The three secrets of resilient people | Lucy Hone | TEDxChristchurch

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NWH8N-BvhAw

00:00:17
So I’d like to start if I may, by asking you some questions. If you’ve ever lost someone you truly love, ever had your heart broken, ever struggled through an acrimonious divorce or being the victim of infidelity, please stand up. If standing up is inaccessible to you, you can put your hand up, please stay standing and keep your hand up there.
00:00:44
If you’ve ever lived through a natural disaster, been bullied, or been made redundant, stand on up. If you’ve ever had a miscarriage, if you’ve ever had an abortion or struggled through infertility, please stand up. Finally, if you or anyone you love has had to cope with mental illness, dementia, some form of physical impairment or cope with suicide, please stand up. Look around you. Adversity doesn’t discriminate. If you are alive, you are going to have to or you’ve already had to deal with some tough times. Thank you. Everyone takes seat.
00:01:34
I started studying resilience research a decade ago at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. It was an amazing time to be there because the professors who trained me had just picked up the contract to train all 1.1 million American soldiers to be as mentally fit as they always have been physically fit. As you can imagine, you don’t get a much more skeptical, discerning audience than the American Drill Sergeants returning from Afghanistan. So for someone like me, whose main quest in life is trying to work out how we take the best of scientific findings out of academia and bring them to people in their everyday lives, it was a pretty inspiring place to be. I finished my studies in America and I returned home here to Christchurch to start my doctoral research. I’d just begun that study when the Christchurch earthquakes hit. So I put my research on hold and I started working with my home community to help them through that terrible post-quake period. I work with all sorts of organizations, from government departments to building companies and all sorts of community groups, teaching them the ways of thinking and acting that we know boost resilience. I thought that was my calling my moment to put all of that research to good use. But sadly, I was wrong, for my own true test came in 2014 on Queen’s Birthday weekend. We and two other families had decided to go down to Lake Ohau and bike. At the last minute, my beautiful twelve-year-old daughter Abby decided to hop in the car with her best friend Ella, also 12, and Ella’s mum Sally, a dear dear friend of mine.
00:03:41
On the way down as they traveled on Thompson’s track, a car sped through a stop sign, crashing into them and killing all three of them instantly.
00:03:55
In the blink of an eye, I find myself flung to the other side of the equation, waking up with a whole new identity. Instead of being the resilience expert, suddenly I’m the grieving mother, waking up not knowing who I am, trying to wrap my head around unthinkable news. My world smashed to smithereens. Suddenly I’m the one on the end of all this expert advice and I can tell you, I didn’t like what I heard one little bit. In the days after Abby died we were told we were now prime candidates for family estrangement, that we were likely to get divorced and we were at high risk of mental illness. Wow, I remember thinking, thanks for that. I thought my life was already pretty shit.
00:04:48
Leaflets describe the five stages of grief. Anger, bargaining, denial, depression, acceptance. Victim support arrived at our door and told us that we could expect to write off the next five years to grief. I know the leaflets and the resources meant well but in all of that advice they left us feeling like victims totally overwhelmed by the journey ahead and powerless to exert any influence over our grieving whatsoever.
00:05:19
I didn’t need to be told how bad things were. Believe me, I already knew things were truly terrible. What I needed most was hope. I needed a journey through all that anguish, pain, and longing. Most of all, I wanted to be an active participant in my grief process so I decided to turn my back on their advice and decided instead to conduct something of a self experiment. I’d done the research. I had the tools. I wanted to know how useful they would be to me now, in the face of such an enormous mountain to climb. Now I have to confess at this point I didn’t really know any of this was going to work. Parental bereavement is widely acknowledged as the hardest of losses to bear. But I can tell you now five years on what I already knew from the research, that you can rise up from adversity, that there are strategies that work, that it is utterly possible to make yourself think and act in certain ways that help you navigate tough times. There is a monumental body of research on how to do this stuff. Today I’m going to share three strategies with you. These are my go-to strategies that I relied upon and saved me in my darkest days. There are three strategies that underpin all of my work and they’re pretty readily available to us all. Anyone can learn them, you can learn them right here today.
00:07:08
So number one: resilient people get that shit happens. They know that suffering is part of of life. This doesn’t mean they actually welcome it in. They’re not actually delusional. But when the tough times come they seem to know that suffering is part of every human existence. And knowing this stops you from feeling discriminated against when the tough times come. Never once did I find myself thinking why me? In fact, I remember thinking why not me? Terrible things happen and to you just like they do everybody else. That’s your life now. Time to sink or swim. The real tragedy is that not enough of us seem to know this any longer. We seem to live in an age where we’re entitled to a perfect life where shiny happy photos on Instagram are the norm when actually as you all demonstrated at the start of my talk, the very opposite is true. Number two: resilient people are really good at choosing carefully where they select their attention. They have a habit of realistically appraising situations and managing to focus on the things that they can change and somehow accept the things that they can’t.
00:08:43
This is a vital, learnable skill for resilience.
00:08:50
As humans, we are really good at noticing threats and weaknesses. We are hard-wired for that negative – we really, really good at noticing them. Negative emotions stick to us like velcro, whereas positive emotions and experiences seem to bounce off like teflon. Being wired in this way is actually really good for us and served us well from an evolutionary perspective. So imagine for a moment I’m a cave woman and I’m coming out of my cave in the morning and there’s a saber-toothed tiger on one side and a beautiful rainbow on the other. It kind of pays for my survival for me to notice this tiger. The problem is we now live in an era where we are constantly bombarded by threats all day long. And our poor brains treat every single one of those threats as though they were a tiger. Our threat focus, our stress response is permanently dialed up. Resilient people don’t diminish the negative – but they also have worked out a way of tuning into the good. One day when doubts were threatening to overwhelm me I distinctly remember thinking “No, you do not get to get swallowed up by this. You have to survive. You’ve got so much to live for. Choose life not death. Don’t lose what you have to what you have lost.” In psychology, we call this benefit-finding. In my brave new world it involved trying to find things to be grateful for.
00:10:41
At least our wee girl hadn’t died of some terrible, long, drawn-out illness. She died suddenly, instantly, sparing us and her that pain. We had a huge amount of social support from family and friends to help us through. And most of all, we still had two beautiful boys to live for, who needed us now and deserve to have as normal a life as we could possibly give them. Being able to switch the focus of your attention to also include the good has been shown by science to be a really powerful strategy. So in 2005, Marty Seligman and colleagues conducted an experiment and they asked people to think of three good things that had happened to them each day. What they found over the six months of this study was that those people showed higher levels of gratitude, higher levels of happiness, and less depression over the course of the six-month study. When you’re going through grief, you might need a reminder, or you might need permission to feel grateful.
00:11:54
In our kitchen, we’ve got a bright pink neon poster that reminds us to accept the good. In the American Army, they framed it a little differently. They talked to the army about hunting the good stuff. Find the language that works for you, but whatever you do, make an intentional, deliberate, ongoing effort to tune into what’s good in your world.
00:12:22
Number three: resilient people ask themselves “Is what I’m doing helping or harming me?” This is a question that’s used a lot in good therapy and boy is it powerful.
00:12:35
This was my go-to question in the days after the girls died. I would ask it again and again. Should I go to the trial and see the driver? Would that help me or would it harm me? Well, that was a no-brainer me. I chose to stay away but Trevor, my husband, decided to meet with the driver at a later time. Late at night I’d find myself sometimes pouring over old photos of Abby, getting more and more upset. I’d ask myself “Really? Is this helping you or is it harming you? Put away the photos, go to bed for the night, be kind to yourself.” This question can be applied to so many different contexts. Is the way you’re thinking and acting, helping or harming you in your bid to get that promotion, to pass that exam, to recover from a heart attack, so many different ways. I write a lot about resilience and over the years, this one strategy has prompted more positive feedback than any other. I get scores of letters and emails and things from all over the place of people saying what a huge impact it’s had on their lives, whether it is forgiving family transgressions, arguments from Christmases past, and whether it is just trolling through social media, whether it is asking yourself whether you really need that extra glass of wine.
00:14:09
Asking yourself whether what you’re doing, the way you’re thinking, the way you’re acting is helping or harming you puts you back in the driver’s seat. It gives you some control over your decision making. Three strategies. Pretty simple.
00:14:31
They’re readily available to us all, anytime, anywhere. They don’t require rocket science. Resilience isn’t some fixed trait. It’s not that some people have it and some people don’t. It’s actually requires very ordinary processes. Just the willingness to give them a go. I think we all have moments in life where our life path splits and the journey we thought we were going down veers off to some terrible direction that we never anticipated and we certainly didn’t want. It happened to me.
00:15:15
It was awful beyond imagining. If you ever find yourselves in a situation where you think “There’s no way I’m coming back from this,” I urge you to lean into these strategies and think again. I won’t pretend that thinking this way is easy.
00:15:38
And it doesn’t remove all the pain. But if I’ve learned anything over the last five years, it is that thinking this way really does help. More than anything. It has shown me that it is possible to live and grieve at the same time. And for that, I will always be grateful. Thank you.
Source : Youtube

Decisions and deliberations: how schizophrenia is more than psychosis | James Kesby | TEDxUQ

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y5CZiuT-g3M
Transcriber: Frank Cao Reviewer: Trina Oršić What’s the first thing that comes to mind when you hear the word “schizophrenia”? Psychosis? Recreational drug use? Danger, perhaps? These are commonly the focus when we think of psychotic disorders like schizophrenia due to both fact and myth.
00:00:31
And although our dialogue is much more open about mental illness these days, severe mental illnesses like schizophrenia still carry a stigma. As a behavioral neuroscientist, I spent most of my adult life trying to understand how the brain ends up manifesting the behavioral syndromes we see in disorders like schizophrenia. Our brain, this little thing up here has as many neurons as there are stars in the galaxy. Each neuron has thousands of synapses, the little mouths used to talk to each other.
00:01:06
Somewhere near 100 trillion in our brain. If you took one second to count each one, you’d be there for over 30 million years.
00:01:17
So understanding how the brain functions is a truly daunting task.
00:01:21
But it’s really important if we’re going to find ways to prevent and alleviate the problems associated with schizophrenia, one of the most severe mental illnesses a person can suffer from.
00:01:34
So let’s talk some facts and myths about schizophrenia. One: Psychosis is a key feature of schizophrenia. Fact. Psychosis is actually a group of symptoms and they tend to surface in early adulthood when trying to figure out who we are and what we want to do.
00:01:56
Hallucinations are common, often hearing things that aren’t real.
00:02:01
These can be narrative, “James is putting his hand up, he’s putting his hand down.” Or they can be more disturbing, “What are you doing here? The audience hates you!” Delusions are another symptom.
00:02:13
Believing in something that’s clearly not true.
00:02:15
And this is unshakable, regardless of the evidence presented against it. These are often laced with a level of paranoia: “The government’s put a chip in my brain to read my thoughts.” But psychosis affects other disorders too, including psychotic bipolar disorder and neurodegenerative diseases. Or you can experience psychosis after taking drugs like methamphetamine.
00:02:42
Two: Psychosis makes people angry and violent.
00:02:47
Myth, the classic Hollywood trope is that every serial killer has schizophrenia. This somehow explains all their scary and villainous behavior.
00:03:00
Now, views of psychotic disorders are shaped by these representations. But more likely, you could be having a chat with someone, and have no idea they’ve been diagnosed with schizophrenia.
00:03:11
One thing I love about my job is I get to do exactly that, and talk to a lot of people with schizophrenia.
00:03:16
Anything from chatting about music to talking about the symptoms the lived experience they have. It’s a real privilege.
00:03:25
Around 1% of the general population will be diagnosed with a psychotic disorder in their lifetime. So let’s just unpack that a little.
00:03:34
Here in Queensland, Australia’s third largest state, the average public high school has 1200 students.
00:03:41
Statistically speaking, 12 students or half a class from each high school will suffer from a psychotic disorder in their lifetime. That’s not a trivial number, but it just shows how common these disorders are in the community.
00:04:00
Three: People with schizophrenia are always psychotic. Myth.
00:04:06
A psychotic episode represents the most severe end of the psychosis spectrum, and it’s a terrible event in someone’s life.
00:04:15
But the severity of these symptoms differ between people and over time. With treatment and interventions, most people with schizophrenia go through their daily lives confident they won’t have a psychotic episode.
00:04:28
So we’ve cleared up a few common misconceptions regarding schizophrenia. You’ll notice I focused mainly on psychosis. But what if I told you that even though it’s the most obvious behavioral aspect of the disorder, it’s not the biggest problem? Many people think that if we can stop the psychosis, we can cure the disorder.
00:04:52
Unfortunately, cognitive problems such as issues with planning, memory and decision making are considered to be the biggest burden for these individuals.
00:05:02
And to be clear, we’re not talking big problems.
00:05:05
It’s the little things that most of us take for granted every day. The calculations our brains make in the background that we use to progress through the days, weeks, and years of our lives. What does this mean for someone with schizophrenia when their psychotic symptoms are under control? To explore this, I’m going to take you on a theoretical tour of decision making.
00:05:28
So cognition and decision making are fundamental to our ability to build and maintain a successful life in this complex world. Think of all the decisions you might make in a day.
00:05:41
If you’re like me, probably counting on your fingers.
00:05:44
I had toast for breakfast, I finished that project at work. (Chuckles) I caught a late bus home. Three decisions.
00:05:54
Now, we all know that’s a gross underestimation.
00:05:58
Throughout each day, our brain is seamlessly making thousands, if not millions, of small calculations and decisions without us even realizing it. Many of these decisions take very little thought or none at all because the outcomes are really clear.
00:06:13
I’ve experienced them thousands of times before. Take looking before you cross the road.
00:06:19
You don’t think about it but you’re aiming to avoid being hit by a car. That would be a bad outcome.
00:06:25
Now our brain navigates this with ease for the most part. Different areas acting in collaboration, using our past experiences to predict the future. But sometimes outcomes aren’t as clear. Say you’re driving to an appointment and you get stuck in traffic.
00:06:44
You have two lanes and you’re worried you might be late. First, you have to consider the speed of both lanes.
00:06:51
Is one traveling faster? Should you switch into that lane? Now, some people will switch as soon as a lane changes speed, trying to save every last second of their trip. Other people are content in their lane, thinking that overall the difference between the two is negligible.
00:07:07
It’s the situation that determines which of those strategies is actually best. The switching strategy is best when a lane is stopped up ahead. You get into the faster lane earlier.
00:07:20
But we’ve all seen someone change up ahead and then we slowly pass them by. (Laughter) The key is to avoid the noise and figure out which lane is travelling faster overall. And as easy as that can be to see after the fact, “Ah,I should’ve changed lanes back there,” in real time, that can be quite difficult. In Behavioral Neuroscience, we design tasks to see how people make these choices.
00:07:49
Rather than traffic, we use pictures, and we can provide money, rewards for good choices and losses for poor choices. Now we’re not mean, but we do like to trick people. So we’ll throw in some misleading feedback and maybe change the rules without people realizing.
00:08:07
But it’s all in the name of trying to imitate real life scenarios. So let’s make some decisions together.
00:08:16
And don’t worry, I’m not going to pick on anyone.
00:08:20
On the screen, you’ll see two shapes: a triangle and a circle. I want you all to choose one.
00:08:29
Okay, so who chose the triangle? Hands up. And who chose the circle? Okay. So we expect about 50-50, right? We don’t know anything about this. It makes sense.
00:08:41
So for those of you who chose the triangle, I tell you, “Good job! You’ve earned 50 cents.” (Laughter) Okay. Now, I want you to make that same choice again. Who here chooses the triangle this time? So you see, some people chose the triangle first. They want some money.
00:09:07
So they chose the triangle again.
00:09:10
Now, I’m really interested in choices like this as my research and research from other scientists have shown that people with schizophrenia are less likely to choose the same picture after a reward than someone without schizophrenia.
00:09:22
So in this example, someone with schizophrenia is slightly more likely to choose the circle after that first triangle. Let’s up the ante a little.
00:09:32
We still know very little about these shapes. Maybe the circle won a dollar.
00:09:38
Let’s say I offer you a bonus 20 dollars if you can tell me which of the two shapes will win the most of the next 100 trials, the way I’ve coded it to be.
00:09:49
But the catch, if you choose the wrong one, you have to give me $100. Who here is confident picking the triangle? (Laughter) Not many takers. It’s a real shame, those odds heavily favor me. What if I let you peek into the future? I’ll show you what you’ll get if you chose each shape five times.
00:10:18
So for the triangle, you can see one on that first attempt, but then lost the next four.
00:10:26
And the circle, Ahh, the circle. You won four times and only lost once.
00:10:35
I’m feeling generous, so I’m going to offer you that same deal as before. Who here would now pick the circle? Okay, so we’ve got some more takers. See, that’s not good for me, but I think it shows how our past experiences helped shape our certainty what a future choice will give us in return.
00:10:57
Research has shown that people with schizophrenia use less information to make these same choices as people without schizophrenia. And we call this “jumping to conclusions”. It’s really interesting as this could also shape some of the psychotic symptoms we see, the formation of inaccurate associations.
00:11:15
When some of us walk into a room, we see a flashing light up in the corner. We think nothing of it.
00:11:19
It’s a fire alarm or something insignificant.
00:11:22
But someone with schizophrenia might jump to the conclusion that it’s actually a video tracking monitoring system following their whereabouts.
00:11:31
My research is interested in how the decision making changes we see and psychotic symptoms intertwine.
00:11:38
Can we reduce psychotic symptoms by improving decision making in people with schizophrenia? I think we can, but it’s going to take time to figure that out. So these are just a few examples.
00:11:52
And it’s important to know that no matter what test you did, I could not tell if you had schizophrenia.
00:11:59
Many people with schizophrenia perform above average, and many people without schizophrenia perform below average. When we look at the group differences, we see this shift towards different decision making in people with schizophrenia.
00:12:15
Our brains are constantly comparing our current and past outcomes to try and predict what a future choice will give us in return.
00:12:23
And when you’re making millions of micro decisions every day, small differences add up.
00:12:30
They make things like maintaining productivity at work more difficult for people with schizophrenia.
00:12:36
Even the simple traffic analogy from before.
00:12:38
Poor planning for delays means potentially more rushing or more being late to work.
00:12:45
These cognitive changes in schizophrenia and other severe mental illnesses currently have no treatments, so they are ever present in these people’s lives.
00:12:55
That’s the end of our short Behavioral Neuroscience tour. I hope you’ve learned a few things.
00:12:59
Psychosis is only one part of schizophrenia and maybe not the most problematic.
00:13:05
But also our brain is amazing at navigating this complex world without us even realizing it. So next time you get a chance, I ask you to slow down and focus on all the little decisions you might make without realizing.
00:13:20
Next time you’re getting ready for work or school, or any outing for that matter, take stock of each little decision and choice and all the outcomes that are possible. When you realize you’re running late, you’ll appreciate how seamlessly our brain does this in the background, and you’ll understand how difficult it could be for some people and make the advantageous choice less often or not as quickly. We should all appreciate that people with schizophrenia and other severe mental illnesses suffer from symptoms that make their daily lives more challenging.
00:13:57
By understanding how our brain makes decisions and how that’s affected in disorders like schizophrenia.
00:14:04
I trust the neuroscience community can and will find ways to overcome these problems. And I look forward to working towards this goal with my research.
00:14:14
But in the meantime, we can all be more mindful, accommodating and supportive of the different challenges people face.
00:14:21
We can all help to reduce the stigma associated with mental illness. (Applause)
Source : Youtube

Psychosis or Spiritual Awakening: Phil Borges at TEDxUMKC

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFtsHf1lVI4
Translator: Mika Fukasawa Reviewer: Maria K. Good evening.
00:00:16
One of the things I love about visiting indigenous cultures is it lets me step back in time and see how we all lived centuries ago. In doing that, I’ve noticed so many things, things that we’ve gained and things that we’ve lost. One of the things I’ve really noticed is the fact that our relationships are much different. First of all, our relationship to the land.
00:00:44
In indigenous cultures there is no grocery store, in tribal cultures, especially, no utility districts, no water districts, no fast food restaurants.
00:00:57
Nothing stands between them and their survival, other than their own ingenuity and their own knowledge of the earth. They have a very intimate knowledge of the earth.
00:01:09
It’s always astonished me.
00:01:11
This one Hawaiian woman, who was at the beach and I met her, she saw this crab flipping out sand out of the hole. She said, “Look, sand is going to the North. There will be a storm coming tomorrow.” Sure enough, the storm, it shows up tomorrow.
00:01:28
They’re more or less the PhDs of their place on the planet. The other relationship that I’ve noticed is so tight is their relationship to each other.
00:01:40
Again, they don’t have the institutions.
00:01:42
They don’t have social security.
00:01:44
They don’t have an IRA or a 401(k) plan. They don’t have elder-care facilities.
00:01:53
They completely depend on each other for their survival, again. That produces a real tightness.
00:02:02
I’ve noticed women at a well in Africa for instance. They’re all sitting around, joking and talking. They’re nursing their babies.
00:02:11
The woman that needs to go to get the water will take her baby and pass it to another woman. She’ll start nursing it.
00:02:17
That woman will see her goat run off, and she’ll pass the baby to a third woman. She’ll start nursing it.
00:02:22
These kids are kind of even raised communally.
00:02:27
They live in extended families, and that brings a real tightness. The other relationship that I want to talk about tonight is the relationship to spirit. It’s a very strong one. This is Malik and her great grand daughter Yasmina.
00:02:47
They spend all their time together, 14 hours a day working in the garden.
00:02:53
I’ve seen this in Africa, Asia, South America.
00:02:57
I ask, “Why are these two people that are so different, together all the time? There is a big age difference.” They said, “No, no. You don’t understand.
00:03:07
Yasmina is just coming out of the spirit world, and Malik is just about to go back into the spirit world. So they really do have the most in common.” They literally pray to the spirits of the forests, the mountains, the rivers. They put spirits in everything.
00:03:27
Their ancestors’ spirits are so important to them. In the beginning, I sort of looked at this as superstition, uneducated, naive thinking. Over the last 30 years, I’ve slowly changed, and I want to talk to you a little bit about how that change came about. About 25 years ago, I was doing a project in Tibet on the human rights issues there, and I had the opportunity to go and meet the medium that channels the oracle of Tibet, the Dalai Lama’s oracle.
00:04:09
It took place in this little monastery. There were about 60 monks in there; they led the medium in, sat him down, put this big hat on his head, a very heavy hat. His face turned red.
00:04:24
The monks started chanting and beating their drums. He kind of went into this trance, and he started talking in a real high-pitched voice. The monks started writing down everything he was saying, and then, after about five minutes of that, he fainted, and they literally had to carry him out of the room. I just watched this, and I was wondering, “Is this a performance? Did he have a heart attack?” But two days later, I was able to interview the medium. His name is Thupten, he was 30 years old at the time. He is 50 now.
00:05:05
He said that he didn’t remember a thing that he said when he was in this trance.
00:05:11
He felt very weak right afterwards, for a day afterwards. So I said, “Well, how did you become the medium? How did you get this job?” And he said, “You know, when I was younger, I had started hearing these voices.
00:05:29
I started feeling very ill, and I was very confused, and in fact, I thought I was dying at one point.
00:05:36
An older monk came to me and said, ‘Hey, you’ve got a gift.’ He taught me how to go in and out of trance; he nurtured me; he stayed with me for the whole year.” Now he’s the Dalai Lama’s Oracle, the Oracle of Tibet. Two years later, I was doing a project for Amnesty International up in the Northern part of Kenya, in the Samburu area, and I was taking pictures of these people.
00:06:03
My guide turned to me and said, “You know, their predictor has told them that you were coming to take pictures of them.” I didn’t think too much about that because there I was taking pictures of them.
00:06:16
He went on to say, “They also said that she said that you would hide from them when you took their picture.” I said, “No, I don’t hide, I use very short lenses. I’m usually right in front [of] the person when I take their portrait.” That night I was home, cleaning my lenses, packing my bags, and I realized, yeah, I’ve brought my new camera that I’ve never used before.
00:06:43
It’s this Panoramic camera.
00:06:45
And this is the way I’ve got to focus that, in total darkness. All of a sudden I thought, “Well, that’s a coincidence.” My assistant said, “That’s amazing.” It was just something we kind of filed away, but at that point, I decided what I wanted to do is start actually seeking out these people that go into altered states of consciousness in order to heal or predict for their tribes. That’s what I started doing.
00:07:17
By the way, here is the woman that was the predictor. I did take her picture with a panoramic camera. Her name is Sukulen.
00:07:26
She is 37 years old – or was, at the time – five kids.
00:07:30
She had the very same story as the medium of the Dalai Lama. When she was 12 years old, she started having visual hallucinations. She started feeling sick and dizzy. Her grandmother came and said, “You know, you’ve got a talent,” and she nurtured her through it. I literally went around the world and doing my human rights work and started finding these shamans. The way I would find them – they never introduce themselves as shaman.
00:08:03
You would never know who they were unless you ask the community members, “Who is the healer here? Who goes into trance?” And they would tell me and lead me to the person.
00:08:11
So this is Nomage. She is a Mongolian shaman. I’ll just show you some of the 40 I interviewed.
00:08:18
This is Morgan Yazzie, he is a Navaho medicine man. This is Lindsa.
00:08:27
She is a shaman in Eastern Siberia. Mengatohue, a shaman in the Romani tribe, in the Amazon in Ecuador.
00:08:42
One of the last shamans I interviewed was right on the Pakistan-Afghan border. There is a group of animists there, called the Kalash.
00:08:51
There’s only 3,000 of them left, and they are surrounded by Islam. They hold on to their animistic beliefs.
00:08:59
They are very interesting-looking. They are blond-haired, blue-eyed.
00:09:03
They say they are the remnants of Alexander the Great’s army. They are very fun-loving, they make their own wine, but I went there because I was told that there was a six-year-old boy that was being initiated to be a shaman, and I wanted to see him.
00:09:20
Everybody I had interviewed up to that point had been a shaman for years.
00:09:24
I wanted to find somebody in that process of initiation.
00:09:27
When I got there, I found: no, he wasn’t six years old, he was a 60-year-old goat herder up in the mountains. (Laughter) So that’s the shaman rumor mill.
00:09:37
But anyway, I had taken my 16-year-old son with me as an assistant.
00:09:44
We had to hike for about a day and a half to get up to the top of the mountain where Janduli Kahn was herding his goats. He was the shaman for the Kalash people. And again, I asked the same questions.
00:09:58
“How did you get into this? What do you do for your tribe?” He had the same story of hallucinations, being mentored by an older shaman.
00:10:07
The shamans, in different cultures, induce their trance in different ways. By the way, shamanism is a universal practice. It’s the world’s oldest spiritual practice. There is a lot of common denominators, but the way they go into trance can differ.
00:10:25
In Mongolia, they beat a drum next to their ear.
00:10:29
In South America, they take psycho-active plants, like Ayahuasca. In Pakistan, they use something that is quite unique: they burn juniper branches, they slaughter an animal, pour the blood over the burning branches, and then the shaman inhales the smoke to go into trance.
00:10:48
Here I am trying to talk him out of doing a ceremony for me because I don’t want him to kill one of his animals. He said, “No, I have to do it.
00:10:57
My spirits are telling me I have to do it. You’ve come so far.” So the next morning, his sons started the fire, started burning the juniper branches. He started praying to the mountain spirits, the spirits of the forests.
00:11:13
They slaughtered the animal, and he started inhaling the smoke, and then he went into trance.
00:11:18
He stayed into trance for about five or 10 minutes, and when he came out, he was very silent, he hardly said anything. He was very talkative before he went into trance. And I thought, “Well, this is kind of strange.” I asked one of his sons through my interpreter, “What happened to him? What did he say? Did he see anything?” And the son just said, “The only thing he said is, ‘Your journey is going to be extremely difficult, but you are going to be safe.’ That’s all he said.” The next day my son and I took off.
00:11:55
We left his camp and walked down the mountain and headed up further into the Hindu Kush Mountains. We were out in the middle of nowhere, we had a jeep, and my son started getting sick.
00:12:08
He evidently picked up a bug in the water around Janduli Kahn’s camp. First day went by, he couldn’t keep anything down.
00:12:16
Second day, third day, fourth day. Couldn’t keep anything down for four days. He was getting so weak he could hardly walk. I was totally freaked out.
00:12:27
We pulled into this little village, and we happened to run into a doctor from Islamabad, who was visiting his mother, and he happened to have a bag of glucose and saline and an IV drip and some oral rehydration salts, and we brought Dax around.
00:12:48
To me it was like a miracle that the whole thing happened. I’ll tell you a little bit about the shamans. First of all, this is the common things with shamanism; it’s not always true, but in general.
00:13:04
They typically are identified with what they called the “Call.” And the “Call,” [for] the ones I interviewed, almost all of them, it was a psychological crisis.
00:13:15
Secondly, they almost always had a mentor. Somebody that has been through it, and has come out the other end of this psychological crisis, and can show them the ropes, and show them, and tell them, and comfort them along the way. And then they have to face what they call the initiation. It’s almost always this death.
00:13:39
A death of their old self and a rebirth of a new self. And this rebirth – I don’t know how to explain that. It’s like they …
00:13:53
take on much more of an elevated consciousness. They expand their consciousness.
00:13:59
Their awareness of who they are expands. They expand their circle of compassion; I guess that’d be the quickest way to say it.
00:14:09
As such, they learn to go into the spirit world, where they believe the spirit world informs our world of reality here. That’s where things really happen.
00:14:23
They go there, get the information, come back to help people. And then, after they’ve learned their trade, they begin their life of service, either a healer or a seer, a priest, and they typically do this for no money.
00:14:41
This is something they just do, it’s just something added to what they do. In the beginning many of them resist it because like Janduli Kahn, he’s still a goat herder, he still has to do that.
00:14:52
But on top of that, he is the healer for the community. Sukulen has five kids that she has to take care of.
00:14:58
On top of that, she is the healer of her community. So it is a lot of extra work.
00:15:05
So it happened – I put that whole project aside because I didn’t know what to do with it. I didn’t know what to say about it.
00:15:12
I felt I was getting in over my head, into the world of consciousness, and spirits, and all this. But a year and a half ago, I met a young kid who had one of these psychological breaks.
00:15:23
I just want to introduce you to him, just a moment here. (Video) Adam: “It was just this total shattering, and my mind just opened, and I started thinking of all these different things. And in that sense, it was beautiful. I found it was – How I found my – The first time I’d ever experienced a real connection to the universe, where I really felt like a part of this.
00:15:48
That I was this, this was me. It was just like … incredible! And so simple – Yeah, I mean, absolutely amazing.
00:15:56
And then I kept going, and then I went way too far. And then it got scary.
00:16:04
It was just kind of like a panic. I don’t know.
00:16:07
‘Put some medication in this kid and just hope for the best,’ but it – I don’t know if it hurt or helped.
00:16:15
It was at the point where I was being diagnosed, I think, for side effects of medications.
00:16:19
Like, there was a point where I was taking 15 pills in a day.
00:16:24
And I felt like a lab rat, and the side effects were just awful. Absolutely awful.
00:16:33
Vomiting all day, I couldn’t leave my house for so long, from just these awful anxiety attacks, and the thought of interacting with people would make me sick to my stomach. It was just so much. I still don’t know what was the side effect and what was my mind.” Phil Borges: Adam was on drugs, on pharmaceuticals, for about four years. He was having a such a hard time that he decided to go cold turkey, cut them off, and did a Vipassana meditation retreat. And those of you who don’t know what that is: They come in various forms, but this one was 10 days silent meditation, 10 hours a day. It’s very rigorous.
00:17:19
I did one just to see what it was about.
00:17:21
And it was one of the hardest things I’ve done. He was able to stabilize himself.
00:17:28
He got a job at Whole Foods Market, which he hadn’t been able to do before. He started having what he called “synchronicities,” where he’d have a thought and the thing would happen. And by the way, he is very psychic, he has very strong healing potentials.
00:17:44
But he has no confidence in what’s happening to him, there’s no one that’s been able to conceptualize it for him. Anyway, he had these, and he decided he needed to go back and do another Vipassana. Well, they learned that he had this history of mental illness, and they sent him home.
00:18:04
So the one avenue that he could have gotten relief from cut him off because of the stigma of his mental illness. Adam isn’t alone in this by the way.
00:18:19
In having bipolar [disorder], schizophrenia, depression, any of these heavy psychological episodes. Here’s some statistics from the National Institute of Mental Health.
00:18:32
One in five of us will suffer a psychological crisis in our lifetime. By the way, that’s a rising figure right now.
00:18:41
The other thing is, one in 20 will become disabled because of it. Another interesting fact about this phenomenon is 50% happens before the age of 14.
00:18:54
By the way, most of the shamans, it happened either in their adolescence or in their teenage years.
00:18:59
Seventy five percent before the age of 24.
00:19:02
So it’s more or less a phenomenon of young people. Here is the difference in cultures that I noticed. The shaman’s advantage.
00:19:15
One, they have a cultural context.
00:19:19
The physiological crisis, although it’s difficult, it’s believed to be – they put it in a positive light. It’s something the person is going to come out of and be stronger in the end.
00:19:31
Have more abilities in the end.
00:19:34
The other thing that’s a big advantage is it’s not stigmatized.
00:19:39
If you have the stamp of mental illness on your forehead, or on your dossier, or whatever, you are not going to get a job. It’s not like having diabetes or even cancer. It’s one of the most stigmatized things that can happen to the person in our culture.
00:20:01
And especially, if some kid is having these visions, and he’s not knowing what’s happening to him, and the doctor comes and says, “You’re broken and you are this,” you can imagine how that adds to the problem. The other thing they have an advantage of, they have a mentor, they have somebody that has been through this process, that can take and hold their hand and say, “Listen, I know what this is all about, and this is how you manage it.” And the third thing that’s a huge advantage is they have a community that buys into what they’ve gone through. Not only that, they have an outlet for their talents.
00:20:40
Many of these people have specific talents that the normal person doesn’t have. So, that’s what is an advantage if you’re in one of these indigenous communities. I don’t know if you heard the recent TED Talk by a woman by the name of Eleanor Longden. Has anybody heard that one? It went viral. She did it a couple of months ago. This is a young woman, when she went to college she started hearing voices. She said, “My nightmare began when I told my roommate I was hearing voices.” Her roommate said, “You’d better see a doctor.” So she went [and] saw the doctor.
00:21:18
The doctor said, “You’d better see a psychiatrist.” She went to see the psychiatrist.
00:21:22
The psychiatrist gave her the label “schizophrenia,” put her on medications.
00:21:27
By the way, these medications suppress the symptoms, they don’t get at the root [of the] problem.
00:21:33
She said, from that point on, she just spiraled down.
00:21:37
You ought to listen to her video on how she brought herself out of that. She eventually got to the point where she said, “I realized that those voices were helping me resolve this old childhood trauma of sexual molestation.” But it took her and a couple of friends that believed in her, to get her out of that hole that she had gone down in because of that stigma.
00:22:03
So, if you do have one of these issues, if one of us does have one of these issues, we go to somebody.
00:22:10
The common method of treatment is to suppress the symptoms with pharmaceuticals. So, with Adam, we’ve been following among, and so I’ve been posting this on our blog over the last year and a half, how he’s doing and what’s going on.
00:22:24
By the way, he’s homeless now, like so many end up.
00:22:27
And we’ve started interviewing professionals that take a whole different approach to this problem.
00:22:35
And in fact, some of the psychiatrists, psychologists we’ve interviewed, and we’re posting them as well, claim many of these instances, not all of them, but many of them, as spiritual emergencies. And they believe, just like I do now, if you hold these people, if you don’t stigmatize them, if you don’t scare them with the label, and tell them they’re broken, and if you give them a place of support, that the psyche itself is self-healing.
00:23:10
It will take them, and it will eventually work out whatever is going on with them, and they’ll typically come out at a higher level of awareness and consciousness then when they went into the problem in the first place. There are many people that believe – we’ve interviewed cultural historians, cultural anthropologists, they believe that our species right now is in crisis.
00:23:39
You look at the environment, you look at the economic system, you look at what’s happening with our continual wars, and we’re being asked to raise our consciousness to a whole different level.
00:23:57
I just want to end with this statement from one of our most famous scientists, and I love this statement, he says, I’ll just quote: “We human beings tend to experience ourselves as something separate from the whole we call the Universe. This is actually an optical delusion of our consciousness. It’s like a prison for us.
00:24:25
Our task is to free ourselves from this prison by [widening] our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of Nature in its beauty.
00:24:37
This striving for such an achievement is a path to our liberation and the only true foundation of our inner peace and security.” That was Albert Einstein. Thank you very much.
00:24:51
(Applause)
Source : Youtube

4 Warning Signs of Generalized Anxiety Disorder

Narrator Everybody gets anxious or worried every once in a while. Maybe you have an important work event: you’re planning or a family member going through tough times, But what, if you feel anxious and worried a lot of the time? And you’re just not sure why You might have a mental health condition called generalized anxiety, disorder. Generalized anxiety disorder is characterized by excessive anxiety and worry. This is different from regular anxiety. You might feel Here are a few reasons why your anxiety persists over a long period. You’ll feel this way for more days than not for at least six months. Two, anxiety and worry affect your day-to-day life. You might face challenges at your job or social life. Maybe you don’t go out as much or socialize with friends. Three, the worrying seemingly comes out of nowhere. One moment you’re feeling fine and the next. You might be anxious and can’t figure out why Four, your anxiety and worry are associated with at least three of the following symptoms: Restlessness, getting tired, easy difficulty focusing irritability muscles, tension, and sleep disturbances, Generalized anxiety, disorder, isn’t the only condition that Can make you worry a lot Other medical conditions, as well as certain medications, can also make you more anxious If you are feeling worried all the time for no reason talk to your doctor, You don’t have to deal with this worry and anxiety by yourself.
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Anxiety Disorders: Psychiatric Mental Health | @LevelUpRN

Hi, I’m Cathy with Level Up RN. In this video, we will be discussing generalized anxiety disorder,   as well as a few key specific anxiety disorders. At the end of the video, I’m going to give you guys a little quiz to test your knowledge of some of the key points I’ll be covering,   so stay tuned for that. And if you have our Level Up RN Psychiatric Mental Health   Nursing Flashcards, I am just starting in the disorder section of this deck.  Everyone experiences anxiety from time to time and that is a normal thing. However, with generalized anxiety disorder, or GAD, an individual will have persistent and excessive worrying that will cause significant physical and/or psychological symptoms. Females are more likely than males to experience a generalized anxiety disorder, and symptoms include excessive anxiety and worry that lasts for more than six months, as well as symptoms such as fatigue, restlessness,   irritability, muscle tension, as well as insomnia. In terms of diagnosis, it’s important to rule out any underlying disorders, such as hyperthyroidism. Treatment can include talk therapy, as well as cognitive behavioral therapy, or CBT. I covered CBT in a previous video in this playlist,   so if you need a review of that therapy then definitely check that out. Medications used in the treatment of generalized anxiety disorder include SSRIs, SSNRIs, as well as benzodiazepines, and atypical anxiolytics such as buspirone. In terms of nursing care, we want to teach our patient how to recognize the signs of escalating anxiety and teach them interventions to help decrease their anxiety, such as deep breathing and exercise.   It should be noted, however, that if a patient is experiencing severe or panic-level anxiety, then problem-solving is not going to be possible and our nursing care should be focused on the patient’s safety as well as their physical needs. Moving on to specific anxiety disorders now. Two specific anxiety disorders that I would be familiar with include social anxiety disorder and agoraphobia. With social anxiety disorder, an individual will experience anxiety related to social situations due to fear of humiliation or rejection.   Agoraphobia translates to fear of the marketplace, and an individual with agoraphobia will experience anxiety related to public transportation, crowds of people, and being outside the home.   Some patients have anxiety that is produced by a specific object or situation. For example,   arachnophobia is the fear of spiders and claustrophobia is the fear of confined spaces.   Treatment of specific anxiety disorders can include behavioral therapy, such as systematic desensitization and anti-anxiety medications, which we covered earlier in this video.  All right, it’s quiz time. Are you guys ready? Question number one. Is generalized anxiety disorder more common in females or males? The answer is females. Question number two. Name one or more drug classes that are used to treat generalized anxiety disorder.   All right, if you said SSRIs, SSNRIs, benzodiazepines, or atypical anxiolytics,   such as buspirone, then you are right. Question number three. What do you call anxiety that is produced by fear of public crowds and being outside the home?   The answer is agoraphobia. All right, that is it for this video. I hope you found it helpful. Take care and good luck with studying.   Two specific anxiety disorders that I would be familiar with.

mR. Mc!, (http://myweb.ecomplanet.com/RALE5393)

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3 HOURS of Worry Management Skills: The Ultimate Generalized Anxiety Disorder Guide | Dr. Rami Nader

do you worry a lot do you know somebody who does worry a lot   well this is the ultimate guide for understanding managing and better controlling worries   hi everyone welcome to the ultimate video guide for managing worry this video is going to be a   long video that puts together a number of other videos that i’ve previously uploaded   that spell out the best ways to manage and understand excessive worry but before i get   into that just a couple of disclaimers to go over i’m a registered psychologist in   the province of british columbia canada and this video is for informational purposes only   it is not intended as a replacement or substitute for advice from your doctor or mental health   professional now with those two things out of the way let’s talk about worry management   so like i mentioned this video is really a compilation of a 14-part video series that   i’ve previously uploaded about worry management you can choose to watch   all 14 of those individual videos but i had a lot of people ask me to put them all together   into one video that they can use as a reference and so that’s what this video is all about   i would not recommend watching this video from beginning to end and expecting to remember   all of it it is pretty dense and has a lot of material in it but i hope you’ll come back to it   as you work through some of the worry management tools that i’m going to be talking about   now one of the things i want to point out is these worry management skills aren’t things that i just   dreamed up uh these are worry management skills that are backed by a lot of research and there’s   been a lot of scientific work that has been put into putting together this treatment protocol   it was developed by a brilliant researcher and psychologist at concordia university named   michelle duga and he has done a lot of research on these skills and tools that i’ll be presenting and   the great part is these skills and tools work and there’s a lot of research to back that these tools   are highly effective for helping a person manage and understand their worry so   i hope you’ll find this video helpful and look forward to any comments or thoughts   that you have about it so with that being said let’s start with the first video that discusses   the three features of worry and two different types of worry have you ever thought about what worry actually is that’s one of the first questions i   ask my clients when we get into worry management is i ask them to provide me with a definition   of worry and usually there’s a bit of a a pause and a look of confusion because i think most   people know what worry feels like and everybody knows kind of how it feels to be worried but   rarely do people ever stop to think about what worry actually is and that’s what i want to talk   about today so that people can have a clear sense and a clear idea of what i’m talking   about when i talk about worry so the first thing about worry is that worry is a thought process   it is something that happens in your head it is something that you are thinking now worry   tends not to be just a single thought it tends to be a collection of thoughts now that can be   the same thought looped over and over and over and over again or it can be one thought   leading to another leading to another leading to another until you get this scenario building   now for example i wake up one morning i’ve got a really bad headache and i think to myself   what if this is a brain tumor what if there’s something wrong   now typically with worry the next thought isn’t well i wonder what i’m going to have for breakfast   the next thought is either going to be looping over oh my goodness what if this is a tumor what   if this is cancer what if this is something bad or spiraling into a negative scenario about what   might happen if i have to get treatment and what would happen to my family those types of things   so the first sort of defining feature of worry is that it is a collection of   thoughts it is a thought process and a collection of multiple thoughts the second   defining characteristic of worry is that worry tends to be future oriented what that means is   that people don’t worry about things from the past typically they worry about stuff that’s   going to happen in the future now sometimes people will stop me and they’ll say hold on a second i   worry about things from my past but usually when people say that they’re worrying about   stuff from their past what they’re actually talking about is they’re worrying about how   the things from the past are going to affect them in the future so essentially how the implications   of events that have happened in the past and what impact they’re going to have on a person’s future   so for example if i’m worrying about having been fired from a job three years ago it’s not so much   that i’m worrying about having been fired from the job three years ago it’s that i’m worrying   about how i’m going to be able to explain that i was fired from that job three years ago in   the upcoming job interview so now another small but sort of obvious component of this   is that worry tends to be about future negative events people don’t worry about positive things   happening right so rarely do people ever worry oh what if what if this job goes really well or   what if this relationship turns out great what if my friends are really impressed with me   people don’t worry about those things people usually only worry about negative things happening   so that’s the second defining feature of worry worry is about future negative events   now the third defining feature of worry is that worry is associated and accompanied by   anxiety anxiety is the emotional result of the worry process now this is an   important concept and important point because a lot of times people will use the terms worry   and anxiety interchangeably i’m worried and anxious and that’s probably because people   usually experience worry and anxiety at the same time but worry and anxiety aren’t the same thing   worry is a thought process and anxiety is the emotion that results from that thought process   so you can’t be worrying without being anxious but you can be anxious without worrying   so i hope that makes sense that worry is the thought process anxiety is the emotional   result that comes from that thought process so that’s the definition of worry that i work by   that’s the definition of worry that i use when i’m working with my clients on worry management worry   is this collection of thoughts or doubts about future negative events that are accompanied by   anxiety so with that definition of worry out of the way i want to talk about two types of   worry now the first type of worry is what we call a type one worry now a type one worry   is a worry about a current actual real problem a problem that’s happening now   a problem that i am dealing with in this moment so for example i get my credit card bill in the mail   and the credit card bill is for three hundred dollars but i only have twenty dollars in my bank   account and so i start to worry how is it that i’m going to be able to pay this credit card bill   so that worry about being able to pay the credit card bill   that’s an example of a type 1 worry it’s a worry about a problem that’s actually occurring now   the other type of worries are called type 2 worries now type 2 worries are worries about   future or potential problems problems that haven’t happened yet problems that may never happen so for   example i get my credit card bill in the mail and the credit card bill is for three hundred dollars   i have three hundred twenty dollars in my bank account so i can pay that credit card bill   but i start thinking to myself well that was a close one what if next month i’m not able   to pay my credit card bill and what if that has a negative effect on my credit rating and what   if that means i’m not going to be able to get a car loan which means i’m not going to be able to   get a good job because i can only get a job that i can commute to by walking or taking transit   and so i’m not going to be able to sort of have a very successful career and no one will want   to be with me and because i don’t have a good job and because i’m not able to afford a house   because i won’t be able to get a mortgage and then i’ll get depressed because no one wants   to be with me and i’ll lose my job and i’ll become homeless and i’m living under a bridge   none of that stuff has actually happened but i’m worrying about it happening and that’s that sort   of chaining and that spiraling of thoughts that i talk about yeah when i talked about earlier   in terms of the definition of worry so type one worries worries about actual current real problems   type two worries are worries about future or potential problems   so you may be wondering okay so what we’ve got this definition of worrying these two   types of worries what do i do with this how does this help well the key to understanding   type 1 and type 2 worries isn’t so much in terms of being able to define the worries   but when we talk about worry management tools we’re going to use slightly different tools   depending on whether or not the worry is a type 1 worry or the worry is a type 2 worry and so   that’s why it’s important early on to get into the habit of being able to recognize your worries   think about your worries and define the worries as either is this a type one or is it a type two   now sometimes worries can start out as type 1 and as part of that spiraling they go into becoming   type 2 worries we call those mixed worries so there’s a component of it that’s a type 1 and a   component of it that’s a type two so for now the idea is to just spend some time thinking about   your worry and so this is what i encourage clients to do is to use this information by just trying to   be more aware and more mindful of your worries and when you catch yourself worrying to even just try   and think about is this a type 1 worry is this a type 2 worry what that can do is it can help   you disengage from the worry even for a moment and for you to start thinking a bit more analytically   and a bit more critically about the worry rather than getting caught up in the worry   experience you’re now kind of observing it and thinking about it differently even just   by simply being able to say this is a type 1 worry or this is a type 2 word everybody experiences worry so when i talk about worry management   i’m not really talking about a worry cure what i’m talking about is helping people who worry a lot   be able to better manage their worries so they’re not worrying as much because the   reality is everybody worries it’s just a matter of how much do people worry so you can think of   it kind of like falling on a continuum where one end of the continuum are people who don’t   really worry very much at all they still worry but just not that much and it’s not particularly   problematic or interfering for them then on the other end of the continuum are people who worry   a lot and if a person worries excessively enough and if their worry is chronic enough they can   meet criteria for what we call generalized anxiety disorder but regardless of whether or not a person   meets criteria for generalized anxiety disorder or they are a person who worries excessively or   they’re a person who worries a little bit the same worry management skills that i’m going to   be talking about apply to all different types of worry and all different intensities of worry   the worry experience for people usually starts with a trigger some sort of trigger situation   leads them to begin worrying now triggers can be pretty much anything so triggers can be internal   they can be thoughts that i have thinking about an argument that i had with my wife   they can be physical sensations i wake up in the morning i’ve got a really bad headache   triggers can be external my cell phone rings i check the call display and it’s worth   calling and i think to myself why is work calling what’s going on is something wrong   so pretty much anything can act as a trigger and the trigger then leads to what i call the what if   question now the what-if question is kind of the foundation of worry now the thing about worry is   it usually doesn’t just start and stop at one what if question so for example the trigger is i wake   up in the morning and i’ve got a bad headache and i think to myself what if this is a brain tumor what usually happens is that worry either loops itself over and over and over again so i worry and   i keep thinking to myself about what if i have a brain tumor what’s going on what if i have a brain   tumor or it leads to a chaining or spiraling of additional what-if thoughts that ends up in this   negative scenario building of what might happen and it’s that chaining and spiraling of what if   thoughts that’s what we call worry and so when a person is worrying think about how that makes you   feel for example so when you’re worrying what’s the emotion that you associate with the worry   that emotion is typically anxiety so this is an important point to note that worry and   anxiety are not the same thing so worry is this collection of what if thoughts   anxiety is the emotion that results from the collection of these what-if thoughts   so now think about this process and imagine if you worried a lot and you’re going through this   process day after day after day trigger what if we’re anxiety trigger what if   we’re anxiety trigger what if we’re anxiety how are you feeling by the end of the day   now most of the time when i ask my clients that they’ll usually say two things one they feel   exhausted now exhausted on multiple levels exhausted mentally because their mind will   not shut off right they just keep worrying they just keep thinking their mind will not   stop thinking about something and so mentally that can be exhausting but it can also be physically   exhausting as well so you’re going through all of these negative thoughts in your mind   and it’s normal for sort of the muscles to tense up and to just feel an increased physical tension   um it can lead to problems with sleep because it’s difficult to sleep when you’re worrying so much   and so it’s common for people to feel kind of exhausted and worn out by their worries   both mentally and physically and the second outcome of this sort of constant worry process   is a feeling or a perception of being demoralized demoralization and what i mean by that is that   it’s hard to really look forward to anything when you worry a lot so it’s hard to get really   excited or enthused about something because when you think about all the positive things that can   happen what also happens is that you then begin to start thinking about all the negative things that   could happen so it’s hard to really look forward to anything because you’re always thinking about   all of the negative things that can occur and so the outcome of this worry process is a feeling of   being demoralized and exhausted and think about it the more demoralized and exhausted you feel   what do you think that’s going to do to the frequency of what-if thoughts   it’s going to increase them and so you get into this self-feeding cycle of worry where   you have a trigger leading to the what-if worry anxiety feeling demoralized and exhausted which   just means you’re prone to creating more what-if questions in response to triggers so that’s kind of the the basic engine of worry this is kind of how worry works   and as i’m going as i go along uh with this video series and talk about other factors that   contribute to worry we’re going to be building on this model but it’s important to understand this   is kind of the the core engine of worry so with that understanding in mind it leads to the first   key worry management skill that i’m going to be talking about now this is a foundational   skill it’s hard to do any of the other worry management skills i’m going to be talking about   if you don’t do this skill and the first worry management skill is worry awareness training   essentially becoming more aware of what it is that you worry about and having a better understanding   of your worry experience now when i’m working with my clients and i bring this up a lot of   times people will say hey i already know what it is that i’m worrying about i don’t need to   get better at thinking about my worries   but what i find for a lot of my clients is that they they kind of know what the big worries are   but they don’t really have a great sense of their entire worry experience and for a lot of my   clients they are such highly efficient worriers that they’re not even aware of everything that   they’re worrying about that they worry almost automatically to a point that they’re not even   aware they don’t even know what it is that they worry and so it’s not uncommon for people who   come to see me to say i don’t really feel like i’m worrying but i have a lot of free floating anxiety   now usually when i hear the term free floating anxiety it’s a cue for me that this is probably   someone who is a highly efficient worrier and that they’re worrying but just don’t realize it yet   and that’s where worry awareness training comes in so worry awareness training really what it is   at its core is excavating your worries dusting them off and really beginning to examine them   so that you can have a new understanding and a better understanding of what your   worry experience is actually like getting a better understanding of that worry fingerprint   your unique worry experience that’s unique to you so how do you do worry awareness training   key tool i use with my clients is called a worry diary and what i’m going to be doing is putting a   link to a worry diary that you can download in the description of the video below so please feel free   to download that and take a look at it so the idea of a worry diary is that you don’t keep track of   every single worry that you have rather what you’re doing is you’re taking a sampling   of your worries so what i get my clients to do is to complete a worry diary three times a day   for one to two weeks and the idea is to have some set times every day that you’re going to pull out   your worry diary and write down what it is that you’re worrying about at that time so i encourage   people to set an alarm so an alarm in the morning in the afternoon and sometime in the evening   when the alarm goes off you pull out the worry diary and you complete an entry in the worry diary   so with the worry diary the first column is the time and day so the date time that you’re   completing the worry diary the next column is the situation what’s going on what’s the   context that you’re worrying in this can map on to the trigger that we talked about before   after that you write down what is it that you’re worrying about   what are the what if thoughts that you’re having in that moment after you’ve completed the what ifs and wrote written down what you’re worrying about   you make a rating of your anxiety on a scale from 0 to 10 where 0 is no anxiety at all   10 is extreme anxiety so you make a numerical rating of how anxious am i in this moment   and then the last column of the worry relates to what i talked about in a previous video when   i talked about a definition of worry and types of worry and that relates to is this a type one worry   or is this a type 2 worry now type 1 worries are worries about actual   current problems type 2 worries are worries about future or potential problems and so you take a   look at what it is that you’re worrying about and you make a rating is this type 1 is this type 2   now sometimes a worry can be a bit of a mix of both so it starts out as a type 1 worry   and it spirals into a type 2 worry if that’s the case you can write down both so   you complete this worry diary if you do this worry diary for a week or two what it’s going to give   you is a rich amount of data about your worry experience that you may have never had before   are there days or times that you tend to worry more than other days and times are   there certain situations or triggers that tend to trigger your worry more   are there certain worries that come up over and over and over again kind of like your greatest   hits of worry are there certain worries that are associated with higher levels of anxiety   so for example it’s not uncommon for people to be well aware of the worries that are causing   them levels eight nine and ten in terms of anxiety but when they do the worry diet they they realize   wow there’s a whole bunch of worries that are causing me anxiety about three and   four that i was never actually aware of and those worries can contribute to just that background   hum of anxiety and nervousness and those may be worries that a person’s never thought about before   this worry diary can also help you get a sense of are my worries more type 1 worries do i have   more type 2 worries do i have kind of an equal mix of type 1 and type 2 worries this is all   information that people typically don’t have about their worry experience and by getting   this information it provides you with um a lot of background that you’re gonna be able to use then   when we start talking about other worry management skills but none of the other worry management   skills i’m going to be talking about are effective if you don’t know what it is that you’re worrying   about and that’s the key and that’s the foundational skill of worry awareness training and in the last video i talked about a model for understanding worry   and i talked about it as the bare bones engine of worry the the driving force behind worry so if you   think of that as the engine of worry what we’re talking about today intolerance of uncertainty   that’s the fuel that drives this worry engine so what is intolerance of uncertainty   well intolerance of uncertainty one way to think about it is it’s kind of like a psychological   allergy and if you think about how an allergy works suppose i’m allergic to dust and i walk   into a room all it’s going to take is for there to be just a little bit of dust in that room and   it’s going to cause a big allergic reaction on my part sneezy watery eyes that sort of thing whereas   somebody else who’s not allergic to dust walks into the exact same room has no reaction at all   so for people who are intolerant of uncertainty all it takes is for there to be just a little   bit of uncertainty in a situation and it leads to a big emotional reaction a big emotional response   so you can think of intolerance of uncertainty kind of like falling on a continuum where on   one end of the continuum are people who are highly tolerant of uncertainty   these are the people who for example can travel to europe with a one-way ticket and a quarter   in their pocket they have no idea what they’re going to be doing for work what they’re going to   do for money uh how long they’re going to be gone where they’re going to go but they just see it as   a big adventure they’ll figure it out as they go whereas on the other end of the continuum   if a person is highly intolerant of uncertainty and they’re traveling to europe they’re going to   have a clearly laid out itinerary they’re going to know exactly what they’re doing on every day   they’re going to have backup plans for if the weather’s changes they’re going to know exactly   how they’re going to get from point a to point b everything is going to be highly organized   those people are highly intolerant of uncertainty now what we know is that for people who worry a   lot they tend to gravitate more towards the highly intolerant end of this tolerating uncertainty   spectrum so the way intolerance of uncertainty works is it’s kind of like a lens through which   a person views the world so you have this person and they’re faced with an uncertain situation   and they’re looking at this uncertain situation through this intolerance of uncertainty lens   what the intolerance of uncertainty lens is going to do is it’s going to bend the person’s   perception or prediction of what’s going to happen to be a negative outcome so they’re   going to think about all of the positive all of the possible negative things that can occur   when faced with that uncertain situation but you can probably also recognize on a logical level   that uncertain situations don’t always lead to negative outcomes that there can be a range of   potential outcomes that on certain situations can result in so some are negative but some uncertain   situations can turn out neutral or they’re neither good nor bad they just kind of are   what they are and then there are some uncertain situations that turn out really positively   so they turn out much better than a person anticipated the situation was going to turn out   i call these happy accidents not expecting them to happen they happen and they’re really great   so uncertain outcomes can fall anywhere on this continuum of possible outcomes but the   intolerance of uncertainty lens prevents a person from really considering the possible positive or   neutral outcomes and all the person ever focuses on is the potential negative outcomes so it’s not   so much the uncertainty that is so sort of scary or anxiety provoking for a person who’s intolerant   of uncertainty it’s not the uncertainty itself it’s what they feel that uncertainty represents   which is the negative outcome the negative potential outcome that they focus on that   this intolerance of uncertainty lends bends their predictions and their perceptions to be all about so what do you do with this information how   exactly does this work and how can you use it to better manage worry well   think about the dilemma that someone who is intolerant of uncertainty experiences on one hand   i’m intolerant of uncertainty yet on the other hand there’s uncertainty in the world around me   and so i have to try to find some way of reconciling these two things the inherent   uncertainty of the world and my intolerance of uncertainty and invariably what people do is they   tend to focus on ways of trying to eliminate uncertainty in their world trying to control   their world trying to be highly organized try to seek lots of information avoid things that   they are uncertain about it’s all designed to try and eliminate uncertainty in the world but how effective do you think that is do you think there is any way   to fully eliminate uncertainty in the world   well the answer is no if you think back to the original model of worry that i talked about   it starts with a trigger and what i mentioned and why i pointed out is that anything can be   a trigger so anything can trigger worry anything can trigger uncertainty any situation   can have uncertainty associated with it so trying to eliminate uncertainty in the world   as a way of trying to manage this intolerance of uncertainty is kind of like a losing battle   it’s sort of like i’m at the bottom of a pit and i want to get out of the pit and   the approach i use to try and get out of the pit is to pick up a shovel and to start digging   now i’m doing lots of work i’m putting lots of effort and energy into trying to get out of the   pit but is picking up a shovel and digging actually getting me out of the pit no it’s   just a lot of work that’s not actually getting me anywhere and that’s what i find for a lot   of my clients who deal with excessive worry and struggle with excessive worry they feel   exhausted because everything they’ve tried to do to manage their worry hasn’t really helped   all of the ways that they try and control their world all of the ways that they try and gather   information all of the ways that they try to avoid or eliminate the uncertainty in their world   isn’t really helping it’s like i’ve got a bucket and i’m trying to fill that bucket with water but   the bucket’s got a big hole in the bottom of it so i’m constantly pouring water into the bucket but   the bucket’s never getting full i will never be able to fully eliminate uncertainty in the world   so the only way of dealing with this dilemma the world has uncertainty in it   and i’m intolerant of uncertainty the only way of really reconciling this dilemma isn’t to focus on   eliminating uncertainty from the world it’s to focus on becoming more tolerant of uncertainty it’s not enough to just know you need to be more tolerant of uncertainty   the idea is you need to behave as if you’re more tolerant of uncertainty most everybody knows at a logical level that uncertainty can lead to a variety of outcomes   they can lead to positive outcomes they can lead to neutral outcomes they can lead to negative   outcomes that’s not an epiphany to people so trying to convince yourself that uncertainty   is going to be okay just based on logic probably isn’t going to be enough to help you become more   tolerant of uncertainty so the key is to start to behave as if you’re more tolerant of uncertainty   to do exposure to uncertainty and see what happens and that’s how we build tolerance for uncertainty   by essentially having experiences with uncertainty and seeing whether or not what i’m worrying about   actually happens but before we can we can get into that you need to know the various   different ways that intolerance of uncertainty is actually manifesting itself in your life   in your behavior in the various things that you do and that’s what i’m going to be focusing on today   what are the various manifestations of intolerance of uncertainty the various ways   that intolerance of uncertainty kind of sneaks up on me sneaks into my life sneaks into my behavior   and is maintaining my worry even if i’m not aware that that’s what’s going on   so the first three manifestations of intolerance of uncertainty that i’m going to be talking about   are essentially variants of the same thing avoiding doing certain things   finding imaginary obstacles or reasons not to do certain things and procrastinating   the idea of avoidance finding imaginary obstacles and procrastinating the idea behind this   is that it gives me a temporary state of certainty so for example if a friend of   mine called me up a few weeks ago and i haven’t returned that phone call and now i’m worrying   about uh whether or not my friend’s going to be upset with me for not having returned the phone   call as long as i’m not making the phone call if i avoid making the phone call to my friend   i have certainty that in this moment my friend isn’t yelling at me my friend isn’t upset with   me my friend isn’t telling me how disappointed they are in me that i didn’t return the phone call   so it gives me this temporary state of certainty that the bad thing that i’m afraid of   isn’t actually happening and that goes for finding those imaginary obstacles or reasons not to do   certain things i can come up with all sorts of explanations and rationale as to why i’m not   going to return that phone call to my friend today i can just put it off and say i’ll do it tomorrow   they’re all forms of avoidance they’re all forms of things i do to give myself   a temporary state of certainty that what i’m afraid of isn’t happening right now the next manifestation of intolerance of uncertainty is having to do everything yourself   not delegating tasks to anybody else the way this works is that if i do everything myself   i know it’s been done right i know it’s been done the way i think it should be done i know   it’s been done to my standards to my expectations the moment i have to bring somebody else in or if   i have to rely on somebody else to do it well now that brings up a whole bunch of uncertainty   what if they don’t do it what if they don’t do it as well as i would have done it what if they   mess it up and it becomes a big mess and they really screw it up and then i have to go in and   fix it anyway you know what it’s just a lot easier if i do it myself so this idea of not delegating   tasks needing to be in control that’s another manifestation of intolerance of uncertainty another manifestation of intolerance of uncertainty is not fully committing yourself to   a relationship a job a project the idea behind this is that if i fully commit myself   to something if i fully give it a hundred percent and the thing doesn’t work out   then i’ll be devastated i’ll be really upset i will have fully invested in it and it doesn’t   work out and so it’s almost like i’m hedging my bets kind of having one foot in one foot out not   fully committing to it that way if the negative thing happens or if the relationship doesn’t work   out or if the project doesn’t work out well i wasn’t fully committed to it anyway it’s not   that big of a deal so it’s like i’m hedging my bets anticipating that it’s not going to work out   now this can be uh really tragic i’ve seen this in a lot of clients unfortunately especially around   the idea of relationships where they don’t fully commit to the relationship because they’re not   sure if the relationship’s gonna turn out and so they’re kind of in and out of the relationship and   they can never fully commit and they’re not sure if they can commit and eventually the relationship   falls apart because they were never able to fully give themselves over to the relationship   i also see this with students who don’t fully commit to their studies they don’t   fully put effort into doing their studies into studying for the test and to doing the paper   that way if they don’t do well   well the reason why they didn’t do well is they didn’t really fully commit themselves to it anyway   but if they were to fully commit themselves to it and they didn’t do well well the only answer is   then is that they’re not good enough so it’s almost like by not fully committing   themselves to the project to the assignment to the studying for the test they’re hedging their bets   that if they if it doesn’t turn out well then that’ll be okay because they didn’t   really commit to it anyway it’s almost like a built-in excuse for why it didn’t go right the next manifestation of intolerance of uncertainty is spreading yourself out   really thin right wanting to sort of participate in a whole bunch of   different things keeping yourself really busy but never fully committing to any   of those little things that you commit to or that you’re keeping yourself busy with   the idea behind this is that i don’t want to miss out on any opportunities so i don’t want to say no   to anything and then later find out that it would have been a great opportunity so i want to keep   all of my options open as long as possible but i won’t commit to any of them i just like to keep   the various options available so it’s like i’m spreading myself out really thin and keeping   busy doing a whole bunch of different things but never actually committing to any of them   now this can lead to feelings of exhaustion because i’m spreading myself out really thin   all the time because i just don’t want to say no to something and then regret it later the next manifestation of intolerance of uncertainty that i want to talk about   is looking for a lot of information before proceeding to do something   so for example if i’m going to buy a digital camera   i’m going to research the heck out of that digital camera i’m going to read every review that has   ever been written about that digital camera i’m going to read every review about every other   digital camera i’m going to watch all the youtube videos about all the features of the   camera it’s almost like i’m constantly looking for that little holy grail piece of information   that’s going to give me certainty that this is the right decision to make so it’s this   excessive information gathering to try and give me reassurance and to give me certainty that i’m   making the right choice now think about how this affects things like efficiency or making   decisions it just takes so much longer to make a decision it makes me highly efficient because   i can’t ever just make a decision i have to think through it over and over and over and look up lots   of information before i can commit to making a decision about which camera i’m going to buy and then the next manifestation of intolerance of uncertainty is that   once i’ve made a decision or i doubt myself and then i check whether or not i made the right   decision so uh once i’ve bought that camera i finally made a decision and i bought a camera   i spend the next six months reading reviews about all of the new cameras that came out since the   time i bought that camera almost like i’m trying to convince myself or to prove to myself that i   made the right choice that uh i should have you know i should have bought the one that i bought   rather than you know waiting a little bit longer because a better camera   came out so it’s always like i’m second guessing decisions that i’ve already made after i make them the next manifestation of intolerance of uncertainty is seeking reassurance from   other people this is essentially a variant of the information gathering manifestation of intolerance   of uncertainty except the way that you’re gathering information with reassurance seeking   is rather than doing your own research you’re asking other people for reassurance hey uh i was   gonna do this this and this what do you think do you think i should be doing that um i uh   i was going to answer my friend in this way what do you think do you think that’s what i should do   what do you think i should do this reassurance seeking is very insidious because what it does   is it really undermines a person’s confidence in their ability if you were confident in   what you were doing why would you have to seek reassurance and have to seek someone else’s input   before you go ahead and do something so the act of reassurance seeking actually undermines confidence   and that’s why a lot of people who worry a lot lack confidence is because they’re really worried   about making the wrong choices or making the wrong decisions or upsetting someone and so they engage   in this reassurance seeking to try and give them a sense of certainty that everything’s   going to be okay but in doing so it just undermines their confidence and their abilities   and it’s really tragic and it’s really um it’s really one of the ways that this intolerance of   uncertainty chips away at a person and really contributes to their worry and their anxiety the next manifestation of intolerance of uncertainty uh is one that when i bring it   up with clients they either relate to it or they don’t relate to it at all um and the idea here is   try and explain everything away rationally or always trying to imagine everything’s gonna turn   out well so it’s almost like creating a false sense of certainty so rather than going into   an uncertain situation and saying look i don’t really know how it’s going to turn out let’s see this manifestation of intolerance of uncertainty is is kind of like always thinking the bright   side is going to happen and always telling yourself the bright side is going to happen   so it’s not so much i don’t know what’s going to happen it’s everything’s going to be fine   no no no everything’s going to be fine just think positively it’s all going to be okay   well the thing is i i don’t know it’s all going to be okay so by telling myself that i i kind of know   that i’m sort of trying to pull the wool over my eyes it doesn’t really give me any sense of   comfort because i know it’s not true i know that i can’t know for certain that it’s going to be okay   so this is well like i said this is one that sometimes people do sometimes they don’t or   they don’t relate to but it is surprising when people will sometimes look at this manifestation   of intolerance of uncertainty say yeah no i don’t do that but once they start paying attention to   their behavior they realize oh wow i actually do that and i never realized that i was doing it the next manifestation of intolerance of uncertainty that i wanted to talk about   is double checking things or redoing them because i’m no longer certain that i did   them right in the first place so if i’m going to send an email i double and triple check that   email because i want to make sure there’s no spelling errors in it i want to make sure that   everything’s clear or there’s no way of misinterpreting what i’m saying or i don’t want   to offend someone so i want to make sure that the tone is is right in that email so i’ll double and   triple check it i i won’t send it i’ll come back to it and read it over   again this kills efficiency because i can’t just send an email i have to read it over   and read it over and read it over and try to be certain that there’s nothing wrong with it and the final manifestation of intolerance of uncertainty that i wanted to talk about   today is over protecting others uh taking care of other people   this is a big one with parents and this is kind of like a variant of that earlier one that i talked   about which is not delegating tasks except in this case the tasks that aren’t being delegated   are allowing the person the other person to take care of themselves   so like i said this is a big one for parents who are overprotective or are over involved in their   children’s lives and their children’s behavior in their children’s relationships so uh they’re   the ones that are trying to uh fix or coordinate any sort of arguments or little fights between   their child and a friend or they do everything for their child because they want to make sure   that the child is okay or that everything gets done right for the child so what this does is it   it doesn’t really allow the person who’s being over protected from doing things on their own   from learning from their own mistakes so it’s like trying to cocoon them in this in this protective   bubble wrap but it doesn’t actually protect the person because ultimately they’re going to have   to learn to do these things on their own and so it really is about giving this person a giving   me a false sense of security and certainty that uh this person that i care about is going to be okay so that’s a lot of manifestations of intolerance of uncertainty and there’s a lot of different   ways that this intolerance of uncertainty can kind of weave its way into a person’s   life and this is one of the reasons why i really like this concept of intolerance of   uncertainty because you can think of it kind of like an umbrella concept that helps explain   why all of these various seemingly different behaviors are all serving or all attempting   to serve the same purpose so how is me avoiding returning a phone call to a friend the same as   me spending hours and hours researching a digital camera well because they’re both designed to try   and eliminate uncertainty in my world and in doing so they’re both maintaining my worry   and my anxiety that things are going to turn out badly or things are going to turn out negatively so may raise the the question of well so what what do i do with this information so i see   i’ve learned about all these manifestations of intolerance of uncertainty what now so the idea is   to spend some time observing your behavior and looking for personal examples in your life of the   various ways in which intolerance of uncertainty may have manifested itself in terms of your   behavior once you start looking for it what you may recognize is that there’s all sorts of ways   in which you’ve been behaving that are designed to eliminate or reduce or avoid uncertainty in   your life and it’s that avoidance of uncertainty or that trying to eliminate uncertainty that may   be one of the big things that’s perpetuating or maintaining your worry and your anxiety   so one of the things i often encourage people to do is you know keep a list of these manifestations   of intolerance of uncertainty and spend a week or two paying attention to your behavior and seeing   which of these do i do and what are personal examples of each of these things that i do so the key to understanding building tolerance for uncertainty is to understand that when we   talk about worries we’re talking about thoughts that are predictions of something that’s going to   happen so the idea is to reconceptualize your worry or think about your worries   not so much as worries or factual things that are going to happen but essentially   predictions and hypotheses of what’s going to happen so the key way we build tolerance   for uncertainty is through behavioral exposure to uncertainty essentially doing what i call   tolerating uncertainty experiments so the idea with these tolerating uncertainty experiments   is to put those predictions to the test and see how accurate those predictions actually   are so for example if i’m avoiding returning a phone call to a friend because i’m concerned   they might be upset with me i might come up with a tolerating uncertainty experiment that gets me to   call my friend so that’s the behavior that’s the tolerating uncertainty experiment   behavior that i’m going to do return the phone call to my friend   the next thing to think about then is what is it that i’m worrying about what is my   worry telling me is going to happen when i return the phone call to a friend   so the idea is you’re setting up the experiment and you’re thinking about the hypothesis   the hypothesis or the prediction ahead of time and so what i’ll often give my clients is a worksheet   to help them organize these tolerating uncertainty experiments in their mind and i’ll put a link to   the worksheet down below so that you can download it and see it for yourself so the first two   the first two parts of the worksheet you do before you actually engage in the experiment   come up with the chosen behavior and then you think about what is it that i’m worrying is   going to happen what does my worry predict or what is my worry telling me is going to happen   now this is where worry awareness training becomes really important we talked about   worry awareness training right at the beginning of this series on worry management you need to know   what it is that you’re worrying about before you can actually begin to manage the worry   so the worry becomes central in this experiment this is what we’re testing   we’re testing whether or not the worry what we worry about is actually going to happen   so now i’ve come up with my behavior i’ve come up with my hypothesis the worry prediction   then i go and do the experiment i actually pick up the phone and i call my friend this is the data   collection portion of the experiment and i write down and i record what actually happened i called   my friend and they were really pleased to to hear from me they were surprised why i hadn’t returned   their call and uh they had some really exciting news to tell me and it turned out really well or   i call my friend and they tell me that they’ve got some bad news they just lost their job and they   were calling me up to get some support or to get some advice as to what they should do   or i call my friend and they are really angry with me and they’re really upset because i keep flaking   out on them and i’m never available for them when they call whatever the outcome i record it   and then i come up with my conclusion based on the outcome was my worry accurate   was my worry prediction did it actually come true   so if you think about this if you do say a hundred of these tolerating uncertainty experiments   and 95 of the hundred tolerating uncertainty experiments turn out negatively so they turn   out badly 95 percent of the time what does that tell you about uncertainty well what it tells you about uncertainty is that uncertainty is bad   that uncertainty is something to be afraid of that most of the time the vast majority of the time   when i’m uncertain about something bad things will happen and so what i should   do is get better at avoiding uncertainty get better at eliminating uncertainty in my life   if 95 of the time these tolerating uncertainty experiments turn out badly but what if 95 of the 100 experiments that i do turn out either neutral or positively what   does that tell me about uncertainty well what it tells me about uncertainty is 19 times out of 20   the uncertainty is just fine nothing bad happens and so how do you think that’s going to change   how i orient myself towards uncertainty how do you think that’s going to change how i   think about and feel about uncertainty well i’m probably not going to be as afraid of uncertainty   if through a hundred experiences with it it’s turned out just fine so the idea here isn’t to try and convince yourself through logic or just rational thinking   that uncertainty is okay the idea here is for you to determine how you should feel about uncertainty   through experiences with uncertainty and by setting up these tolerating uncertainty   experiments you’re giving yourself explicit examples of times where you   did something you were uncertain about you were worrying that this was going to happen   and what you were worrying about didn’t actually happen   and the more you see to the more you sort of see and the more you observe and the more you   demonstrate to yourself that the things that you worry about don’t actually happen the less   weight the less uh importance the less value you’re going to put on your worries   it’s kind of like if every time the weatherman said that it was going to rain it was sunny   and every time the weatherman said it was going to be sunny it rained essentially the weatherman’s   terrible at predicting the weather so the next time the weatherman says it’s going to rain   you’re not going to take your umbrella because you know it’s going to be sunny   if your predictions are not very good you’re not going to put much weight   or much value in those predictions and that’s all worry is it is a prediction   so that’s one way of building tolerance for uncertainty actually setting up these tolerating   uncertainty experiments using the worksheet that you can download and fill out you fill out the   first two sections before you do the experiment what is the experiment and what is your prediction   then you do it you record the data and you record your conclusion   so it’s sort of forward thinking pre-planned tolerating uncertainty experiment   the second way of building tolerance for uncertainty is taking advantage of naturally   occurring opportunities in your life to do things that you’re uncertain about the reality is   we’re faced with uncertainty every day multiple times a day and the vast majority of the time   that uncertainty is turning out fine we’re just not even really aware we’re not even   processing that the uncertainty is turning out fine so what i often encourage clients to do   to try and take advantage of naturally occurring opportunities to be more tolerant of uncertainty   is to imagine the following question tattooed to the frontal lobe of their brain   so essentially they’re filtering their world through this question and the question is   if i were more tolerant of uncertainty what would i do in this situation if i were more tolerant of uncertainty would i order the same thing i always order in this   restaurant or would i order something different if i were more tolerant of uncertainty would i ask   that person out for a date or would i stay in my seat and not say anything if i were more tolerant   for uncertainty would i answer the call even though the i don’t recognize the number or would   i let it go to voicemail if i were more tolerant of uncertainty would i speak up and express my   opinion in this meeting at work or would i stay quiet and wait to see what everybody else says you have countless opportunities to tolerate uncertainty on a daily basis you just have to   look for those opportunities and take advantage of those opportunities when they present themselves   i were more tolerant of uncertainty what would i do in this situation   you don’t have to do all of the tolerating uncertainties things but just be aware of it   just keep that question in mind help that orient you towards uncertainty to look for uncertainty   in your day-to-day life and every once in a while do the uncertain thing and see what happens because what you do by doing these tolerating uncertainty experiments either   the ones that are pre-planned or the ones that are just taking advantage of naturally   occurring opportunities that come up you can think of what you’re doing kind of like   putting money in a tolerating uncertainty bank account what you’re doing is you’re   having conscious explicit experiences with uncertainty where you think about what it   is that you are concerned is going to happen and then compare it to what actually happens   and by being aware of that and seeing that the uncertainty doesn’t turn out badly all the time   or rarely turns out badly what you’re doing is it’s almost like you’re making deposits   in this tolerating uncertainty bank account each time you do one of these experiments   and so through these ex through these experiences with uncertainty the more and more of these   experiences that you have with uncertainty where uncertainty turns out well or fine or not negative   that tolerating uncertainty bank account gets bigger and bigger and so when you’re faced with   a bigger uncertainty in life what you can do is you can draw from this bank account you can   think about and reflect on all of the various experiences you’ve had with uncertainty in your   life where it turned out fine and so if all of those uncertainties turned out fine there’s   a good chance this big uncertainty that i’m concerned about is going to turn out fine as well so those are the two main ways of building tolerance for uncertainty   planning ahead and actually setting up experiments and taking advantage of the   numerous opportunities you have in your day-to-day life to tolerate uncertainty   if i were more tolerant of uncertainty what would i do in this situation so today we’re going to be talking about another factor that perpetuates excessive worry   and that relates to this notion of beliefs about the usefulness of worry one of the things that   we know about people who tend to worry a lot is that they tend to hold beliefs that the worry is   actually serving some benefit for them so when i first bring this up with a lot of my clients   what they tend to do is kind of look at me a little bit odd and say hold on a second   um i recognize that my worry is causing me a lot of problems and now you’re telling me   that i have some underlying beliefs that worry is actually serving me some benefit or that i   think it’s doing something good for me so the way i like to sort of introduce this concept   of beliefs about the usefulness of worry is to use an example and the example is that   i change the oil in my car every 5 000 kilometers because i believe that changing   the oil in my car every 5 000 kilometers is good for the long-term maintenance   of the vehicle it helps with the efficiency it helps with preventing costly repairs down the line   and it’s just something that’s good to do because it helps my car run well and problem free   now suppose one day a friend of mine pulls me aside and this friend knows everything there   is to know about cars and this friend says to me hey ramy you know that whole   oil change every 5 000 kilometers thing it’s a bit of a scam by the oil companies all they’re really   trying to do is to get you to buy more oil nothing bad is happening to the engine oil it’s perfectly   fine you don’t need to change it at all now if i believed what my friend was telling me how would   that change my behavior would i continue to change the oil in my car every five thousand kilometers   well probably not because the only reason i’m changing oil in my car every five thousand   kilometers is because i believe that changing oil in my car every five thousand kilometers   is serving me some benefit some usefulness the moment i stop seeing any usefulness or benefit   to changing the oil every 5000 kilometers then i’m going to stop doing it   so now relating this to excessive worry what we know is that for people who tend to worry a lot   they tend to hold beliefs that worry is actually serving some benefit some usefulness for them so   the first belief is this notion that worry helps motivate me the idea that uh when i’m worrying   about something it’s activating me to go and do something about it it’s activating me to engage   rather than just being really relaxed about it and if i’m not worrying about it i’m not really going   to be all that motivated to do anything to engage in an activity to try and change the situation at   all so the notion here is that worry in and of itself acts as a motivator to be that sort   of that spark under me or that kick in the pants that i need to get going and uh and do something the second common belief about the usefulness of worry is that worry helps with problem solving   now the idea behind this is that if i’m worrying about a problem   it’s keeping the problem in my mind it’s helping me think about the problem a lot and by thinking   about the problem a lot what that’s doing is it’s helping me potentially come up with solutions   uh or you know ways of addressing this problem that i may not otherwise have   if i wasn’t worrying about it as much so the idea here is that the worry benefits me   because it helps keep a problem in my mind and helps me figure out ways to solve that problem the third common worry belief is it’s got a bit of a superstitious flavor to it   and the idea here is that worry in and of itself can prevent bad things from happening   another way of thinking about it is if i don’t worry about something   then it’s almost like i’m jinxing myself it’s almost like uh if i don’t worry about   this presentation that i’m going to give then that will be the time and that will be the presentation   that things go really badly it’s almost like the universe is giving me a smack on the backside   for not worrying enough or not being concerned enough about this presentation so the notion   here is that worry in and of itself can prevent bad things from happening related to this but   just a little bit differently is this notion that worry can protect me from future negative emotions   so if i’m worrying about something bad happening it’s almost like i’m emotionally preparing myself   just in case that bad thing were to happen so i won’t be caught off guard i won’t be surprised i   won’t be blindsided by the negative thing because i’ve been worrying about it and i’ve been thinking   about it so the notion here is that if the bad thing were to happen well i’ve already kind of   pre-prepared myself for the negative thing and i’ve prepared myself emotionally   to deal with it so i’m not caught off guard and i’m not surprised   and the final worry belief is this notion that ruri represents a positive personality   characteristic essentially what kind of person would i be if i didn’t worry about my children   what kind of person would i be if i didn’t worry about my relationship what kind of   person would i be if i didn’t worry about my performance at work it’s almost like worry   acts as this this measure of how much i care how conscientious how responsible i am so by   worrying it demonstrates that i care about these things that i’m responsible that i’m conscientious   and so that’s actually a really good thing it demonstrates a really positive aspect or really   positive aspects of my personality so if you think about these five worry beliefs if worry   actually did serve to motivate me help me solve problems prevented bad things from happening   protected me from future negative emotions and demonstrated a positive personality characteristic   well then that would seem to to be something that i should be doing   of course i should be worrying if it actually served all of these purposes but as you can probably guess worry doesn’t actually do any of these five things and   i’ll explain why it doesn’t in uh the next video uh but you may now raise the question   of okay well well so what what do i do with this information now you’ve you’ve told me about five   worry beliefs that promote anxiety and promote worry so what what can i do with this information   well the first thing to do is to use these worry beliefs and notice them when you catch yourself   worrying the idea here is that for a lot of people this this concept of part of the   reason why i worry excessively is because i think that the worry is doing something positive for me   this is a bit of a foreign concept people often when i work with my clients they’ve never thought   about any potential benefits that they may have perceived that worry is giving them and so the   first step is to just be aware of which of these worry beliefs actually play a role in my worry now   there may be some of these worry beliefs that you’re sort of that we’re talking about that   right away you’re saying no that doesn’t that doesn’t apply to me i don’t believe that at all   it’s not so much whether or not you believe the worry belief to be 100 true all the time   but it’s more like you want to ask yourself the question am i behaving as if   i believe this worry belief to be true and so uh for a week or two spend some time paying attention   to a what it is that you’re worrying about and then when you notice what you’re worrying about   ask yourself are there any of these five worry beliefs that may be playing a role in this worry   because once you’re aware of the common worry beliefs that you tend to use   then you can begin working on challenging those worry beliefs and evaluating whether or not those   worry beliefs are true but you can’t do that unless you’re aware of what the worry beliefs   actually are but once you identify the worry beliefs the question then becomes okay well what   do i do with that information so if i know that i’m engaging in this worry in part because i hold   this worry belief how can i go about changing that and that’s what we’re going to be talking   about today ways of challenging the validity of these beliefs and assumptions about worry so   what we’re going to do is go through each of the five worry beliefs and talk about different ways   and different questions to ask yourself to help you challenge the validity of the worry belief   because it’s important not only to recognize that the worry belief   isn’t true or that the worry belief is a myth but also to understand why it’s not true   because that results in a much more compelling challenge to the usefulness of the worry   so the first worry belief that we talked about is this notion that worry acts as a motivator   that worry is the kick in the pants that i need to get going to engage in in doing things that   if i didn’t worry i wouldn’t be particularly motivated i wouldn’t be particularly successful   here are some questions to think about how you’d go about challenging that belief so if you believe   that worry does actually motivate you well have you ever met anyone or ever known anyone who was   really successful and was really able to motivate themselves who didn’t seem to worry excessively   well if so then what that means is that worry isn’t a necessary component for success   or motivation another question to ask yourself is does worry dramatically improve your performance   or your ability if so by what percentage it does it make a big change so when you’re worrying a lot   do you find that you perform even better or do you find that sometimes when you’re worrying a lot   it actually interferes with motivation it actually causes problems that make you less motivated   to engage in activity or to do something so think about how you feel when you’re   worrying excessively what does that do to concentration what does that do to energy level   so if you’re worrying a lot and it’s causing you to lose focus or lose concentration   how exactly does that help motivate you if your worrying is so exhausting and wearing you out   so much how does that um how does that help you get things done if you don’t have as much energy   when you’re worrying a lot what does that do to your tendency to want to engage in an activity   when we talked about intolerance of uncertainty we talked about one of the manifestations of   intolerance of uncertainty is procrastination so if worrying is causing you to procrastinate a lot   how exactly can that be something that’s consistent with something that helps motivate you   so these are some of the questions to ask yourself to challenge that belief that worry helps motivate   me so the next worry belief that we talked about is that worry helps with problem solving   it’s this notion that by worrying a lot about the problem it keeps the problem in my mind   and it helps me come up with solutions for that problem so if we want to look at whether or not   this belief is true you want to ask yourself the question does worry actually solve the problem   is worrying the same as problem solving well worrying as we talked about in an earlier video   is essentially looping a feared negative outcome over and over and over again in your head it is   something that you’re doing cognitively it’s something that is just a bunch of thoughts   spinning in your head whereas problem solving is a much more active behavioral task you’re   defining problems you’re coming up with possible solutions you’re implementing solutions you’re   doing something about it so what you want to be clear on is are you worrying or are you problem   solving and you don’t want to be mixing up the two because worrying isn’t the same as problem solving   worry doesn’t have any effect on the world worry is something that you’re doing in your head   it doesn’t actually solve a problem so being very careful to   distinguish between worrying versus active problem solving   another question to ask yourself just like with the the previous worry belief is do you know   anyone who’s really good at solving problems who’s able to get things done who’s able to   figure out solutions to problems who doesn’t worry excessively well if you’re able to identify at   least one person in your life who doesn’t worry excessively but is still able to solve problems   what that suggests is maybe you don’t need to worry excessively to be good at solving problems and tying back to another question that we asked earlier think about what worry does to   your anxiety levels and think about when you’re feeling really anxious what does that do to how   well you’re able to think clearly how well you’re able to concentrate how well you’re able to   think creatively well we know that worry and anxiety interfere in all of these things   so by worrying what you’re doing is you’re making it more difficult to concentrate you’re making it   more difficult to think clearly through situations and you’re making it more difficult to think more   clearly or more creatively so by worrying what you’re doing is actually interfering in   the cognitive skills and the tools that you need for effective problem solving so these are some   questions to ask yourself if you believe and if you think that worry helps you solve your problems now the third worry belief we talked about has a bit of a superstitious flavor to it and it’s   this notion that worry can prevent bad things from happening just the act of worrying can   uh help prevent me from being jinxed uh or can prevent the bad thing from occurring well   to challenge this belief you want to ask yourself some questions based on experience have you ever   worried about something bad happening and the bad thing actually did happen   well if we were to able to prevent bad things from happening then every time you worried   the bad thing shouldn’t happen think about potentially setting up a   an experiment one thing i i’ll often get people who hold this worry belief to do is to go out and   buy a lottery ticket and then for one week to spend five to ten minutes every day worrying   excessively worrying as hard as they can about having wasted their money on that lottery ticket think about what should happen then if worry can prevent bad things from happening what should   happen well they should win the lottery because by worrying about having wasted their money on   the ticket if worry can prevent the bad thing from taking place can prevent the negative outcome then   the person shouldn’t experience a negative outcome which means that they should win the lottery   not once in all my years of doing this has a client come back and said hey guess what i won the   lottery so that’s another way of challenging this notion that worry can in and of itself have some   impact on the outcome you also want to think about is it the worry that’s preventing the negative   outcome or is it things that you’re doing that are preventing the negative outcome so for example if   i’m worrying about a presentation that i’m going to give and that presentation turned out fine   after i worried excessively was it the worry that ensured that the presentation went well   or was it the fact that i prepared really well for the presentation that ensured that   the presentation went well is it maybe the fact that i kind of knew what i was talking about   that ensured that the presentation went well maybe it has nothing to do with the worry   a fourth common worry belief is this notion that by worrying about something bad happening   it almost protects me from future negative emotions by uh preparing me emotionally just   in case the bad thing were to happen so if the bad thing were to take place uh by worrying about   it what i’ve done is kind of prepared myself for that bad thing so i’m not caught off guard   i’m not surprised and in some ways then that that can help reduce the impact of the negative emotion   well have you ever worried about something bad happening   and the bad thing actually happened how did you feel afterwards did you say to yourself   yeah you know i don’t feel so bad because i’ve been worrying about it for the last three weeks   probably not another way i get people to think about this is it’s a bit abstract and it’s a bit   of a silly math uh puzzle but i like it because it it helps explain uh how to really get at this   notion or really challenge this notion that worry prevents me from feeling bad in case something bad   happens so i want you to think about sort of negative emotion in terms of   pieces of suck how much it would suck if this thing happened so suppose one of my big worries   is that my family is going to be killed in a motor vehicle accident and i worry about this a lot   well think about what that worry does in terms of how it makes me feel well it’s   probably going to suck to be worrying about this all the time and to be thinking about this all   the time so maybe that’s a hundred pieces of suck now imagine tragically one day my family is killed   in a motor vehicle accident say that is a thousand pieces of suck well do you think the moment i   pick up the phone and uh hear the message that my family’s been killed in a motor vehicle accident   do you think that moment when i hear that news that i’m going to be saying to myself wow it’s   a good thing that i’ve been worrying about this for so long i don’t feel so bad right now   no it’s gonna suck it’s gonna suck that thousand pieces of sock whether or not i’ve been worrying   about it or not so if you do the math i worry excessively about my family being killed   in an accident that’s a hundred pieces of suck my family is killed in a motor vehicle accident   that adds a thousand pieces of suck to the equation so what am i left with i’m left with   1100 pieces of suck well suppose i don’t worry excessively about it well i have zero pieces   of suck and then if the bad thing were to actually happen i have a thousand pieces of sock so the net   result is i end up with a thousand pieces of sock it’s still better than the 1100 pieces of sock   now suppose my family never gets killed in a motor vehicle accident well i’m worrying   about it happening so that’s a hundred pieces of suck it doesn’t happen that’s zero pieces of   sock i’m left with a hundred pieces of sock but if i don’t worry about it it’s zero pieces of   sock if it never happens that’s zero pieces of sock i end up with zero pieces of sock   so um it’s a bit of a a sort of a strange or silly math puzzle but what i find is that for a lot of   my clients it really resonates with them you know just do the math how many pieces of suck are you   actually saving by worrying about this probably not any and you’re probably actually making   the situation worse so the final worry belief i want to talk about challenging is this notion   that worry represents a positive personality characteristic that by worrying excessively   it demonstrates a sense of caring a sense of responsibility a sense of conscientiousness   this is a big worry belief for parents especially moms who who often tell me what kind of person   would i be if what kind of mother would i be if i didn’t worry about my children   and so i asked the question well what are some of the other characteristics that make you a   good mother aside from worrying can you think of any other characteristics that are important to be   a good mother another way of thinking about it is does the worry ever interfere in you being able to   be your best does it ever interfere in terms of how well you’re able to engage in relationships   how well you’re able to be present in situations does the worry ever interfere in those things   well if so then how can it be a positive personality characteristic how can it be   a positive personality characteristic if it interferes in your relationships if   none of your friends or people close to you think that your tendency to worry is a good thing   do you know conscientious responsible caring loving people who don’t worry excessively   if so then worry probably isn’t necessary to be conscientious to be caring to be responsible so these are the five worry beliefs and these are some questions to help you   challenge each of those worry beliefs and so you might be thinking now okay   well so what what can i do with this how do i actually use this information to help me worry   less so the way you do it is through something we call cognitive therapy and this is essentially   thinking about your thinking now this is a bit of a challenging task because we’re not typically   used to thinking about what we’re thinking and we’re definitely not used to thinking about   our thoughts about what we’re thinking and that’s kind of what we’re doing here so you have to be   aware of what your worry is that’s cognitive layer one then you have to be aware of your worry belief   that’s cognitive layer two and now we’re challenging the beliefs about the usefulness   of worry that’s cognitive layer three so this is a bit of a challenging task if you’re trying to   do it all in your head and so to help uh to help be better able to challenge these worry beliefs   i’ve come up with a series of questions to help you work through this and i   have a worksheet that i give my clients and i’ll be linking to it in the description down below   so you can download and take a look at this but it helps you organize your thoughts to help challenge   the beliefs that you have about the usefulness of the worry so the way it works is the first   thing you need to do is identify what it is that you’re worrying about this again goes back to that   foundational skill i talked about in the very first video which is worry awareness training   being aware of what it is that you’re worrying about so you identify your worry   then the next question to ask yourself is what are the beliefs about the usefulness of this worry   that may be playing a role in this worry do i think this worry is helping motivate   me do i think this worry is helping me solve problems do i think this worry shows that i’m   a caring person do i think that this worry is going to prevent something bad from happening   do i think this worry is going to protect me from negative emotions in case something bad   does happen so you identify which of the worry beliefs might be playing a role in this worry the   third question then to ask is if i had to prove to myself that these beliefs may not be true   what are some of the things what is some of the evidence that i would point out   so essentially using some of those questions i talked about earlier and challenging each of   these worry beliefs so if i think that this worry about my child shows that i’m a caring parent i   may want to start asking myself some questions of well does does my worry ever interfere with   me being a good parent does my worry ever make it more difficult for me to be present in these   situations and moments with my child well if so then how can that make me a good parent   so you’re using some of those questions to help challenge the worry belief then the fourth question you want to ask yourself is what’s the benefit for me continuing to worry   about this issue right now and it’s not uncommon for the answer to this question to be none   once you identified the worry belief and you’ve challenged the validity of the worry belief   oftentimes it’s easy for a person to see well there’s there’s no real benefit for me to continue   worrying about it that takes us to the fifth question which is okay if there’s no benefit   of continuing to worry about it what are the costs associated with worrying about it so when   you’re thinking about the costs associated with worry what you want to think about is things like   how does this worry or your tendency to worry interfere with your productivity your performance   um how does it make you feel how does it what is the impact that it has on your relationships   with other people what are the negative impacts that worrying excessively about this topic are   having on you and having on uh other people are there other people who seem to get similar results   as you without the same costs associated with this worry   so really thinking about what are the negatives associated with the worry what are the   negative impacts that this worry is having on you because you want to think about that   in the context of this equation that we’re looking at which is asking kind of the ultimate question   of should i continue to worry about this is there value in continuing to worry about this   so you’ve gone through these five questions what’s the worry what’s the benefits associated   with the perceived benefits associated with this worry what are some of the challenges uh to those   perceived benefits what is the potential benefit of continuing to worry about this   what is the cost of continuing to worry about this and based on all of that information you come up   with a conclusion a conclusion about now that i’ve thought through all of these things should   i continue to worry about this topic is there value in continuing to worry about this topic   and what you end up with is a much more compelling challenge a much more compelling challenge to   the purpose or the utility of that worry than what people typically do which is   just stop worrying about it it’s silly you shouldn’t be worrying about it well   this goes beyond that it’s not so dismissive of the worry it’s more about i know i should stop   worrying about it because of this this and this reason and because of this this and this cost   so it’s a much more compelling uh more rounded challenge to the validity of this worry   so this is a challenging skill it’s challenging because for the most part we’re not used to   thinking about our thinking so it takes a fair bit of practice and so i hope if you’re interested in   trying this out or using some of these skills please download that worksheet that’s in the   description section below and try it out uh don’t worry if you’re not getting it right off the bat   it is a challenging task but with practice what i find is that people get a lot better at   identifying and challenging some of the benefits they perceive that they’re getting from a worry what we’re going to be focusing on now is tools and skills specifically to address   type 1 worries so worries about actual problems so it may not become as much of a surprise that   the primary way we deal with type 1 worries is to solve the problem that’s contributing to the worry   and so that leads us to a question about you know why is it that people who worry a lot tend not to   have very effective or tend not to engage in very effective problem solving so uh there was   some studies that were done that looked at how is it that people who worry a lot how   how good are their problem solving skills compared to people who don’t worry a lot   and you might be surprised by the findings and what they found was that there’s actually   no difference in the problem-solving abilities of people who worry a lot   versus people who don’t worry a lot but what is different is that people who tend to worry a lot   tend not to use the problem-solving skills that they have whereas people who don’t worry a lot   tend to be able to use their problem-solving skills more frequently and more effectively   so you can think of this kind of like the way i like to think of it is it’s kind of like   a garage door where it doesn’t matter if you have the best problem solving skills in the world   you can have the ferrari of problem solving skills but if that garage door is down it doesn’t matter   if you have a ferrari in the garage or if you have a tricycle in the garage neither of those   problem solving skills are going to be able to get out of the garage and so this garage door is   something that we refer to as negative problem orientation it’s a tendency to view problems   in an overly negative way seeing problems as threatening as dangerous viewing myself as not   being very good at solving problems or addressing problems and so if i don’t think i’m very good at   solving problems if i don’t think that i should be having problems if i don’t think that   problems are are good or that every time i have a problem it means that there’s something wrong   i’m not going to be all that motivated to actually want to engage or do something about a problem   and so if i’m not actually engaging in a problem if if i procrastinate or i avoid dealing with   a problem what tends to happen to the problem well typically problems that you don’t deal with   don’t go away by themselves and they tend to fester and grow and mushroom until they become   a crisis and now it’s a crisis that you have to deal with and so you go into the situation   and now i’m dealing with a crisis situation and i deal with that crisis situation by spontaneously   coming up with the first thing that comes to mind to try and deal with this problem that   is not a very good recipe for effective problem solving a crisis situation and me spontaneously   coming up with a solution right off the top of my head to address this crisis situation   and so what that ends up happening is what ends up happening is i don’t really address the problem   very well and then that reinforces my negative beliefs and my negative views about problems   that problems are bad uh problems i shouldn’t have problems and i’m terrible at dealing with problems   and so as long as i hold those views and i don’t engage in problem solving that’s just going to   maintain the problems and it’s just going to maintain my worry about those problems so if we   want to improve worry management skills if we want to worry less about problems we need to get better   at solving problems and in order to get better at solving problems we have to be able to   use the problem-solving skills we have and in order to use those problem solving skills   we need to address this negative problem orientation we need to get the garage door   to move up and then to be able to let our problem solving skills out of the garage so   negative problem orientation tends to have sort of three components   to it and the first component of negative problem orientation is this tendency to see problems as   abnormal or that there’s something wrong with me that i have problems that uh other   people don’t seem to have the same problems that i do related to this is the idea that   problems should be solved quickly and easily and that if i’m not able to solve a problem   really quickly or if i’m not able to solve a problem the first time i try to solve the problem   then that means that there’s something wrong that i should be able to solve a problem quickly   and easily and if i can’t then that just goes to show that there’s something wrong   with this problem or there’s something wrong with me for having problems like this so that’s   one sort of manifestation of this negative problem orientation second manifestation of this negative   problem orientation is a tendency to focus entirely on the threat components of the problem   so when faced with a problem all i think about is all the things that could go wrong   so if you think about uh if you think about the possible outcomes of a problem on a continuum   where one end of the continuum is opportunity or challenge opportunities for things to work out   and the other end of the continuum are uh i see it as entirely threatening 100 threat   well what we know is that with people with this negative problem orientation for with   people who worry a lot they tend to gravitate more towards focusing on the threat aspect of a problem   and so if all you think about when you think about solving a problem   is all the things that could go wrong and how badly it can turn out that’s not   particularly motivating it’s not particularly good as a motivator to get me to do something   about that problem so i end up in this paralysis zone where all i’m really doing is focusing on the   negative potential outcomes and i’m paralyzed to do anything about it   so uh what ends up happening is i don’t really engage in trying to solve the problem or trying   to deal with the problem because i don’t really see many opportunities for things to work out well   and that leads to the third component of negative problem orientation is that sometimes people can   get so good at avoiding problems that they fail to recognize when a problem’s actually there   they get so good at being avoidant to problems that they don’t recognize that a problem exists   until it’s too late until it becomes a crisis like i talked about before so if i’m not even   aware or if i’m not even recognizing that a problem’s there i’m not going to be able to engage   in trying to solve the problem so i have these three components of negative problem orientation   i see problems as abnormal that there’s something wrong with me for having problems i focus entirely   on the potential threat or danger associated with the problem and i get so good at avoiding problems   that i fail to even recognize when problems exist if i have those three things going on   i’m not going to be particularly good at actually engaging or doing anything with regards to problem   solving so the question becomes okay well what do i do with this if i if i recognize that i’m   i’m i have this negative problem orientation i don’t deal well with problems what do i do   so let’s talk about how you challenge each of these components of negative problem orientation   so if you find that you tend to view problems as abnormal or is there something wrong with me   for that i have problems or problems should be solved quickly and easily first thing i   typically ask my clients is well do you know anyone who doesn’t have problems or is the   presence of problems indicative of there’s something being wrong   or is it the case that just everybody has problems and that there’s nothing really wrong with   the fact that you actually have problems because having problems is just a natural state of being   everybody has problems so it’s really about normalizing the occurrence of problems   beautiful people in hollywood have problems people who are down and out have problems   rich or rich and powerful politicians have problems everybody’s got problems   so the fact that you have a problem or the fact that you have problems doesn’t necessarily mean   that there’s something wrong with you it just means that you’re like everybody else   we all have problems and no one ever said that problems should be solved quickly and easily   i sort of think of it as kind of like the the sitcom approach to viewing problems where people   hold this attitude that uh problems should be resolved just like they are on tv sitcoms where   a problem arises in the first five minutes of the show there’s then 20 minutes of zany hijinx   and then everything gets wrapped up nicely in the last five minutes problem solved everyone goes on   with their life while that works really well in tv sitcoms no one ever said that real world   or real life problems are actually like that so if you’re having problems that you find are   challenging or difficult to overcome well welcome to the club everybody has those types of problems   and no one ever said that problems should be solved quickly or easily so really challenging   this component of negative problem orientation is really about normalizing the occurrence of   problems and normalizing the fact that some problems are just really difficult to address the second component of negative problem orientation this tendency to focus on the threat   component of the problem well if you think back   if you think about our our continuum and i’m stuck in the paralysis zone where all i’m   thinking about is all of the potential threat or danger that is associated with this problem   all of the things that could go wrong with this problem well you know part of this has to do with   intolerance of uncertainty and we talked about that in a prior video intolerance of uncertainty   goes very well and hand in hand with this fear of addressing problems or this viewing problems   as threats because problems at their core by definition are things that we’re uncertain about   the solution to the problem if we knew exactly what we needed to do to solve a particular problem   then it wouldn’t be a problem it would just be a series of steps that i need to engage in   what makes it a problem is the uncertainty and the unknown of what it is that i need to do to   solve this problem or how i solve this problem and so this intolerance of uncertainty can get   a person to really focus on all of the the potential threat or danger associated with   potentially trying to address this problem so the idea here is to try and reframe   the problem as an opportunity and try and get it out of this paralysis zone where all you’re   focusing on is the potential threat so it’s just a reframe uh thinking about the problem in a bit   of a different way you don’t have to see the problem as entirely good or it’s going to be   really wonderful to try and solve this problem but you just need to get out of this paralysis zone   so you just need to reframe or shift the problem or shift your perception of the problem just   a little bit to get out of that paralysis zone so that you can see a little bit of opportunity   and with that little bit of opportunity now you might be more motivated to actually engage   in this problem and solving the problem so so how exactly do you do this well   let’s think about an example suppose i have a job interview coming up and one of my things is   that i’m terrible at job interviews um i always get really nervous and anxious hands get sweaty   and uh and i just my voice tends to tends to quake and i tend to ramble and all this sort of thing   and i’m really concerned about this job interview and i see it as a real problem of how i’m going to   go about dealing with this job interview so one way of reframing this as an opportunity   is to look at it and say okay yeah i’m i haven’t had really good experiences at job interviews   in the past but the opportunity in this is for me to practice the skill of interviewing   for a job so even if i don’t get this job the opportunity here is that i get some practice   engaging in a job interview and in doing so i’m going to potentially get better so that for my   next job interview i’ll have some experiences that i can learn from and that will help me   in the next job interview so it’s again it’s not sort of making it entirely pollyanna   this job interview is going to turn out great i really love job interviews that’s not realistic   thinking but it’s more about just reframing it a little bit to get out of that paralysis zone   and to look for even just a little bit of opportunity with this problem um if you’re ever   struggling to find an opportunity and a problem a good default is always this is an opportunity for   me to tolerate uncertainty like i said problems by definition are uncertain and so if you’re looking   for an opportunity the opportunity is this gives me a chance to work on my tolerating uncertainty   which if you’ve seen previous videos you know that’s a key to cutting off the murray fuel supply   so to help with this sort of challenging or reframing problems as opportunities   i have a worksheet that i’ll link to in the description below you can download the worksheet   and it sort of walks you through how to take a a type one worry or worry about an actual problem   and then to reframe it as an opportunity or a challenge so the third component of this negative   problem orientation this tendency not to recognize or not to be aware of problems until it’s too late   so there’s a couple ways of addressing this the first is these problems or problems that a person   doesn’t deal with very well they tend not to be one and done types of problems these are   problems that tend to come up again and again and again they tend to recur for a person   so one way of becoming better at recognizing problems early on is to actually keep a list of   what are problems that tend to recur for me again and again and again   because by keeping this list what it does is it it keeps your mind or keeps you alert to   potential problems that may come up that you wouldn’t necessarily recognize unless you were   looking for them so for example um one of my recurring problems is that i’m always terrible   at um at school projects that involve a working in groups and every time that’s happened to me   in the past it’s been a real mess where uh i have either difficulty trying to take control of the   situation or i just become incredibly passive in this situation and it doesn’t work out very   well so that’s something that i can keep track of that’s a recurring problem that comes up again and   again for me so i just have it on this on my list of recurring problems just as a way of keeping it   in the forefront of my mind another way of being more aware or recognizing problems earlier on   is to use your emotion as a bit of a red flag a bit of a cue to stop and to look around and to   ask yourself is there a problem here that i’m not addressing so you notice yourself feeling really   anxious in a situation that’s a moment to stop and say okay i’m feeling really anxious what’s going   on here is there a problem that i’m not dealing with is there a problem that i’m not addressing   i had this uh a good example of this with a client a few years ago and this client found that he was   just really really anxious whenever he was at work and so we got to this part of the worry management   program where we talked about negative problem orientation and he used his anxiety at work as a   cue and he stopped and asked himself one day okay what’s going on here why am i always so anxious   at work and as obvious as this may sound as simple as this may sound   what he realized by sort of stopping and asking himself that question was that   he hated his job he hated everything about it it was going nowhere it wasn’t really that   reinforcing for him he didn’t like the people that he was working with and so once he was able to   recognize and identify that the problem was that he hated his job and that’s why he was so anxious   whenever he was at work he was then able to engage in some problem solving so what he did is he   worked on his resume and he submitted his resume applied for a bunch of jobs and he got a new job   and lo and behold he was no longer anxious at work so it was using his anxiety at work   as that red flag of that that caused him to stop and ask is there something that’s going on here   that’s making me anxious or that’s that i’m worrying about is there a problem here that   i’m not dealing with and once he did he was then able to take some steps and deal with the problem   so those are the manifestations of this negative problem orientation and those are some tips   to try and improve your orientation towards problems like i said this is this is the garage   door and until you deal with negative problem orientation as long as you tend to view problems   in a really negative way as threats and that you avoid dealing with you’re not going to be able   to deal with the problems and you’re probably going to continue worrying about the problems   excessively by addressing this negative problem orientation by normalizing the occurrence of   problems by reframing problems as opportunity instead of threat and by recognizing problems   earlier on what you’re doing is you’re raising that garage door and you’re allowing yourself to   use your problem solving skills that you already have and to use them in a really effective way so what we’re going to be talking about is six steps in problem solving and these six steps   like i said it’s kind of like a recipe and if you follow the recipe what you’ll find is that you’re   a lot more effective or it gives you a framework to be more effective in terms of solving problems   so the very first step in problem solving this one you probably already know and probably pretty   obvious to you is that you need to define the problem and the way i like to think about defining   the problem is to sort of ask yourself three questions what is the situation that currently is   what would i like the situation to be and what is the barrier or the obstacle between what is   and what should be because then you can reframe the problem is a question about   how you address or remove the barrier to get the situation to what you want it to be   so the first step is defining what your problem is so let’s use an example as we go along here   suppose my problem is that i’m feeling like i’m overweight that i need to lose some weight   and the barrier i’ve discovered is that i really just don’t have a very healthy lifestyle   my lifestyle is one that it doesn’t allow me to uh be particularly healthy with regards to diet with   regards to exercise and so the problem is that my lifestyle is preventing me from being more healthy   and helping me lose weight so step one define the problem step two comes directly from step one and   it’s defining what the goal is so i’ve defined the problem but what is it that i want what is my goal   and to try to be as kind of specific and clear and behavioral as possible with regards to the goal so   in my example the goal may be that i want to lose 15 pounds so that’s my goal   so that leads us to the third step which is what i call the brainstorming step coming up with   alternative possible solutions to address this problem now i find that with a lot of   the clients i work with this is the part of the problem solving that they tend to rush through   the idea with brainstorming is you want to try and generate possible solutions to help you address   this problem and those possible solutions need to meet sort of three principles for effective   or good brainstorming the first principle is what i call the quantity principle   and what that means is you want to generate a lot of possible solutions what people often do   when they’re engaging in problem solving they just come up with the first one or   two uh ideas or solutions that come to mind and that’s what they go with brainstorming   takes it beyond just those one or two possible solutions and gets you to think about lots of   different possible solutions so when you’re thinking about brainstorming i like to tell people   rough rule of thumb 10 to 15 possible solutions to this problem so that’s the quantity principle   the second principle of effective brainstorming is the um the diversity or different types of   possible solutions so if for example i’m going through my brainstorming and i’m coming up with   possible solutions like uh my my possible solution is to go to the gym and run on the treadmill   another possible solution is to go to the gym and ride the exercise bike another possible solution   is to go to the gym and go on the elliptical trainer now these are all different solutions   but they’re all kind of the same solution so you want uh some diversity in the possible solutions   that you’re coming up with so it’s not just the same thing over and over again you want some   uh variety in the possible solutions you’re coming up with so one of my possible solutions   could be going to the gym and running on the treadmill or it could be eating more salad or   hiring a personal trainer or taking up hiking or going on a low carb diet or packing my own   lunch for lunch rather than getting something at a restaurant so i’m coming up with lots of different   possible solutions to help solve the problem or that could potentially solve the problem   the third principle of brainstorming is one that i find that people really struggle   with and this principle refers to deferring judgment in other words when you’re brainstorming   you’re not actually judging the possible solutions that you’re coming up with you’re just coming   up with the solutions it’s not about evaluating whether or not the solutions will work the idea is   you want to be as creative as possible with your solutions you want to get out of the typical box   that you usually think of when it comes to solving problems and think a little bit outside of that   box so when you’re doing the brainstorming some of the solutions you come up with should be a bit out   there they should be a bit ridiculous and bizarre because what that means is that you’re allowing   yourself to think outside how you typically think i once had this experience with a client this was   a mom of two kids she loved her kids dearly but she just wasn’t getting enough time away from   the kids where she could do things to recharge her batteries and so she tried all of the things like   babysitting swaps with other moms or having her parents look after the kids but she just   wasn’t getting a big enough chunk of time away from her kids and so one of the things that she   came up with as she was doing the brainstorming was putting her kids on a rocket and sending   them to the moon and so she thought well that’s kind of a ridiculous idea i could never do that   but it got her thinking okay well i can’t send my kids to the moon but i can send them to summer   camp and so she got the idea to register them for a summer camp and they went away to a sleepover   camp she had a week away from them really recharged her batteries and she felt really great   because it had helped solve the problem of having some time away from her kids where   she could really charge her batteries and so she wouldn’t have got there if she hadn’t allowed her   mind to go into kind of really out there possible solutions like sending the kids to the moon so   you want to defer your judgment allow yourself to be creative allow yourself to be a bit out there   with the possible solutions it’s not about judging the solutions at this point so after brainstorming   then you want to evaluate the possible solutions this is where you determine whether or not   those solutions could potentially work so in order to evaluate the solutions i like to get people to   think of a few questions so first of all will this possible solution likely solve my problem   so for example if one of the solutions i came up with while i was doing my brainstorming   to help me lose weight is to to go and and do an all donut diet   well it’s kind of an out there solution but it’s probably not going to solve my problem   it’s probably not going to help me lose that 15 pounds so right there i can dismiss that solution   as one that’s probably not going to be all that effective another question i want to ask is how   much time and effort is going to be involved in this solution so if i come up with a solution of   going to the gym seven days a week and working out eight hours a day well chances are that’s   gonna help me get into really good shape but it’s not really all that realistic and it’s probably   way more time and way more effort than i’m willing to do so i’m unlikely to do that solution   i’m going to want to think about what will be the impact on myself how will i feel about myself for   coming up with the solution or implementing the solution and what will be the impact on other   people if i implement this solution so for example if one of the potential solutions i came up with   is to steal my best friend’s girlfriend who happens to be a personal trainer so i can get   free personal training lessons well that might help me get into better shape because she’ll   give me free personal training lessons but i’m probably not going to feel very good about myself   for having done that and my friend probably isn’t going to be too pleased with me for having done   that either so that’s not a very good solution either so you you have this list of possible   solutions that you’ve brainstormed so the idea is to try and evaluate these solutions based on   these questions and to try to come up with the best possible solution not the perfect solution   there likely will be no perfect solution and so it’s at this stage where you have to really   tolerate some uncertainty because you’re not going to know exactly what the best solution is   you’re just going to have to pick one that seems like it’s the best solution   and go with it tolerating the uncertainty of that so once you’ve decided on a solution   the fifth step is to actually come up with a plan and implement the solution so   if i come up with uh if one of my solutions is to eat more salad i need to come up   with a plan for how i’m going to actually implement solution of eating more salads so   i’m going to make sure to add salad to my grocery list i’m going to make an effort to buy the salad   the salad mix so salad dressing all of the fixings for the salad and i may pick a day   of the week um maybe tuesday or thursday will be my salad days and so i’ll make a plan to   implement uh eating more salad on those days so i come up with a plan and then i implement the plan and then the final step step six is one that people often don’t think about but it’s actually   pretty critical in terms of problem solving and step six is to verify whether or not the   solution has worked so to have sort of a set date or set time that you’re going to look back and say   okay i’ve been doing the solution i’ve been implementing my plan has it helped so maybe i   give myself a month of eating salad every tuesday and thursday and so what i do is i weigh myself at   the end of the month and see whether or not it’s worked if it has worked that’s great i can reward   myself give myself a pat on the back for coming up with the solution and implementing it and   uh and it working so i can feel good about myself for having taken some steps to solve this problem   but if it hasn’t worked if i in the solution verification stage i realize i actually haven’t   lost any weight i’ve actually gained a few pounds then this is an opportunity for me to   look back on my problem-solving approach and to ask myself where might things have gone wrong   well maybe i didn’t define the problem correctly um maybe when i look back on my brainstorming i   only came up with one or two solutions i didn’t actually do the brainstorming that well maybe when   it comes to evaluating the possible solutions i look back on it and realize you know what   the one that i picked seemed like it was going to work but it didn’t maybe i should try one of the   other possible solutions that i came up with or i could look at it and say hey you know what maybe   the solution that i picked would have worked if i’d actually done it and so looking back on it   i realized i didn’t actually do a very good job of implementing the solution that i came up with   so the idea of the solution verification step is to help you to look back and figure out   where it went wrong if it did go wrong and then to problem solve or then to try different   different approaches or different tweaks to your solution to try to get at a solution that works   so the process is self-correcting if you allow it to be self-correcting and if you allow yourself   the opportunity to reflect on whether or not it’s working so those are six steps to a recipe of six   steps to help you solve problems more efficiently so you might be wondering okay well that’s all   great and interesting and all but how does that help me worry less well the idea is with these   type 1 worries if you’re able to more effectively solve the problem that you’re worrying about   then you’re not going to be worrying about it anymore   understanding these problem-solving steps can also help you recognize what problem-solving is   versus what it isn’t right so when we talked about worry beliefs one of the common worry beliefs   is that worry helps me solve problems well by understanding what problem solving looks like   defining the problem defining a goal brainstorming evaluating possible solutions implementing a   plan and then verifying whether or not the plan worked that’s much different than worrying about   negative things happening from this problem so understanding these steps to problem   solving also helps you understand a little bit better what problem solving looks like what   effective active problem solving looks like versus worrying about a problem   now obviously these problem-solving steps that i’m talking about aren’t going to be applicable   to every problem now there are some problems that are just pretty simple to solve right so if i take   my lunch to work every day and one day i forgot my lunch at home well i’m not necessarily going   to have to go through these six steps of problem solving to figure out what it is that i need to do   i’ll just go down to the food court and buy myself lunch but these problem-solving steps   can be really helpful for some of those more difficult problems some of those problems   that you find that you’re struggling with or that you’ve been struggling with for a while   and so if you can break down the problems and use these problem solving this problem-solving recipe   it might be able to help you get to a more effective solution to the problem and to   assist with that i’m going to link to a problem solving worksheet down in the description below   so you can download that worksheet and it can help you walk through these six steps   of problem solving just as a way of of writing down how you’re going to approach the problem type 2 worries are worries about future or potential problems problems that haven’t happened   problems that may never happen but still a person worries about them now the thing about these type   2 worries is that they tend to tap into the core fears that a person often has so these type 2   worries tend to be about the most scary things that we fear or that we dread happening worries   about failure failure academically failure in life more generally worries about losing   a job or a relationship breakup worries about you or someone you care about becoming very sick   or a family member dying in a motor vehicle accident these types of things so these type two   worries tend to be quite scary and quite upsetting when they come up so if you think about it if uh   if you catch yourself worrying about one of these really sort of scary core fears what’s   the most natural thing the most natural reaction to do with those worries well for a lot of people   who worry a lot and for a lot of people who don’t worry a lot the most natural thing when these   unpleasant worries these unpleasant thoughts about future negative events come up the most natural   thing to do is to try and push those thoughts out of your mind try not to think about them   and it makes sense if if these thoughts bring up you know sort of images or or   thoughts about things that are really distressing or really upsetting to think about it’s natural   to just want to avoid thinking about that in general it’s something we call cognitive avoidance   so pushing these thoughts suppressing these thoughts from my mind so that i don’t have to   think about the thing that’s so upsetting that obviously i don’t want to think about now this cognitive avoidance may make sense   on the surface and it’s kind of the most natural response to these upsetting thoughts   but one experiment one little exercise i do with my clients to sort of explain how this cognitive   avoidance works is to get them to for one minute to think about anything they want to think about   anything at all but in that one minute i get them to try really hard not to think about   a pink elephant so they can think about anything they want to think about just not a pink elephant   and so i start a timer and i get them to think about whatever they want just not the   pink elephant but if they happen to think about a pink elephant i ask them to make a   a mark on a piece of paper each time the thought or image of a pink elephant comes to mind   and usually what happens is uh in that one minute i see them really start to struggle   either they start to kind of laugh or they start to roll their eyes or they but they’re   making marks on that sheet of paper and what ends up happening at the end of that minute is   they’ve thought about the pink elephant a lot and so i often ask them a few follow-up questions   like uh how many times in the past week have you thought about a pink elephant and   usually the answer to this question is well i haven’t thought about a pink elephant at all and   then i asked them okay well in the past week how much effort did you put into trying not to think   about a pink elephant they tell me well i wasn’t trying not to think about a pink elephant at all   and so i point out well isn’t it interesting that in one week of putting no effort into   trying not to think about a pink elephant you didn’t think about a pink elephant at all   but in one minute of trying not to think about a pink elephant   you thought about a pink elephant multiple multiple times we call this the paradox of thought   suppression the more you try not to think about something the more you end up thinking about it   so relating this to type 2 worries if i’m avoiding thinking about these type 2 worries   because they’re really upsetting to think about and i don’t want to think about them and so   if i’m trying to deal with these type 2 worries by pushing the worries and by pushing   the thoughts out of my mind it’s essentially me doing a pink elephant with these worries   i’m trying not to think about it and by trying not to think about it all that really does is it   causes the worry to come up over and over and over and over again and each time it comes up i try and   push it out of my mind which means it’s just going to come up again and then i’m going to push it out   of my mind and it’s going to come up again so the reason why these type 2 worries keep coming up   is often because a person’s trying not to think about it and the harder you try not to think about   it the more the worry is going to keep coming up so it’s this uh really kind of self-destructive   uh self-fueling cycle um i liken it to trying to hold a beach ball underwater the more pressure   you put to hold that beach ball underwater the more pressure there is for the beach ball   to keep popping up and then you grab it and you push it back down again it pops up and you grab it   and you push it back down again but it just keeps coming up and so while this cognitive avoidance   on the surface seems like the most natural thing to do when these type 2 worries come up   it’s actually one of the factors that’s maintaining the type 2 worries   so that leaves us with the question okay if trying not to think about the type two worries is what’s   causing the type two worries to come up over and over and over again what can i do about it   well the answer to that question is something we call cognitive exposure   and i’ll be talking about that in the next video if trying not to think about the type 2 worry is what’s causing the worry to come up over and   over and over again the solution the tip or the tool for managing these types of worries may seem   very counter-intuitive and the idea is rather than trying not to think about the worry rather it’s to   think about the worry over and over and over and over and over again until you essentially drain   the emotion out of the worry thought so again remember that worries are they’re just thoughts   they’re predictions about the future and with these type two worries what can happen is you have   this anxiety and this emotion connected with the worry and the worry thought so every time the   worry thought comes up the anxiety comes up and if you feel really anxious every time this thought   comes up it makes sense to want to try and get the thought out of your mind because the anxiety is   really uncomfortable so the way around this is by thinking about the worry again and again and again   the the metaphor i like to use to explain this is to imagine that you’re watching tv and   one day there’s this weird satellite glitch that happens and whatever it is that you’re watching on   tv disappears and what ends up happening is this really grotesque horrible horror film comes on the   tv it’s really upsetting and it’s really gross and and distressing and so you just turn off the tv   but the next time you turn on your tv lo and behold the same thing happens the same   movie interrupts what you’re watching and it gets really distressing for you and you turn off the tv you do it again and it just keeps happening well imagine what would happen and how you’d feel   if you watched if you allowed yourself to watch that horror movie all the way from the   beginning to the end well you’d probably find it really distressing you’d probably find it really   uncomfortable and really unpleasant and you feel really distressed watching that movie but then you   force yourself to watch it a second time well the second time you watch it you may find it even more   distressing and even more upsetting because you kind of know what to expect and you kind of know   the horrors that are that are awaiting but then you force yourself to watch it a third time and   a fourth time and a fifth time and a sixth time by the hundredth time you’ve watched the horror   movie by the thousandth time you’ve watched the horror movie what do you think is going   to happen to your emotional reaction to it well you’re you’re probably going to be pretty bored   uh you’re probably going to be like oh yeah guy jim’s out of the shower with a big knife   big deal the movie hasn’t changed one bit what’s changed is your emotional reaction to the movie   essentially it’s drained any emotion out of the movie and so it’s no longer all that distressing   and so um you’re watching the same movie it’s the exact same movie that you saw   the first time you saw it when it was really upsetting for you but it’s no longer upsetting   it’s the same process with this idea of cognitive exposure you essentially want to   take these type 2 worries and think about them over and over and over again to their their   really horrible hand the most distressing parts of it that you don’t let yourself think about   with these type two worries what often happens with people is their their mind will go to a   certain point in the worry and they say okay you know what it’s too much i i can’t take anymore and   they they stop thinking about it and so it’s almost like one of those old-fashioned record   players and it just keeps skipping so it plays the same part of the song and just keeps skipping   over and over and over again so it’s not playing the song all the way through that’s what happens   with these type 2 worries a person doesn’t allow themselves to think about the type 2 worries   all the way through to the the horrible end that they imagine but by doing this and by   doing this repeatedly essentially what you’re doing is you’re giving the worries the air time   so it’s almost like these worries want their air time they want you to think about them   and so you give the worries their air time and you think about them in concentrated ways until   the emotion essentially drains from the worry and if the emotion drains from the worry it’s   not going to be so upsetting when it comes up and if it’s not so upsetting when it comes up   you’re probably not going to try and push the thoughts out of your mind so it’s a bit of a   strange concept to wrap your head around but it works and in fact this is the exact same   treatment approach that we use for people with post-traumatic stress disorder   the difference with between post-traumatic stress disorder and this is that in post-traumatic stress   disorder the traumatic event has happened to the person it’s happened to the person in their past   whereas in generalized anxiety disorder and excessive worry the traumatic event is something   that a person imagines happening in the future but it’s the same process to drain the emotion   out of the thought so how do you go about doing this cognitive exposure how do you how do you   do it well cognitive exposure is different than worrying about the worry with cognitive exposure   the idea is you sit down and you write out a script imagining your type 2 worry   in all of the graphic horrific upsetting detail that you can imagine all the way to the end to   those darkest parts that you don’t even allow your mind to go to that you don’t let yourself   go to and you take your mind there you write out this script detailing what you imagine happening   and i encourage person to write out the script in the first person present tense so like it’s   actually happening to them because what that can do is it it puts you in the worry scene it puts   you in that scenario and it allows you to sort of more closely imagine yourself in that situation   and so you write out the script it should be anywhere from like one to three or five   minutes long it doesn’t have to be any longer than that but you want to include as much   a detail as possible as much sensory detail as much thought detail as you can   so i’ll give you an example of a script um now this is a script for someone imagining   uh that they’re going to die of cancer so the script may go something like this um   i was diagnosed with or i was diagnosed with my cancer a few weeks ago and it is spread rapidly   through my body uh the cancer is my fault because i didn’t take care of myself i had a unhealthy   lifestyle i ate poorly um i spend too much time in the sun without sunscreen so it’s all my fault   that this is happening to me i’ve gone through a series of upsetting and painful procedures   the treatments have caused me to lose my hair i’ve lost weight i’m fatigued i’m exhausted all   the time i’m now coughing up blood and it makes me sick every time i see myself in the mirror   i know now that i’m on my deathbed i can feel my life draining from me this was all my fault   i did this to myself and now here i am in this hospital bed having just soiled myself   and i can smell how awful it smells and i feel exhausted and weak i can’t even call out for help   i’m in this darkened hospital room in this darkened ward and i see only shadows in the   background i know my death is coming soon and it’s going to be a bleak emptiness that i’m   going to face for eternity so now notice that that may not be something that you worry about   but that type of script it’s descriptive enough that it’s like this kick in the gut it it should   make you uncomfortable and so the idea is you write out this script about this really horrific   type 2 worry whatever your type 2 worry is whatever the the worry that you’re struggling with   is you write out a script as detailed as possible and once you have that script the idea is to take   30 45 minutes an hour a day and read that script over and over and over again so you read the   script all the way through and i encourage people to make a note of how upsetting or distressing it   was on a scale from zero to ten where zero is not distressing at all ten is uh extremely distressing   extremely upsetting so after every time you read the script you make a rating from zero to 10. Then   immediately you read it again from 0 to 10 make a rating and again and again at least 10 or 15   times in that 30 to 45 minutes to an hour chunk of time that you’re setting aside to do this   you want to do this at a time when you’re not going to be distracted so turn off your cell phone   sort of get away so that people aren’t going to be distracting you now it’s key to understand this   is going to be very distressing it’s going to be very very difficult to do it’s going to make you   feel very uncomfortable and so if you’re feeling uncomfortable even at the thought of doing it   that’s normal this isn’t something that anyone should look forward to doing because the whole   idea is to bring up the emotion to bring up the distress and to learn to cope with it and   to let it just go away on its own like watching that horror movie over and over and over again   so you do these ratings and what you should find is that   uh within a session of doing this so from the beginning where you start with a rating   the first time you read it maybe a 9 out of 10 or a 10 out of 10. And then you read it over 15 times   what you should find is that at the end of that 15th time of reading it your rating should be   lower right the first time you do it maybe your rating at the 15th time is a five or a six out of   ten and then you do it again the next day and the day after that and i encourage people to   do this for a week or two and what they find is that over the course of that week or two   the ratings both within each session tend to decline and between each session they tend to   decline so after a couple of weeks of doing this the distress at the you know 10th or you know 15th   day that you’ve done this those distress scores are a lot lower than they were in the first day   so this is like i said a very challenging exercise this isn’t something that you want to do with   every worry because it takes a lot of time and it’s quite distressing so you want to use this   on those worries that are particularly problematic those worries that come up again and again that   you’re really struggling with because this works it’s it’s not pleasant but it works so i’d liken   it a lot to that buckley’s cough syrup commercial you know it tastes awful but it works that’s kind   of what what this cognitive exposure is all about as well it tastes awful but it does work as we’ve   gone along we’ve talked about lots of different tools for managing these various uh factors that   maintain worry we’ve talked about worry awareness training and categorizing worries as type one or   type 2 worries we’ve talked about the importance of building tolerance for uncertainty through   behavioral experiments with uncertainty we’ve talked about ways of challenging worry beliefs   we’ve talked about improving problem orientation by recognizing problems earlier on by normalizing   the occurrence of problems and by reframing problems as opportunities instead of threats   we’ve talked about cognitive exposure and how that can be used to help address and deal with   type 2 worries so we’ve talked about a whole bunch of skills a whole bunch of tools   and for a lot of my clients when we get to this point of therapy they’ve learned a lot but   there’s a little bit of confusion in terms of like all of these skills seem a little bit disconnected   and they don’t really understand how they all come together and how to use all of them to effectively   manage worry and that’s what i want to talk about in this video exactly how we put together   these tools and skills the order in which to use them kind of like a recipe to best manage worry   so the very first step in terms of this worry management recipe   goes back to the very first tool we talked about which is worry awareness training you have to   be aware and you have to know what it is that you’re worrying about and then you categorize   the worries once you’ve identified the word you think about it and categorize it is this a type   1 worry or is this a type 2 worry so let’s start with type 1 worries what would be the formula or   the recipe for dealing with type 1 worries and as a review type 1 worries are worries about   actual current real problems problems that you’re actually experiencing in this moment   so the first step with type 1 worries is you’ve identified it as a type one worry well the next   thing to do is to think about are there any ways in which i’m being intolerant of uncertainty in   this situation are there various things that i’m doing that may be avoiding or trying to eliminate   uncertainty with this problem so for example let’s imagine that i have a problem like i’ve just   gotten into an argument with my friend and uh me and my friend haven’t spoken in a couple of weeks   so it’s a current problem that i’m dealing with well what are some of the ways in which i might be   intolerant of uncertainty in this situation well i may be avoiding reaching out to my friend because   i’m concerned that they’re still upset with me and so i’m engaging in avoidance or i may be checking   in with other friends and seeking reassurance about you know what i did was it was it wrong   would they be upset with me how would they react have they heard anything from my friend about it   so thinking about all of the things that i might be doing that are intolerant of uncertainty   and thinking about what is the opposite that i could be doing what are things that i can be   doing to tolerate uncertainty in that situation so that’s the the step looking for opportunities to   be more tolerant of uncertainty or to be tolerant of uncertainty with this problem after that after   i’ve worked on tolerating uncertainty the next thing i want to do is to think about which of the   worry beliefs might be playing a role in this worry so i might hold some worry beliefs that   maybe me worrying about you know my relationship with my friend it demonstrates that i’m caring   it demonstrates that i’m conscientious it demonstrates that i’m a responsible person   who cares about his relationships that’s why i’m worrying about it so once i’ve identified   that worry belief that’s continuing to have me worry about this i can begin to challenge that   worry belief using some of those challenging questions i talked about in a previous video   so i’ve engaged in trying to tolerate uncertainty i’ve identified and challenged my worry beliefs   the next step is to deal with that negative problem orientation   so recognizing the problem earlier on well i’ve identified the worry so that’s good   now i want to normalize that problems are normal it’s not um   it’s not that there’s something wrong with me that i’m having this problem with my friend it’s that   these things kind of happen um and then i want to try and reframe this problem as an opportunity so   i can look at this as this is terrible me and my friend are never going to get back together if i   try to reach out to my friend they’re going to be really upset with me and it’s going to lead to an   even worse outcome so i’m thinking about all of the threat associated with this worry but   the goal here is for me to try to reframe that as what’s the opportunity or the challenge here   well maybe the opportunity in this is for me and my friend to be able to work out this   problem and by doing so we actually get closer because we’ve gone through it we’ve worked out   our difficulties and now we’re at a at a better place than we were even before the problem came up   so then i can engage in the problem-solving steps because i’ve now looked i’ve identified the   the problem i’ve reframed it i’ve normalized it that negative problem orientation is out   of the way and now i can actually engage in some of those problem-solving steps   that we talked about in a previous video so identifying the problem identifying the goal   brainstorming possible solutions of how i can fix this relationship with my friend   evaluating those possible solutions and picking one developing a plan for what i’m going to do   and actually utilizing the plan or implementing the plan and then seeing whether or not it’s   helped seeing whether or not me and my friend have resolved our difficulties   so that if i do all of those things and if i solve the problem at the end i’m no longer going   to be worrying about this issue so that’s the recipe for how you deal with type 1 worries you   identify it and label it as a type one worry you look for tolerating uncertainty opportunities as   a type one worry you challenge the worry beliefs that are contributing to this type one worry you   address the negative problem orientation and you engage in problem solving so um it’s actually   pretty similar to the order in which i presented these tools as we were going through the videos   and that was for a reason because that’s kind of the order in which you want to use these tools   so that’s a type 1 worry well how do you deal with type 2 worries well if you remember type 2 worries   are worries about future or potential problems problems that haven’t happened yet problems that   may never happen and so what’s the approach for dealing with these type 2 worries well   the first few steps are actually identical for dealing with type 1 worries so you’ve identified   the worry you’ve labeled as a type 2 worry the first thing to do is to look for opportunities to   tolerate uncertainty so for example if my type 2 worry is i’ve planned my one vacation a year   to be a sunny a warm weather destination vacation and i’m starting to worry about   the weather and that the weather is going to be terrible and that it’s going to rain   the whole time and my vacation is going to be ruined and this is something that really   sort of bothers me or is really concerning for me and that i’m worrying about it a lot   well thinking about what are some of the things that i might be doing to be more what are some   of the things that i could do to be more tolerant of uncertainty in this situation   well maybe i shouldn’t be checking the weather and the weather forecast for my   hot weather destination maybe i shouldn’t be checking uh the farmer’s almanac to see   historically what the weather was like at that destination over the time that i’m gonna be   traveling there maybe i shouldn’t be looking into all of the possible things i could do   if the weather is not great or if it is raining the whole time because those are all things that   are designed to eliminate uncertainty and so what i want to do is to try to be just more   tolerant of uncertainty in this situation and not do those intolerant of uncertainty behaviors   so once i’ve worked through the things that i can do to be more tolerant of uncertainty   i may want to challenge uh some of the beliefs about the usefulness of this worry so maybe i’ll   hold i hold a belief that worrying about this means that i’m kind of preparing myself so that   if i worry about it ahead of time if when i get to my vacation it is raining i’ll kind of have   prepared myself emotionally for it and so i won’t be so upset well identifying that worry belief and   challenging that worry belief as we talked about in the challenging worry beliefs video so now   i’ve i’ve gone through i’m tolerating uncertainty i’ve identified and challenged the worry beliefs   the next step i want to do if i’m still worrying about this is to engage in that cognitive exposure   exercise that i talked about which is essentially to write out a script imagining that worst case   scenario imagining that i end up on this vacation and it’s pouring the whole time   and imagining how bad it would be to its very end and then reviewing that script over and over and   over again to essentially drain the emotion out of it so that’s the process for type 2 worries and if   you notice the first few steps are identical to the steps in type 1 worries all that differs is   what you do at the end whether it’s cognitive exposure or whether or not it’s problem solving   so those are the recipes that’s the order in which you want to use these tools and that’s how these   tools sort of fit together to work together for the most effective worry management now one of the   things that can come up is sometimes my clients will say okay i understand this and i understand   it makes sense what i do with type 1 where is it makes sense what i do with type 2 worries   but what if i make a mistake at that very first step what if i label a type 1 worry as a type 2   worry so for example it’s a worry about an actual problem but i mislabel it as a type 2 worry so   i think it’s a worry about a future or potential problem well whenever clients bring this up i say   okay well let’s walk through what would happen then well so it’s a type one worry in actuality   but i imagine it a type two worry so what i’m gonna do with dealing with the type two worry   is i’m going to be tolerating uncertainty well i’d be doing that for a type 1 worry anyway   i’d be identifying and challenging worry beliefs well be doing that for a type 1 worry anyway   then i’d engage in cognitive exposure so i write out a script and start working on a script about   the worst case scenario that i can imagine in this well that wouldn’t really work for a type   one worry because the type one worries about an actual problem but what will happen and this has   happened with some of my clients before is they start working on a worry script and they start   reviewing the worry script and what they find is that they start to get really frustrated   because they’re reviewing a wordy script about something they have control over   and then once they identify that no wait this is something i have control over   then they can recognize you know what this isn’t actually a type two worry this is a type one worry   and at that point they then shift to dealing with it in terms of addressing the negative problem   orientation and engaging in problem solving so there’s nothing really wrong with misclassifying   a type 1 worry as a type 2 worry because once you get to the cognitive exposure part of the   the recipe you’ll recognize that this cognitive exposure isn’t working because i can do something   about it and once i recognize i can do something about it i can then shift over to addressing it   like a type one word so think about what would happen if it’s actually a type two worry but i   misclassify it as a type one worry so to worry about a future or potential problem but i deal   with it like it’s a worry about a current problem well the first few steps are going to be identical   i’m going to be tolerating uncertainty i’m going to be identifying and challenging worry beliefs   the only difference is now i’m going to start to engage in problem solving or i’m going to try   to engage in problem solving for a problem that doesn’t exist well as soon as i start to try and   engage in problem solving i’m going to recognize that the problem doesn’t currently exist and once   i’m aware that the problem doesn’t currently exist that’s my cue that this is actually a type 2 worry   and so then i can shift to working on a cognitive exposure script if i need to so the idea here is   not to worry about or not to get too preoccupied with having to have it perfectly clear is this a   type 1 worry is this a type 2 worry like i said from the very beginning just do your best just   sort of do your best to try and figure out if this is type 1 or type 2 and just go with it because   the process is self-correcting the first few steps are going to be identical whether or not it’s type   1 or a type 2 worry and if you misclassify the worries it’s ok because you’ll recognize that   as soon as you start doing either the cognitive exposure or the problem solving and you’ll   recognize that it’s not working which means that you’ve probably misclassified the worry   and so you just need to shift to whatever tool you need to use for the other type of work for some people they find that some of their worries don’t really fit nicely into this type   1 type 2 categorization that there seems to be a bit of type 1 component to the worry but also   a type 2 component to the worry so the worry is is kind of more complex there’s kind of this mix   of type 1 and type 2 worries so the question becomes how exactly do i deal with this how do   i deal with these complex worries and so what i wanted to talk about is kind of a formula recipe   for these type these complex worries that actually follows quite nicely from the previous video   so if you think about the very first step in worry management we identify it as recognizing what it   is that you’re worrying about and labeling the worry is it type one or is it type two   well in this situation what you’re doing is you’re recognizing and you’re identifying the worry   and recognizing that it’s both type one and type two it’s a mixed worry so i’ll give you an example   of a mixed worry suppose i have a business and during the busiest time of the year i have a   whole bunch of staff members quit or get sick and so i don’t have enough staff to be able to fill   all of the orders that i have and so then i start to worry well this is going to really upset a lot   of my customers and what if those customers decide that they’re going to go shop somewhere else and   then this will have a real negative impact on my business and my business is going to decline   and maybe shut down in the future because i’m not going to be able to recover from this setback   so it’s got a bit of a type one component to it that i’m dealing with a problem right now   of my staff all either quitting or getting sick and not having enough staff to uh complete all   of the orders so that’s the type one component of the worry but the type two component of the worry   is my business suffering in the future because of this and ultimately me losing my business   because all of my customers have gone somewhere else that’s the type two component of this worry   so we’ve got a little bit of a mix our type one worry has spiraled into a type two worry so   what do you do with this i’ve identified it as a complex worry i’ve identified it as a mixed worry   what’s what do i do to manage this worry well very first step as we talked about in the previous   video is to look for ways in which i can be more tolerant of uncertainty in this situation how do i   tolerate uncertainty or another way of thinking about it is what are the ways in which i’m being   intolerant of uncertainty in this situation so maybe what i’m doing is i’m avoiding notifying my   customers that their shipment is going to be delayed because i’m concerned that if i notify   them they’re going to cancel the order well all that’s really doing is maintaining my worry about   you know what my customers are thinking so more tolerating uncertainty thing to do in   that situation is to notify them call them explain to them what’s going on and see what happens so   thinking about what are the ways in which i can be more tolerant of uncertainty in this situation   second thing you do like with all worries is to identify and challenge worry beliefs   to think about what are the worry beliefs that might be playing a role   in me worrying about these series of events and the future series of events do i think   that worrying about this situation worrying about not having enough staff to fulfill these orders   is worrying about it going to help me solve that problem well then i can think about the tools   that i’ve learned to help me challenge that belief that worry aids in problem solving so i identify   and challenge the worry beliefs that might be contributing to my worry so i’ve gone through   those steps and those are the same steps we use regardless of the worry regardless of whether   it’s a type 1 or a type 2 worry but now what do i do it’s still there maybe i’m still worrying   about it and it’s this mixed word it’s still got type 1 and it’s still got type 2 components to it   well what i recommend for clients in this type of situation is to focus on it like it’s a type 1   worry so look at the negative problem orientation that may be contributing to the worry so   uh trying to reframe the problem as an opportunity what’s the opportunity in this situation for me   well maybe the opportunity is for me to figure out ways of becoming more streamlined in how i get my   product out to my customers maybe i can figure out more efficient ways of fulfilling the orders with   fewer staff which will help me grow my business in the future so there’s opportunities in this and   so if i can reframe those offer reframe the the problem rather than just seeing it as a threat i   reframe it as an opportunity then i’m more likely to then be able to engage in some problem solving   with this so i then engage in those problem solving steps to try and address the problem of   not having enough staff to fulfill these orders so i engage in those six problem solving steps that   i talked about in an earlier video so now i’ve engaged in effective problem solving suppose i’ve   i’ve solved the problem so i’ve i figured out ways of either hiring new temporary staff or being more   efficient and being able to fulfill these orders with the staff that i have so i’ve solved that   problem well there’s a good chance that by solving the problem i’ve now eliminated the type 2 worry   part of this worry as well so i’ve eliminated the type 1 because i’ve addressed the problem   but now that i’ve addressed the problem maybe i’m not going to worry about losing all my customers   anymore and maybe i’m not going to worry about becoming bankrupt and losing my company   so by addressing it as a type one worry i may fully solve the type two worry part of   this and fully address the complex worry by just treating it like it’s a type one worry   but suppose that i solved the problem i’ve addressed the type one worry part of it   but there’s still this mingling worry that i have about yeah that was close what if in the future   my business falls apart and i start to keep worrying about that type two part of the worry   well if i’m still worrying about the type two part of the worry then i can engage in the cognitive   exposure we’ve talked about so write out a script imagining that worst case scenario and then   reviewing that script over and over and over again to essentially drain the emotion out of that worry   so these complex worries even though they seem more complex they’re actually pretty   straightforward in terms of the steps you need to use in the order you need to use them   and they’re very similar to how we deal with be it a type 1 worry or be it a type 2 worry   so you essentially treat it like it’s a type 1 worry you identify the worry tolerate uncertainty   challenge worry beliefs address the negative problem orientation and engage in problem solving   at that point if there’s any type 2 part of the worry left over   then you engage in the cognitive exposure so what i like about this is that it flows nicely with   what we talked about in the previous video about our recipe for managing worries and that complex   worries are actually not all that complex in terms of what you need to do to address the worry so what we’ve done over the last 14 videos is talk about a number of worry management   skills and tools we started out with our basic engine of worry we talked about the role that   intolerance of uncertainty plays as the fuel that drives the worry engine we’ve talked about   the role of beliefs about the usefulness of worry and how that those beliefs can maintain   excessive difficult to control worry we’ve talked about the role of negative problem orientation   and ineffective problem solving in keeping worry about current problems going we’ve talked   about how cognitive avoidance can maintain worries about future or potential problems   we’ve also talked about a flow chart for and recipe for how you go about managing   different types of worries including type 1 worries type 2 worries and mix or complex worries   so we have talked about a lot of tools we’ve talked about a lot of skills and you may have   learned a lot by watching all of these videos so the question becomes okay well what do i do with   this now moving forward now one of the things i want to point out is that this isn’t this model   of worry that i’m talking about here isn’t just something that i’ve imagined it’s actually based   in a lot of scientific research that has backed this model of worry and back this treatment   protocol that i’ve been walking you through this treatment protocol is based on the research and   work of a really brilliant psychologist named michelle duga who’s at concordia university   in montreal and what duga and his colleagues did was they developed this protocol and then they   administered it to a number of people who worried excessively people with generalized anxiety   disorder and what they found was that at the end of treatment not surprisingly the vast majority of   people who went through this treatment showed significant improvements in their worry levels   in terms of their anxiety levels so it showed that at the end of treatment the treatment had actually   worked it actually been really effective in terms of helping people better manage their worry   but what they did was they took the research even a step further and they followed up   the people two years later and what they found was actually quite   encouraging they found that the majority of people who went through this treatment protocol   at two years later we’re still showing the same gains and the same improvement that   they had demonstrated at the end of treatment and so what that means is that the treatment   wasn’t just effective as long as the person was in the treatment or was receiving the therapy   but that they maintained the progress two years later and so there are lasting improvements and   lasting gains from this treatment but what they also found was that there was a subset of people   who actually showed even further improvements at the two-year mark that they demonstrated   even lower levels of worry and even lower levels of anxiety two years later than they did when they   stopped the therapy so what this demonstrates is that for the most of the people the vast majority   of people who go through this treatment and who go through the treatment protocol   actually maintain their gains or show even further improvement two years later and that’s great to   know so what it means is that this treatment isn’t just something that you do and then the benefits   go away it’s something in which the benefits are maintained for at least two years likely beyond   but in the research what they also found was that there was a small subset of people   who experienced a recurrence of symptoms so at two years later they are actually demonstrating higher   levels of worry and higher levels of anxiety than they were when they stopped treatment   and so what dugon his colleagues looked at was what was the difference between these groups   of people what was it about the people who showed a recurrence of symptoms who showed   a deterioration in their level of worry and anxiety   at two years compared to the people who maintained their gains for who even got better at two years   and not surprisingly what they found was that the people who maintained their gains or who continued   to get better at two years those were the people who were still using the worry management skills   whereas the people who showed a worsening in their symptoms at two years they were people who   at the end of treatment had felt better and then they were just happy to be done with   excessive worry they were happy to be over it and they just wanted to move on with their   lives and so they stopped using the skills and this is one of the things about this type of   treatment or this approach for worry management it’s a skills-based form of treatment it is not   a worry cure it’s worry management because the reality is everyone worries   and everyone will always worry but this treatment isn’t about preventing worry   it’s about helping a person control and manage the worry so it’s not so excessive or interfering   in a person’s life and so if you stop using the tools then they’re going to stop being of benefit   and you’re likely going to fall back into old habits of excessive worry and high anxiety   and so it really is about what can you do to make sure that you’re continuing to use your tools what   can you do to ensure that you’re maintaining the gains and using these worry management skills on   an ongoing basis and i want to give a few tips about how to do that uh in this video so the   first thing to realize and the first thing that’s really important to understand is that there will   be times when you will experience a resurgence in worry there will be times in your life moving   forward where you will experience higher levels of worry because life stressors will come up   things will come up and we know that life stress tends to exacerbate and increase worry for people   now there’s a difference between a temporary increase in worry and a full relapse of worry   so what you want to do is to take these life stressors and   to take these uh the increase in worry that comes with these life stressors   and really apply the worry management tools to address the worries as they come up and help you   get through those life stressors and get through the worries associated with those life stressors   now sometimes life stressors are unexpected they come out of the blue i suddenly lose my job   someone in my family suddenly gets sick and i didn’t anticipate it there was no way i could   have anticipated it it’s not really much you can do about those types of stressors however there   are some life stressors that are predictable and so what you want to do one of the first things you   can do and to ensure that you’re maintaining uh your use of these worry management skills   is to plan ahead for future stressors so for example some predictable life stressors are   the holiday season christmas and new year’s a lot of people find that time of year to be   extremely stressful well that’s an example of a predictable stressor so if you know that the   holiday season’s coming up the idea is to plan ahead for what it is that you’re going to do   to better manage your worry or to manage your worry that comes up with that stress so it may   be that you plan to do more formal tolerating uncertainty experiments during that time it may   be that you’re more hyper aware and hyper tuned to those problems that tend to come up for you over   and over again and so you can identify those problems earlier on during the holiday season   and then be able to kick into your reframing and problem solving so you want to plan ahead and if   you can plan ahead for foreseeable futures and to develop a plan for what you’re going to be doing   to manage your worry during that time that can go a long way in preventing you from spiraling into   excessive worry and high levels of anxiety during those stressful times second thing you can do to   maintain your worry is to think about what are some early warning signs that you may want to   pay attention to that would indicate to you that you’re starting to slip back into old excessive   worry habits now the thing is people don’t just tend to start worrying excessively one day   it’s for a lot of people it’s something that they’ve done their whole life so you may have   gone through these worry management videos you’ve learned a lot of skills and you’re using them and   you’re able to really manage your worry quite well but it’s important to remember that you’ve   only been managing your worry quite well for a few weeks now compared to maybe a lifetime of   excessive worry so that lifetime of excessive worry is kind of like an old habit and so   it’s really easy to fall back and slip back into those old worry excessive worry habits   so the idea is to think about what are some clear signs for me that are going to be like early   warning signs that tell me that i’m starting to slide down an old familiar path of excessive worry   you want to try to make these as specific as possible so that they can be your early alarm   or your early warning sign that something bad or something wrong is going on in terms of worrying   excessively so things like noticing that you’ve been having trouble sleeping for the last four   nights in a row things like noticing that you haven’t been doing any tolerating uncertainty   experiments for a couple of weeks noticing that maybe you’ve been avoiding some social   interactions because you’ve been a little bit more uncomfortable or or experiencing a bit more stress   those behavioral indicators those behavioral signs that maybe you’re sliding back into old   habits because once you recognize that maybe you’re starting that slide back into old habits   you can then kick into using your worry management skills again and really focusing on those worry   management skills to get back on track and to ensure that that little lapse doesn’t lead to   a full relapse in terms of high levels of worry high levels of anxiety because it’s a lot easier   to make a course correction earlier on than it is when you find yourself worrying excessively again and the third tip for ensuring that you’re maintaining your progress is to have a plan for   what you would do if you ever did find yourself worrying excessively again now i know for a lot   of people they don’t like to think about this they want to to be positive and optimistic about   being able to manage their worry moving forward and that it’s not going to be a problem for them   again but i like to think of this more like an insurance policy   so the idea is to sit down and spend some time writing out a recipe or a formula for   exactly what it is that you would do what are the various steps   that you would need you would go through if you noticed yourself worrying excessively again so it   may be uh bookmarking or uh or highlighting some of these videos and going back to watching some   of these videos it may be that you’ve taken some notes from these videos so it’s about reviewing   your notes and having a plan for what is it what it is that i’m going to do if i catch myself   worrying excessively again and you can have this this instruction manual and you can fold it up put   it in an envelope and then right on the outside of the envelope open in case of worry emergency   because if you ever catch yourself worrying excessively again at some point in the future   it’s really difficult in that moment to remember exactly what it is that you need to do to better   manage or better control your worry so what you can do if you ever find yourself in that situation   is you go to this envelope you open it up and then you just read the instructions that you have come   up with for you and so it can be a nice insurance policy and hopefully you never need it because   you’ve been planning for stressors you’ve been catching yourself in those early warning signs   that you might be falling back into old habits and you’re continuing to use the worry management   skills that you’ve learned on an ongoing basis maybe you never need to open that letter   but it’s there for you just in case you need it so those are some tips for maintaining the progress   that you’ve made uh through using these worry management tools that i’ve been talking about   and that’s the end of our 14-part series on worry management you’ve learned a lot if you’ve watched   all of the videos you’ve learned a lot about worry you’ve learned a lot about the factors   that maintain worry and all of the tools that you can use to manage worry this is not   five simple steps to overcome worry i’ve never believed in that sort of approach because   i think it tends to invalidate and minimize worry if it was as easy as five simple steps   nobody would be worrying excessively worry management is a lot of work that’s a lot   of hard work but if you understand the skills and you understand the tools and you use them   these skills and tools work and you can better control and better manage your worry so i would   love to hear your thoughts and comments about this so please leave me some comments down below   uh if you like this video if you found it helpful please hit the like button   and if you’d like to see more of my videos please hit the subscribe button and the notification bell   and you’ll be alerted every thursday when i post a new video so thank you for making it all the way   to the end of this video and all the way to the end of this 14 part series on worry management   it’s been a lot but i hope it’s been helpful so thank you and i will see you in the next one

mR. Mc!, (http://myweb.ecomplanet.com/RALE5393)

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What’s Liith’s TRUE Plan? – Hazbin Hotel Season 1 Ending Explained

  in true season finale fashion has been hotel’s conclusion to its first season left me asking more questions than providing answers to me where the story could go from here what kind of obstacles with Charlie and the hotel crew have to face now that Adam is gone and the big money question of today’s video in particular what in God’s name is going on with lth so let’s get into talking about the most action-packed episode of the series so far just as episode 6 set up episode 8 was entirely focused on the war between the hasbin hotel Alliance and Heaven’s Exorcist who were able to fight on pretty equal grounds with each other compared to the usual Exorcist domination this being thanks to carilla Carmine opening up about how the angels can be slain by weapons infused with Angelic power as an arms dealer and acting as the one to test vaggie‘s resolve to fight not for Revenge but for love she was willing to comply by the end of episode 7 though I am a little sad we didn’t get to see her fight directly Against The Exorcist in the finale as well I understand the main crew needs to have the most shine here and there’s already quite a bit of characters but it’s one of those things where it would have made sense for Carmela to be there since she’s the reason these guys can even hold their own in the first place place it would have gave us more time to get invested into her character too either way these action scenes with the fighting The Exorcist quickly became some of my favorite eye candy in the entire show don’t get me wrong I like the musical numbers but I’m glad there wasn’t like some action infused with musicals this time just raw action it felt like all the main casts was able to have some kind of time in the spotlight at one point or another of course the fights involving Adam loot vaggie Charlie Lucifer and Alistair were my favorites Adam maybe a total scumbag but man this guy can hold his own in a fight I figured he was already pretty strong due to being the oldest human Angel and leader of an armada meant for killing demons but it was at a point where just he and loot were basically dooing the entire hasb been Alliance even Alistar was having trouble against Adam Adam’s attacking potency was so high that Alistar couldn’t even believe it to think he of all people would have trouble estimating the true strength of an opponent he has to fight I can’t blame Alistair for high tailing it out of there to recover because if he didn’t there’s no doubt in my mind Adam would have finished him off I might end up doing a video at some point trying to scale Adam because this guy feels pretty pretty broken compared to a lot of the other characters in this version of hell so far if that’s something you guys would be interested in definitely let me know with Alistair now out of the picture and nobody left to hold Adam back Adam just started causing Havoc everywhere leaving the hasband alliance at a bit of a disadvantage for the time being but in a shocking turn of events sir pentius decides to make the ultimate sacrifice charging in head on against Adam with the hope of using his blimps death ray to take him out in one Fell Swoop unfortunately Adam makes very quick work of him almost too quick I’m not sure how I feel about the handling of the scene by the way because while it is great that serpent just really did redeem himself to fight for the ones he loved rather than for selfish power like he was at the very start of the series they killed him off in a super unserious way which on one hand yeah he was always kind of the joke villain type character who’s best used for comedic relief but when you have this joke type end for him followed by Charlie having a bit of an emotional breakdown about it right after resulting in her going full demon charging towards Adam it feels like the scenes contrast too hard to be happening right after one another if that makes makes sense personally I think it would have been better if they just had pencha attempt to put up some kind of fight against Adam with you know like sad music playing in the background or something before getting finished off in a more epic way compared to getting one shot by Holy Light in a matter of seconds then Charlie’s breakdown would have felt more fitting here in my opinion either way the respect of her his act of nobility is is still there it gets to a point where vaggie is able to take down loot but allows her to live showing Mercy under the idea of vaggie doing it solely because loot will now have to live with the idea that someone she hates with every fiber of her being beat her but didn’t put her out of her misery now having to live with the fact that she was spared by one of her greatest enemies for someone like her maybe that’s a fate even worse than death in her eyes Charlie is struggling to hold her own against Adam as well and I can’t help but question the idea of Charlie being stronger than Alistair anymore it felt like he got way more Dawn against Adam than she did and just when it looks like she’s on the brink of death Lucifer swoops in to save the day punching Adam so hard that his mask broke part of me thought what we’d been seeing was never Adam’s true face mainly with the reveal of loot looking totally different out of uniform in episode 6 but Adam never took his mask off during Charlie’s negotiations in heaven so I figured that maybe that was his real face too but no it was a mass the whole time Lucifer just makes a total fool out of this guy which honestly to be expected because it’s Lucifer for crying out loud Adam may be one of the more notable Angels but he’s taking on the leader of Hell over here just imagine if Lucifer was fighting as seriously as possible the entire time he did start to take it a bit more seriously at the end when Charlie was Free Falling Into the Depths though but at the beginning he was messing with him for sure eventually complete laying into Adam to the point where Adam probably would have died right then and there if Charlie didn’t ask her father to show him some mercy however Adam still refused to go down without swinging still standing on his high horse believing all the Sinners should be bowing down to him more than anything since he’s the reason they even exist in the first place it’s clear that even when he knows there’s no point in fighting anymore he still won’t change so it was time for him to go I never would have guessed it would be Nifty to do Adam in but you know sure this this comedic death definitely felt like it was handled better than penes is I’ll say that much looks like I was half right about the idea of Adam needing to die in the video I did last week about he and Lo’s Fates by the end of season 1 the reason it was only half right is because loot obviously stays alive and Retreats back to heaven with the rest of the Exorcist and I assumed that she was going to die too if Adam died considering how similar these two characters are when it comes to how they viewed hell I I just assumed they’d end up meeting the same if not very similar Fates as one another loot did lose an arm but obviously that’s not on the same level as fall on dying with everything finished we’re now left with the assumption that the extermination days will not happen anymore despite the hotel and its General surrounding area being completely destroyed it was still an overall victory for hell in this battle plus these guys can just rebuild the hotel real quick with the power of music and sorcery let’s go that’s obviously not all though Alistair comes back feeling more liberated than ever before the taste of Freedom he felt from the war gave him some semblance of hope that the deal he’s locked into might have some loopholes he can work around and if he can pull it off he’ll finally be free and the one supposedly pulling the strings not not going to lie I’m quite surprised we didn’t get the reveal of who his deal was with by the end thought for sure that was something we’d know during the final few minutes so until further notice we just have to continue to go with the Assumption he’s either owned by Lilith or Eve either or could work for me this was followed by the revelation of Sir penus making it into heaven after Adam killed him which opens up some interesting yet equally confusing paths because penious going to heaven despite being killed by an Angel could mean Adam may end up in hell at some point even if it wasn’t shown in this episode maybe it was one of those technicality instances where since Adam was killed with an Angelic weapon he’s now fully dead while penus was killed by Holy Light and not a weapon so it allowed him to cheat the system in a way and while I do find it sweet that Pinchos was able to be the first breathing proof the hasb been Hotel does work it’s a bit conflicting for me because my Hope was after the war ended the hotel’s goals would maybe shift a bit to the idea of just wanting to make hell an easier place to live in rather than you know still trying to get the Sinners into heaven and just that the way episode 6 had Charlie react to Heaven’s corrupt system on top of Emily taking her side maybe believed this would be the case even more so if pen is now there it inadvertently continues to push the idea of getting the Sinners out of hell this is something I never really put two and two together before until writing this video but transferring all of the newly well- behaved Sinners into heaven is just going to make hell worse than it already is since these redeemed Sinners won’t be able to help spread their good influences down there anymore at this point I feel like they need to run with the idea of some Sinners wanting to stay down there willingly and saying out loud they want to improve Hell by not leaving or else this direction could become a bit concerning for me I’m still going to hold out some hope for it though finally the biggest reveal of all Lilith being in heaven this whole time her 7-year absence was spent sitting by the Heavenly beaches getting a nice T loot was the one who confronted her about how Lilith’s supposed deal with Adam was now done because he’s dead so with him out of the picture loot wants Lilith to go back down to Hell and put the hasman hotel out of commission for good Lilith was already an extremely mysterious character arguably the most mysterious one in the entire show and this revelation of her being in heaven combined with making some kind of deal with adamal all people adds even more to this history surrounding her so the big money question of the video here what was this deal between Adam and Lilith what does Lilith accomplish from just kicking it back in heaven while her husband and daughter are partaking in the fight of their lives as for the deal itself I think it may have something to do with the extermination correct me if I’m wrong and this is something I may have misspoke on in my Adam video but was it ever specified when the extermination started happening has it been happening for longer than Lil’s sudden disappearance or not because if not maybe the deal she made with Adam was what allowed the exterminations to happen she gets free Raman heaven and in turn pardoned from extermination if she allows it to happen the reason the exterminations even began in the first place was because of the siners uprising an uprising that Lilith herself incited with all those songs she sang throughout hell perhaps Lilith realized this Uprising was getting out of control and wanted to flee the scene having her own safety be the number one priority over anything which as a result would make her a bit of a coward to abandon her people like that just to live the Cozy life in heaven or on the other hand maybe she had a similar mindset as Lucifer when it came to other Sinners just a much more extreme version that formed over time after realizing hell was just out of their old League compared to Heaven this possibility in particular wouldn’t even need to connect to the idea of when the exterminations began either it would be the more interesting scenario for me too because instead of just rolling with the idea of Lilith being a coward it would tackle the angle of someone who was once a noble leader who led her people to a broken person who lost the will to fight now being put up with the task of going back to hell to stop her daughter’s dreams so she might be able to still stay in heaven for the rest of her days yeah it’s kind of similar to what Lucifer went through but not exactly the same part of me thinks Lilith may be ashamed of this deal too because Adam never revealed to Charlie her mom was in heaven leading me to think there was a clause in the deal about Adam not being allowed to tell Charlie or Lucifer about her being there I feel like Lilith being there would have been something Adam would have used as leverage against Charlie causing her to lose the will to fight for hell if her mom abandoned it like that’s something he would do right like they’re in the middle of fighting it’s like yeah you want to protect these people well your mom doesn’t even want to protect these people ha like that that’d be something he’d do yet he never did and then we still got to think about how Alistair might fit into all this at this point I’m thinking if he were to fall in line with scenario 2 of Lilith just being scared or whatever then maybe she just used Alistair as a way of being a guardian angel to to Charlie at this point with this reveal of Lilith being in heaven it feels like now there’s not enough information to go back to or subtle hints to look at to truly figure out why Alistair might be working for Lilith I’m very curious to see what kind of role she’ll have in season 2 because the seemed to be setting her up to be some kind of antagonist for next season considering how much Charlie looked up to her mom growing up I doubt Lilith is going to be one of those antagonists that goes out with a death via killing through one of the pro tags like Adam did she just needs Charlie to show her the light again we’re in for quite the Hiatus I’m sure yet I’ll eagerly be waiting to see what this next season will have in store for us let me know in the comments below what you thought of the season 1 finale or just season 1 in general did you think it delivered in the ways you hoped it would I’d love to know your thoughts don’t be a stranger to hitting that like button down below and subscribing for more content like this in the future but for now I will see you guys next time peace out take care [Music] bye-bye   Read More: K Brosas opens up about her struggle with chronic anxiety disorder | Magandang Buhay As found on YouTube

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What’s going on with these Comics? | Qi’ra Market report | Crimson Climb Review

Qi”ar comic market report you say ,,, yawn. Wait what the heck is going on with Qi’ar keys? The Darkside Crew will update you on some shocking prices after they are down with the New Star Wars novel Crimson Climb. The new segment Live Auction Look In will feature a familiar book. while we also look back at how High Republic Masters’s first appearance and key comics are doing. As always there will be plenty more to discuss in news comic reviews and focus. 0:00 Intro Join this channel to get access to the perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnoVXNgQQcjWE4fqNOrBziA/join Check out our new T’s : https://www.rennavision.com/ https://www.teepublic.com/user/rennavision Every week The Dark Side Crew comes together to talk mainly about Star Wars comics but don’t be surprised to hear about Star Wars action figures/toys, merchandise, events, movie/TV reviews, and whatever rabbit hole the crew of Marco, Pete, J.J., Dom, Jedi, and Wayseeker 😉 IG: @talesfromthedarkside_pdcst Email: talesfromthedarksidepdcst@gmail.com https://linktr.ee/talesfromtheflipside​ #cheapcomics #comicfirst #celebration #thrawn #highrepublic #acolyte #highrepublic1st #starwarsexplained #comicbooks #comicnews #marvelcomics #andora #comicfirstapperances #comicsgate #hotstarwarscomics #hotcomics #coimicstoinvestin #StarWarsHRcomicFirst #starwarspops #starwarsblackseris #starwars #hotcomics

5 Things People With Anxiety Secretly Do Alone

People experience anxiety in different ways. Your idea of how anxiety appears might not always align with how it presents itself. You may not notice traces of anxiety in someone who grapples with it internally and in private. To end the misconception and stigma, we made this video to raise awareness. It is important to remember to always be kind, as you may never fully realize what others are struggling with when they are alone. If you are dealing with anxiety, know that you are not alone in facing these challenges. Disclaimer: This video is for informative purposes only. It is not intended to diagnose or treat any condition. Please reach out to a qualified healthcare provider or mental health professional if you are struggling. Want to learn more about anxiety? Watch our video on the little habits you may not know are signs of anxiety: https://youtu.be/QjLOWQqy2MU Writer: Paula C Script Editor: Caitlin McColl Script Manager: Kelly Soong VO: Amanda Silvera Animator: Kayla Ramirez YouTube Manager: Cindy Cheong References Cuncic, A. (2020, November 18). What high functioning anxiety feels like. Verywell Mind. Retrieved from www.verywellmind.com/what-is-high-functioning-anxiety-4140198 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders: DSM-5. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Publishing; 2013.​ Dr. Michaela. (2021, September 18). Things Those with Anxiety Secretly Do Alone. Sussex Publishers. (n.d.). Signs and symptoms of anxiety. Psychology Today. Retrieved from www.psychologytoday.com/us/basics/anxiety/signs-anxiety#what-are-the-major-signs-of-anxiety. Sussex Publishers. (n.d.). What Is Anxiety? Psychology Today. Retrieved from www.psychologytoday.com/us/basics/anxiety. What Are Anxiety Disorders? American Psychiatric Association. (2021, June). Retrieved from www.psychiatry.org/patients-families/anxiety-disorders/what-are-anxiety-disorders.