It’s Raw, It’s Real, It’s a Preview

It’s Raw, It’s Real, It’s a Preview

Many times when watching movies we love, reading captivating stories, enjoying pieces of art, eating a delicious dessert, or dancing to an amazing song we see the final version of hundreds of hours of creation. But what’s behind the scenes of each one of those projects? How do they start? How do they evolve?

The reality is that the beginning of all projects is far from what we want them to be. And, even though we may know that, how often do we quit things because they’re not perfect enough? I think we need to radically accept that all those unpolished, messy, and imperfect early attempts to create something, start something, and make something, are just part of the process.

So, here I’m giving myself a permission slip and sharing with you the beginnings of a new project on youtube.

These videos are clip from interviews I’ve had with different podcasters this year; so they weren’t created with Youtube in mind or any other video platform. However, after these interviews, I got contacted by different people asking more questions about some of the ideas I shared in these interviews. Here I am sharing some of the clips that capture those ideas with all of you!

 

Why add values to your exposure exercises?

Exposure exercises are the front-line treatment to face our fears, worries, anxieties, and obsessions. And even though its effectiveness is well established, facing our fears is hard work. One-size doesn’t fit all and we need alternatives to get unstuck.

Source: Interview with Kimberly Quinlan from Anxiety Toolkit (2020)

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Tips for developing a new relationship with your mind

We have been told that thinking defines us, that we need to change our thoughts, that we need to respond to thinking with more thinking. But actually, all those responses can keep us stuck if we don’t check how they work moment-by-moment.

I don’t have a recipe for how you should think, but I can tell you – learning to have a better relationship with your mind – watching what it does – taking it lightly – figuring out how you want to show up every day can lead to amazing moments!

In this clip, I share briefly some of those tips to give you an idea of what I’m referring to.

Source: Interview with Kimberly Quinlan from Anxiety Toolkit (2020)

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Using acceptance and commitment skills to face your fears

This is certainly one of my favorite questions to answer, and while it’s short, it may give you an idea of why acceptance and commitment skills can make a difference to liberate ourselves from fear-based struggles and ineffective playing-it-safe actions.

Source: Interview with Adam Lowery from Cognitive Rampage (2020)

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What is the fear of the fear?

Being afraid of being afraid is a very common response that hinders us from realizing that experiencing fear is the norm and not the exception. But what is it and how does it develop?

Source: Interview with Adam Lowery from Cognitive Rampage (2020)

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When problem solving doesn’t solve anything

When problem solving doesn’t solve anything

A couple of months ago, pre covid-19, an acquaintance’s daughter was considering different options for college. Those thoughts seem pretty reasonable, right? Who wouldn’t consider all those variables when deciding a college to go to? Who wouldn’t consider financial reasons? Who wouldn’t think about the proximity of the college with living arrangements?

Well, while these thoughts seem very reasonable because of course, our mind has to go into a problem-solving mode when facing a problem, the challenge is that it could easily drive us into analysis-paralysis. Planning for solving a situation is one thing, but planning for solving a situation, over and over, it’s quite different.

Excessive amounts of problem-solving, over-preparing, and finding solutions to potential problems that “may or may not happen in the future” are another way of playing-it-safe when dealing with fears, worries, anxieties, and obsessions. You may wonder, how come?

Playing-it-safe are all those actions that we do to either approach a situation with half measurements or avoid it completely. So, as tricky as it sounds, problem-solving is a great tool if it drives action towards a particular goal and value but it’s also another thinking strategy that keeps us stuck for a long time.

Here is how you may want to check if you’re into problem-solving mode as a playing-it-safe behavior.

1. What are you trying to solve?

Are you trying to solve a problem or a what-if scenario?

For instance, Mary is 33-years old and hasn’t filed her taxes for the last 9 years; when thinking about taking care of them, she usually sits down at her table, puts all the papers out there, then immediately feels a sense of dread and imagines that when she calls an accountant, she will be rejected. Next, she plans how she may respond to the accountant’s questions. Other times, she thinks that the State of Washington may give her not only a fee but also extend to her a criminal record because of delinquency on not paying taxes accordingly. Then Mary starts thinking of the steps she may need to take if that were to happen. On the weekends, Marys’s mind comes with thoughts about how she won’t ever get married because no one would understand why she didn’t pay taxes; so in response, she starts thinking of how she could explain to a potential romantic partner her difficulties with dealing with taxes.

In the above scenarios while paying taxes is a problem that Mary is facing, she’s also solving potential scenarios – what-if scenarios, but the outcome is that she stays in her head solving this situation.

So, it’s important for you to check what you are really trying to solve: a direct problem or a what-if scenario. Share on X

2. Check when problem-solving is helpful to you and when it’s not.

This may sound a bit complicated, but it’s not, once you get the hang of it. Distinguishing when problem-solving is helpful to you or not, is fundamental to getting unstuck and to start living. Here are some considerations to keep in mind:

When you’re engaging in effective problem-solving you:

* Focus on a single problem (not a chain of problems)
* Accept the fact that it may not be perfect & you may not know the outcome
* Focus on what matters, not what fear-based reactions push you to do

When you’re consumed with ineffective problem-solving you:

* Focus on a chain of problems or a chain of what-ifs (which is endless, as you may realize)
* Continue massive amounts of problem-solving hoping for the best scenario or best outcome
* Take action based on your fears of what could happen and not in what really matters to you.

​​3. Label the problem-solving moves your mind makes

What about labeling those problem-solving strategies as “here is my thinking machine; here is my mind going wild; Inspector Gadget just showed up,”and so on.

Labeling is one way of catching our thinking, not necessarily to interrupt it or block it but to remind us of our ability to choose how to handle it.

​​4. Ask yourself what’s the feeling you’re trying to manage behind all those problem-solving responses

Here is a key question of you, if you don’t spend all that time problem-solving, how does it feel? What shows up for you? Some emotions that may show up are fear, anxiety, impatience, and many more. Don’t worry if you cannot find the perfect name for your emotion, but labeling it will help you to have the emotion and make room for it. You can also describe what you’re feeling in your body (e.g. my hands are sweaty, and so on).

​​5. Ask yourself what would you need to do to make room for that feeling and keep moving?

This is also a key question because quite likely we have been told that we stop feeling this or start feeling that, then we can do all types of things. But, if you have been reading my newsletter regularly, you may hear me saying “oh boy, it doesn’t work like that.” Getting rid of, suppressing, minimizing, or avoiding a feeling, just makes it bigger and bigger. So, considering how to have that feeling and still take action is much more helpful in the long-run.

​​6. Allow yourself to sit with not-knowing how things will be

No matter what problem you’re trying to solve, there will be a degree of uncertainty about the outcome, the process, and how things will turn out. At times, we play-it-safe by overthinking about all those potential negative outcomes and without realizing, we’re engaging in massive amounts of problem-solving that cannot anticipate everything that could go wrong and that end up keeping us stuck.

7. Giving yourself a break

Taking a break is like a sip of new energy sometimes because we can easily be overwhelmed with all the noise that shows up in our mind. So, as you solve a problem that needs to be solved and make room for all those emotions that come along, make sure to be gentle with yourself because stopping playing-it-safe behaviors by pausing our overthinking, over-preparing & over-anticipating potential negative outcomes or a chain of “what-if” situations is work.

The many shades of avoidance, dirty words, & powerful moves

The many shades of avoidance, dirty words, & powerful moves

When was the last time you felt anxious, worried, or scared? How did it feel?

Feeling anxious is not your fault; anxiety just happens and although it feels super-uncomfortable, it’s a natural, adaptive, and healthy reaction we experience to a potential threat.

You may be wondering, if anxiety is natural, why it feels awful and why for some people it’s like living in hell.

The answer is in how you respond to your anxious feelings when they show up! What do you do when feeling anxious? How do you handle that anxious state?

There are two variables that differentiate an effective response from an ineffective response when dealing with fear-based reactions:

(a) The way you think of fear-based reactions.
(b) The way you respond to fear-based reactions.

Let’s dive into these two variables:

(a) The way you think of fear-based reactions

When feeling scared, anxious, afraid, or in panic, you may have learned to look at those experiences in ways with a negative lens and take all those thoughts as the absolute truth with capital T.

Popular thoughts about fear-based reactions are:

  • Thinking of fear-based reactions as “bad.” E.g. I shouldn’t be feeling afraid.
  • Thinking of fear-based reactions as “a sign that you’re in danger.” E.g. When noticing that your heart is beating fast, you may have thoughts that it is a sign that you may have a heart attack.
  • Underestimating your ability to handle those feelings E.g. I won’t be able to manage my anxiety.
  • Overestimating a catastrophic ending E.g. it will be really bad, terribly bad.

Quick clarifications:

  • I’m not saying that fear-based reactions are fun, easy to have, and enjoyable; I know they suck and yet, we’re wired to have them.
  • There are times in which we’re definitely surrounded by threat – e.g. someone pointing a gun at us, someone stealing our purse, etc. – but most of the time, the degree of threat our mind perceives – perceived threat – is related to how we interpret a feeling, thought, sensation, or a situation.
  • The tricky part with how you’re thinking of fear is that Instead of acknowledging that your mind is trying to protect you, as it usually does, you get consumed with those thoughts and act accordingly: you avoid whatever is starting a fear-based reaction.

(b) The way you respond to fear-based reactions

Humans, we don’t like to be in discomfort, struggle, or basically being in pain. So, naturally, we run away, minimize, and do everything we can to get out of an uncomfortable situation. A common response to anxiety is experiential avoidance.

Experiential avoidance refers to all the things we do to avoid unpleasant feelings resulting in short-term relief but making things worse in the long term. There are five basic types of avoidant behaviors:

With this form of avoidance, you stay away from anything that triggers fear-based reactions like:

  • People
    E.g. you avoid your new manager, mother-in-law, or police officers
  • Places
    E.g. elevators, trains, and planes
  • Animals
    E.g. spiders, rats.
  • Objects
    E.g. knives, plastic bags, needles.
  • Activities
    E.g. eye contact, public speaking, asking a question in a group, large parties.

Cognitive Avoidance

Cognitive avoidance refers to all the thinking strategies you do privately in your mind to avoid any form of anxiety. There are different forms of cognitive avoidance:

  • Suppression
    Actually saying to yourself, “don’t think about that. Just don’t go there.”
  • Worrying
    Thinking about all potential what-if scenarios in the future.
  • Rumination
    Thinking about past scenarios and running them over and over in your mind.
  • Replacing thoughts
    Sometimes, people attempt to replace one distressing thought, image, or memory with positive content.
  • Mental rituals
    You may pray in a specific way as a way to protect yourself from something bad happening, but if for whatever reason you don’t do so, you cannot move on with your day.

Somatic Avoidance

When dealing with somatic avoidance, you do your best to not experience internal physical sensations associated with fear. For example, you may be hypervigilant if you experience shortness of breath, feeling hot, feeling fatigued, and so on.

Emotional Avoidance

With this particular form of avoidance, you intentionally try to minimize, suppress, & get rid of uncomfortable emotions. An example is Harold, who struggled with not knowing if he made a bad decision at work so, when feeling uncertain, he began drinking in an effort to avoid this feeling.

Preventive avoidance

S. Hoffman & A. Hay (2018) in a review of different types of avoidant behaviors, identified what is called “preventive avoidance.” Preventive avoidance is all those actions that you do to prevent your experiencing fear-based responses either before or after a triggering situation. For example, if you’re intensely afraid of making a mistake, you may check the task you’re working on multiple times; or after sending an email, you may call the person who received it to make sure you didn’t say anything offensive.

As you can see, avoidance has so many shades; sometimes you may be engaging in one specific form of it or a combination of them. The reality is that these types of avoidances co-exist with each other and don’t show up in isolation. I only broke down the concept of experiential avoidance to help you to consider how you’re responding to a triggering situation and how – without knowing – you may be feeding into the cycle of anxiety.

Just to clarify, while avoidance makes things worse when dealing with worries, fears, anxieties, and obsessions, it’s not a dirty word. Sometimes, avoidance can be adaptive; for instance, when dealing with a problem at work, you may have this urge to talk to others about it because you feel very anxious and receiving emotional support makes those feelings go away and doesn’t interrupt your day-to-day life; pretty adaptive, right?

The challenge is when using experiential avoidance as your go-to response to anxiety-provoking situations; in the short-term, avoidant behaviors help you to avoid an unpleasant moment, but tomorrow you must face the likelihood of the same uncomfortable situation welling up again and again. It’s like the depth and height of what you do is limited by your day-after-day attempts to avoid bad experiences that are, ultimately, unavoidable.

Now that you’re familiar with particular ways of thinking about fear-based reactions and different types of avoidances, I hope you can see how both variables can lead you from experiencing anxiety as a natural emotional state – that we all experience – to a problem that needs to be solved.

– What am I avoiding that I want to approach?

– What do I want to do that I’m afraid of?

– What’s the fear holding me back from?

– How is this affecting my day-to-day life?

Learning to make room for any fear-based reactions, without letting them take over our life is possible. And it all starts with dissecting our fears. Awareness is one of the most powerful moves we can start practicing.

BELIEVING IN YOURSELF IS AN “OVERRATED STATEMENT.”

BELIEVING IN YOURSELF IS AN “OVERRATED STATEMENT.”

Reading Time: 4 minutes

A month ago I saw a post about a 1-hour webinar on how to overcome blockages that hold us back; the description seemed interesting, I was curious, so decided to attend. The webinar started with a nice review of how our brain is a “memory bank” and as such is constantly connecting, relating, and organizing memories one after another. And then, an interesting argument was presented: when considering doing something new, our brain doesn’t have a previous memory to use it as a reference, so we have to create new data for the brain about our future, and one way to do that is by creating “visualizations” of our future self: your goals. Moments later, other provoking ideas were introduced as suggestions to to handle our mental blocks: we just need to “trust ourselves and then you will make things happen for you.” Here is why these two suggestions are poor advice:

About visualizations of your goals

Nir Eyal, an organization psychologist, has done extensive research on this area; after reading his book, his articles, and attending his talks, here is a clear finding that I relate to: visualizing your goals doesn’t work if you get strongly attached to them. Think about it, let’s say for example, my goal is to own a home in Mexico, and I imagine the exterior of the home, the hardwood floor, the tile in the kitchen, the large dining table, the touches of blue on the walls, the types of plants that will go on the patio, the smell of bread from the oven and the sounds of the dog running all over. It’s a nice image, I relate to it, I like it a lot, but what happens when I make that image my goal, when I rely on this image to feel a particular way that is suppose to motivate me, or what happens when I compare everything I do with that image and my mind tells me it’s not enough?

“According to researchers at New York University, visualizing a goal creates an emotion similar to having already accomplished it. The researchers believe this may de-motivate you to actually do the hard work since it temporarily provides the positive sensation you seek.” (written by Todd Snyder, guest post in Nir Eyal’s website)

I love that image, but I don’t have control of making it happen; I only have control of the steps I need to take towards creating my life. So, despite what folk psychology tells us, it’s time to deconstruct this myth and instead of attaching strongly to those goals or visualizations of the future, let’s visualize the steps we need to take towards a particular aspiration of us (which as it turns out, is much more effective 🙂

Link to an article: https://www.nirandfar.com/visualizing/

Trust yourself, tell yourself you can do it, and then you will see you can do it.

When starting a new project, thinking about switching careers, taking sabbatical time, and so on, we may struggle with doubts, hesitancy, and indecision. In response to all of those thoughts, pop psychology tells us “trust yourself, and then you will be able to take action.”

The advice of trusting yourself & then taking actions, has so many variations, the most popular ones I have heard are:

Tell yourself “mind over matter”

List those characteristics you want to embrace “I’m strong, smart, capable”

Ask someone to tell you your strengths!

These are just examples of how the idea that “changing how you see yourself, how you think about yourself” is a prerequisite to start doing fun and important things you care about.

Here is an example: I’m not a talented cook. I do enjoy the process of cooking at times, like chopping veggies, smelling the different ingredients, chatting and cooking, sprinkling salt on top of the salads but I think my food is a bit plain. So, going along with pop psychology, I should tell myself “I’m a good cook or I can cook” and then when I can relate to that thought, assume that my cooking will improve?

“In one camp, you have people who believe improving self-esteem is of paramount importance. On the other side of the fence are those who feel the whole concept of self-esteem is overrated and that it’s more critical to develop realistic perceptions about oneself. But what if we’ve been asking the wrong questions all along? What if the self-esteem discussion is like the proverbial finger pointing at the moon?” (Steve Hayes, personal blog, 2014).

There is a difference between having willingness to take steps needed with determination, commitment, and diligence but that doesn’t mean that the thoughts about myself (self-esteem, self-concept) have to change to do so. Going back to my example above, taking a cooking class, trying new recipes, or watching cooking shows (actionable steps) could improve my cooking, while still having the thought, I’m not a good cook.

As you know, I do have a bias towards action, for hundreds of reasons, but at the core of my bias is that over and over, different studies and personal experiences, have shown that taking action towards what we care about, the instrumental stuff we have to do and the fun stuff, not only takes us further but also allow us to experience ourselves differently and it may even shift our thinking.

Link to an article: https://stevenchayes.com/is-self-compassion-more-important-than-self-esteem/

I finish this write up wondering if I have become a renegade of pop-psychology, pondering why I get cranky with pseudo-science, and why sentences like “research says” and “studies have shown” are not necessarily indicators of solid science but a prompt for our curious eyes to unpack those studies and critically analyze them.

Facing your fears: using exposure skills

Facing your fears: using exposure skills

Reading Time: 16 minutes

Almost everyone I know has something they’re afraid of, and the reality is that most of us have many situations we fear, not just one. Who doesn’t feel afraid? Who doesn’t feel anxious?  Our fears are living entities that evolve, morph, and transform. To handle them effectively, they require we pay attention to them on a regular basis.

When feeling scared, we do all types of things to manage the discomfort that comes our way. Most of the time, we avoid what we’re afraid of. As species, we are hardwired to avoid, control, and escape the stuff that makes us uncomfortable, that’s natural and that’s expected. To avoid is to be human. 

But, what happens when we avoid things that we care about because they are uncomfortable? What happens when we disconnect from the stuff that matters to us because we’re trying to control what we feel? What’s the long-term outcome of those avoidant behaviors in our lives?

The most well-established way to tackle those fears is called exposure; some people refer to it as exposure-response prevention exposure therapy. Either way, they’re referring to the same process of approaching, facing, and confronting fears.

PART 1: From the habituation model to the inhibitory learning model, and to a process-based approach to exposure 

Over the years, most exposure treatments and books have been based on the habituation model, which encourages you to face your fears gradually and to stay in a triggering situation until your anxiety level decreases. The habituation model posits that, for exposure to work and for it to be successful, a person’s level of anxiety needs to decrease within an exposure session and between sessions.

For example, a person scared of taking an elevator would do an exposure whereby they stay in an elevator and take it back and forth until their anxiety levels are reduced to 40 percent of what they were when they started. However, despite this model’s success, a significant number of people don’t respond to it, relapse, and drop out of treatment prematurely (Craske, Treanor, Conway, Zbozinek, & Vervliet, 2014).

Craske (2013) studied in detail what drives change—mechanisms of change—when exposure exercises are practiced.

Her studies led her to three key findings:

(1) a person feeling less anxious is not what makes exposure effective,

(2) a person feeling less anxious between each exposure exercise is not what makes exposure impactful,

(3) a person approaching their fears hierarchically and progressively is not what makes exposure work.

Based on these results, Craske proposed a new model, called the inhibitory learning model (ILM) as a frame to understand how exposure exercises actually work. The ILM reconciled the fact that our brain doesn’t work by subtraction of experiences but by the addition of them. So, when a person experiences an anxious response to a particular situation, it’s because they have learned a threat-based association between an aversive stimulus and a particular response.

According to the ILM for exposure treatment to be effective, it’s not about how much or how little anxiety a person experiences when approaching that aversive situation; it’s more about how a person approaches that stimulus. When a person approaches what he’s afraid of by noticing the emotion, removing safety crutches, and mixing the ways of approaching, that process will lead to the formation of a new relationship called a new safe-association. With multiple experiences in different locations and in different ways, that new safe-association blocks the activation of the old learning, which is how exposure works, and that’s the reason for the name of this model as the inhibitory model (in which the new association inhibits the old association).

Based on the current findings on exposure theory, a new approach has emerged, which I refer to as process-based exposure. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), at a general level, is already an exposure treatment because it invites us to get in contact with our internal struggles as they are and without running away from them, which naturally, requires exposure.

When targeting fear-based reactions in particular ACT capitalizes the findings from the inhibitory learning model and infuses elements of willingness, defusion, values, and acceptance in every single step you take to face what you’re afraid of, from the moment you make a decision to approach your fears, during the exposure exercises, and as you move forward in your day-to-day life.

Within ACT, you are invited to approach what you have been avoiding in the service of your values and, instead of keeping track of the levels of anxiety, you’re invited to check your willingness to make room, accept, and learn to have the yucky stuff that shows up when doing what matters.

The way that I think of process-based exposure, based on ACT, is that you’re invited to developed a new relationship with your thinking and a new relationship with your fears as they come and go in life. To be scared, is to be human, and as we all know, it’s not a one time thing, but an ongoing process.

Facing our fears is really hard work, but when we do it because it matters to us, that’s a different story.

PART 2: How to create your values-based exposure menu?

Reading Time: 16 minutes

biking happy

In part 1 of this guide, facing your fears, you learned that the most research-based approach to face your fears is named exposure, how it has evolved up to the present time, and how Acceptance and Commitment Therapy capitalizes the current research on exposure.

Now, you’re going to read about the first step to confront those fears that are keeping you stuck so you can move forward spending your time, energy, and efforts on doing what you care about.

To start, you need to do an inventory of all the situations you’re avoiding as a starting point. Next, you will use that inventory as a guide to developing your values-based exposure menu. And yep, you read the word “menu” correctly. The goal is for you to decide what situation to face, when to face it, and how to do it, and to always do it in the service of your values.

Behind every situation you’re avoiding, there is something you care about. Share on X

Creating a values-based exposure menu

Grab a paper and a pen, and jot down all those situations. Don’t worry about the order in which you list them, or how big or small they are, just write them down.

This inventory is a guide designed to build your values-based exposure menu. 

Because facing your fears is hard work, it’s important that you do your best to figure out what you care about – what makes the work worth it – when you approach these scary situations.

Here are two questions to help you figure out your personal values behind these exposure exercises when facing your fears:

(1) Which situations matter enough to you that you’re willing to face them and sit with the discomfort that comes with approaching them? Share on X

(2) Which values are you open to moving toward that make it worthwhile for you to do the challenging work of facing those fearful situations? Share on X

Next, based on the inventory you wrote and your personal values, jot down all the situations that are really important to you, that you are willing to approach and get better at handling in the face of overwhelming fear-based reactions. Each situation is an exposure exercise in your exposure menu, and it all starts with things that you’re struggling with in your day-to-day life.

Your values-based exposure menu is your road map for tackling those triggering situations in an organized and planned manner. You can always go back to it, change it, modify it, and adjust it as needed. Your values-based exposure menu is not a menu set in stone but a flexible one that will guide you to decreasing habitual safety-seeking behaviors.

If some of those activities are extremely hard,  you can add other exposure exercises to make things more doable for you. You don’t have to approach a feared situation cold turkey. You can always modify it. Try considering the following variables:

  • Spatial proximity: How close are you going to be to the feared situation? 
  • Temporal proximity: For how long are you to be in contact with the feared situation?
  • Degree of threat: How difficult is the feared situation?
  • Degree of support: Is there someone who can be your support person when facing this feared situation?

For example, Chris, a website developer, is afraid of public speaking and dogs. When he is expected to speak at weekly meetings, his anxiety is prominent: he feels his heart beating fast, sweaty hands, butterflies in his stomach. Similar reactions happen when seeing, hearing, or being around dogs. When Chris was a teenager, he was attacked by a dog, and since then he has been struggling with a dog phobia.

Chris wants to be promoted to a new position in his company, but he’s extremely concerned about his fear of public speaking since the new position will require him to run multiple meetings during the week at an executive level.

Chris has been successful at avoiding dogs for years: asking his friends to keep their dog in a separate room, not going to parks where he anticipates dogs could be unleashed, not leaving his car in a new neighborhood until he is sure that no dogs are around. But Chris has fallen in love with someone who’s a dog sitter; he knows it’s time for him to overcome his phobia.

When Chris answered those questions from above, he came up with the following values:

Romantic relationships:
Being open to new experiences with my partner.

Personal growth:
Being flexible with unpredictability, the unknown, and uncertainty as it comes up in my day-to-day life.

Relationships
Being authentic when connecting with others.

After gaining a sense of his personal values, Chris came up with this values-based exposure menu based on how his day-to-day activities are impacted by his fear of social performance and dog phobia.

  • Asking a question in a meeting, so I can practice sitting with the discomfort that comes with not knowing how people see me.
  • Going to a new neighborhood with my girlfriend without asking if she sees a dog around,  so I can practice being open to new situations.
  • Asking a friend that owns a dog to go on a 10-minute stroll with me and with the dog leashed at all times.
  • Making three brief comments in each meeting, so I can learn to be with the struggle of being the center of attention.
  • Inviting a manager of a higher level to go out for lunch, so I can get better at connecting with others.
  • Being next to a leashed dog for five minutes without asking the owner if the dog is aggressive.
  • Smile and ask a question about a product to a stranger in a grocery store, so I can get better at connecting with others.
  • Driving next to a dog park and staying in the car for 10 minutes while watching the dogs playing, so I can learn to try new experiences.
  • Inviting people to my place for dinner, so I can learn to have authentic conversations with others.
  • Write down a brief update on my department and read it during a meeting, so I learn to be flexible with my fears about giving a public presentation.
  • Interviewing my girlfriend about the challenging moments she has had with dogs as a dog sitter, so I can be flexible with thought-triggering moments.

A couple of observations on this values-based exposure menu

  • As you notice in Chris’s values-based exposure menu, there is a mixture of exposure exercises related to both of his fearful situations. So, if you’re dealing with different fearful situations, you don’t need to have a separate values-based exposure menu for each one of those fears, just a single one, like in Chris’s case.
  • Chris’s exposure activities are related to his day-to-day life. This is the best starting point for approaching your fears. Exposure exercises are not about counting how many times you face your obsessions or power through them. They are about making sure that facing a particular situation, person, activity, or object gets you closer to being the person you want to be and showing up how you really want to show up at that moment.
  • Some of the exposure exercises also include the safety crutch that Chris is trying to discontinue during his exposure. This is important since the purpose of approaching your fears is to get in contact with, to the best of your ability, the emotional experience that shows up at the moment.

PART 3: What are the different types of exposure exercises?

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This is part 3 of the guide facing your fears. In part 1, you learned about the current research on approaches to facing your fears; in part 2 you learned how to face your fears in the service of your values by creating a values-based exposure menu.

Now, as you take steps to approach situations, activities, objects, thoughts, or images you’re afraid of, let’s consider the many ways you can practice your values-guided exposures.

Basically, you can use a situation, your imagination, or your body when facing your fears; academically speaking, those types of exposures are called situational, imaginal, and interoceptive exposure respectively. In this post, you will learn in detail about each one of them and how to connect them with your values. You can definitely mix them up in any way when working through your values-based exposure menu. Let’s learn more about them!

Using a situation: Situational exposure

This type of exposure means physically approaching an activity, situation,  person, or object and getting in contact with all the discomfort that comes with it.

Example:

Rose has been avoiding driving on the freeway for years, and she manages this phobia by asking everyone in her house to give her a ride wherever she needs to go: to school, her girlfriend’s apartment, work, and basketball games. When she cannot find a ride, she plans ahead for the extra time it will take her to use public transportation, or she checks if she can afford a taxi. His exposure menu looks like this:

  • Sitting in a parked car on a side street watching the freeway
  • Riding on a freeway with someone else driving and me sitting in the back seat
  • Riding on a freeway with someone else driving and me  sitting in the passenger’s seat
  • Driving for 5 minutes with a person sitting in the passenger’s seat
  • Driving for one exit with a person sitting in the passenger’s seat 
  • Driving for 10 minutes with a person sitting in the passenger’s seat
  • Driving for two exits with a person sitting in the passenger’s seat
  • Driving for 10 minutes with a person sitting in the passenger’s seat during heavy traffic
  • Driving for 10 minutes alone during heavy traffic
  • Driving for 10 minutes alone with the radio on during heavy traffic

Using your imagination: Imaginal exposures

Another way to do exposure exercises is by using your imagination, based on a script you develop for that purpose. You can practice values-guided imaginal exposure if one of the following situations is happening:

  1. You are dealing with triggering situations that you cannot approach as a  situational exposure.
    (for example, obsessions about stabbing your loved ones, contracting AIDS, exposing your private parts, or molesting your child).
  2. You have tried a values-guided situational exposure first, and even though you tried to tune it up, you’re feeling terribly anxious, terrified, and fearful about that particular situation.

Here are the key elements to writing a script for a values-based imaginal exposure:

  1. Write the script in the present tense, as if it’s happening right now.
  2. Write the script in the first person, using “I” as a pronoun.
  3. Write the script using as many details as possible that involve the five senses (describe what you see, hear, feel, sense, and smell).
  4. Write the script describing your private experiences when having those obsessions. (for example, “I feel…,” “My body will…,” “I’m thinking…”.
  5. Write down the script, including the worst-case scenario.
  6. Do not include reassurance statements (for example, “Everything was okay, I was fine,” “They were fine,” “This would never happen,” “This will end soon”).
  7. Do not engage in mental rituals (such as counting, praying, saying special words, etc.).
  8. Don’t worry about the length of the script, it doesn’t matter. It’s more important to have a script that has the elements described in points 1 through 6.

Imaginal exposures have two steps:

Step 1: Recording your imaginal script
When conducting your imaginal exposures, you’ll need a device to record your voice. Sit in a comfortable position, with your recorder and written script handy, take a deep breath, and start the recording of your imaginal script.

When recording your imaginal script, you may experience some degree of discomfort and urges to neutralize your reactions. Do your best to continue the recording, keep talking, keep recording, until you complete recording your full imaginal script.

Step 2: Listening to your imaginal script

Find a comfortable place to listen to your recording, and then play it for at least 30 minutes a day. If you can, set the replay option on your device; if not, do so manually. After writing your script, you can put into action your imaginal exposure by reading it, recording it, and listening to it.

Example:

Let’s think for a moment of Jason, a very religious person of faith experiencing blasphemous obsessions, such as, Does God really exist? Is the Bible a trustworthy resource? When having these obsessions, Jason feels guilty and ashamed. He spends hours praying as proof of his faith. When considering the consequence of his fear, Jason knows that he is afraid of losing his faith. So he writes an imaginal script about it.

“I’m walking in the street, wandering around and feeling a strong sense of emptiness. God has left me. He’s not protecting me any longer. I’m sad, feeling abandoned, and upset that He’s not watching over me. No one is watching over me. I keep walking in the street feeling a strong hollow sensation and pain in my chest. My sense of loneliness is bigger than my existence. I cry quietly while walking in the street; no one notices anything.

As I walk, I see so many homeless people, smell bad smells, watch people driving pretentious cars in a rush. Everyone is doing their own thing, nobody cares about anybody. This is evidence that God doesn’t exist, that I cannot trust the Bible, and that He’s not in charge. I know that I lost my faith. There is no God, there are only humans existing on their own.”

Using your body: Somatic or interoceptive exposures

Sometimes the triggers of a habitual safety-seeking behavior are physical sensations—breathing, swallowing, not feeling full after eating, to name a few—that act as a barrier in a person’s life. So an exposure focusing on these physical sensations is handy to expand your life. These types of exposures are called somatic or interoceptive.

For this type of values-guided exposure, you need to identify those specific physical sensations that are related to your triggering episodes. Then do two things:

  1. Think about regular physical activities that are part of your day-to-day life that may trigger some of those bodily sensations (for example, if your heart beating fast is a trigger for your fear of having a heart attack, one exposure exercise could be going for a run for 30 minutes).

     

  2. Practice interoceptive exercises that mimic or activate that particular physical sensation. 

Here are the most common interoceptive exercises you can start with: holding your breath, swallowing fast, jumping up and down in the same place, breathing through a straw, staring in a mirror, drinking water really fast, running up and down the stairs, staring at a light, smelling strong smells, wearing a scarf around your neck a bit tight, shaking your head from side to another, stretching muscles for long periods of time so you experience a tingling sensation, or doing ab workouts with books on your stomach.

Facing your fears is not a robotic, mechanical, or linear process. It actually requires creativity, flexibility, and variability. Share on X

Now that you’re familiar with three different types of exposure exercises, you can play with them in your values-based exposure menu so you have a broad range of activities to engage with all the stuff you have been avoiding because of anxieties, fears, worries, obsessions, and panic.

PART 4: Where do you start?

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Now that you have an idea of how your values-based exposure menu looks like when approaching a situation that you have been avoiding, and you’re familiar with the different types of exposure exercises,  you may wonder, where do I start?

Here is my response:

Start your exposure exercises with an activity that truly matters to you, that you’re committed to, and for which you’re willing to face all the yucky discomfort that comes with it. Share on X

If the exposure exercise gets so challenging that it becomes unbearable, you can always adjust it and make some changes that you will learn in the next chapter (e.g., doing it for less time, creating more distance, or using imaginal exposure first).

Keep in mind that doing what matters, and facing those distressing feelings that drive your go-to safety-seeking behaviors, is challenging and is going to be distressing. But that’s not a reason to pull back all the way from your… Share on X

[bctt tweet=”How difficult or easy it is, or how much or how little fear you have, to approach that particular situation shouldn’t be your criteria in choosing what to approach what you have been avoiding. Your main criteria is how important that particular situation, activity, or person is in your life.”

PART 5: What to do when doing an exposure exercise?

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After developing your values-based exposure menu, and choosing a starting point for your exposure-exercises, you may be wondering,

What do I do when facing a situation I’ve been avoiding?

Here are key recommendations for you to keep in mind when approaching your exposure exercises.

Don’t escape by distracting, performing relaxation exercises, or doing calming mental rituals

It’s natural that you may have urges to distract, escape, or minimize the reaction you have when facing triggering situations —it makes sense. And yet, to fully unhook and liberate yourself from those fears, worries, anxieties, and obsessions, it’s important that you approach those fearful situations exactly as you experience them.

Keep doing your exposure practice as your feelings change

All the feelings of anxiety, fear, discomfort, and distress that come with your exposure practices may go up, down, left, or right. This is very natural—you’re not losing your mind. When practicing exposure exercises, as it happens every time we do anything we care about — from cooking our favorite recipe to raising our kids, and from applying for our dream job to going on a date—our emotions move in all directions. As uncomfortable, annoying, and overwhelming all those feelings that come along in your exposure practice are,  remember that you, I, and everyone around us don’t have control over what we feel, think, or sense. Our minds, bodies, and emotions have a life of their own. We don’t have a switch to turn our feelings on and off, but we do have the power to choose how to respond to them.

Use acceptance prompts when feeling emotionally overwhelmed

If you feel emotionally overwhelmed when practicing any exposure exercise, you can use acceptance prompts. An acceptance prompt is a gentle way to coach yourself to make room for those fears, anxieties, worries, and any other overwhelming reaction that shows up when you practice your exposure exercise, without fighting against them. The idea is to really open up to them so you can expand your day-to-day living. Acceptance moves can include short acceptance prompts that you tell yourself, such as:

o   I want to give my best at this moment to ride this wave of emotion.
o   I want to do what I can to let this obsession come and go.
o   Fighting this wave makes it worse.
o   I’m going to let this one go.
o   I want to get through this without fighting.

Here is what I find fascinating about acceptance skills at a brain level (apologies for my nerdiness):

Neuroaffective science of emotions has demonstrated that the skill of observing or detaching from the meaning of our stress-based responses – in plain terms, the skill of watching an overwhelming experience – is extremely handy and even faster than other skills in reducing the activation of our nervous system.”

Keep in mind that using an acceptance prompt is never with the purpose of eliminating an uncomfortable emotion you’re going through; it’s just a cue for you to check whether you’re fighting your experience instead of making room for it, and then letting it be. 

Approach exposures with flexibility and not in a mechanical way

While learning to practice exposure exercises is a skill that you will practice, rehearse, and get better and better at,I encourage you to focus more on the process of approaching a fearful situation, no matter how many times you do it or how big or small the actions are that you’re taking. Share on X

Certainly, exposure exercises are all about helping you to get in contact with, move toward, and stay present with any fear-based reactions that come with a particular stimulus but,

Exposure exercises are also a personal decision you make to face that discomfort in the service of your values and a decision you make to sit with the yucky stuff that gets under your skin when doing what you care about. Share on X

Be curious when practicing your exposure exercises

Being curious is not a technical principle but a matter of attitude and approach. The attitude of curiosity I’m referring to is not the cold and disconnected one but the one that doesn’t get attached to any particular outcome. This curiosity means that, when practicing exposure exercise, you practice also being interested in what shows up, how it shows up, and how often it shows up.

Following all these tips to practice your values-guided exposures  – and approaching fearful objects, situations, and people – will help you to maximize the steps you’re making, the effort you’re putting into it, and the courage you’re taking to build the full and meaningful life you deserve!

How to spot a playing-it-safe behavior?

How to spot a playing-it-safe behavior?

Reading Time: 4 minutes

These days, I found myself thinking a lot about how fear shapes us on so many levels, up and down, left and right. Learning to relate to fear is a life skill to design the life we want to live and be the person we want to be. The way I see it is that…

There is fear, and there is life—and they coexist next to each other.

Today, I want to invite you to focus on one thing: how to spot a playing-it-safe behavior.

Here is a bit of scientific background: The academic literature refers to playing-it-safe behaviors as “safety-seeking behaviors or safety behaviors,” terms first coined by P. Salkovskis in 1996. Since then, as studies progressed, it has become clear that these actions are present across all anxiety struggles. I’m here to tell you that playing-it-safe behaviors, as I refer to them, are not exclusive to people with anxiety problems but are a natural response for every human being when faced with a perceived dangerous situation. We all play-it-safe.

When playing it safe, you’re naturally responding to fears, obsessions, worries, and anxieties by doing what you can to minimize a potentially negative outcome and the discomfort that comes with it. Here are some examples: driving to a job site days before a job interview so you don’t get lost on the day of the interview; rehearsing a public presentation so you don’t make a fool of yourself when the time comes; avoiding watching news about the coronavirus so you don’t go into distress mode; thinking right away about something positive when having negative thoughts about yourself; not saying what you really think about a project to your boss, so you don’t create problems; avoiding watching horror movies so you don’t have nightmares.

In all these examples, you’re attempting to reduce the distress that comes with fearful activities, situations, or internal experiences. Do you relate to any of them? As you can see, no human being walks in life without playing it safe. We all do it – it’s natural, and it’s not the problem. The challenge is how playing-it-safe actions work in our lives, how often we engage with them, and why we do them.

The way that we respond to fear varies based on where we are, who we’re with, what we’re doing, and so many other variables. Consequently, playing-it-safe actions are dynamic, not static. There are playing-it-safe behaviors that keep us healthy and moving toward a valued life, and then there are playing-it-safe behaviors that move us away from the things we care about. Let’s look at unhelpful safety behaviors.

Here are common examples of unhelpful playing-it-safe behaviors:

  • When you directly avoid a situation
    If you’re afraid of driving on the freeway you may avoid freeway driving at all costs; you may ask others to give you a ride, or you might take a cab or other form of public transportation. If you’re afraid of being alone, you may quickly go from one relationship to another without giving yourself a chance to process a rupture or breakup. These types of playing-it-safe moves are straight avoidance behaviors and typically aren’t a one-time thing but a repetitive, constant, or chronic response.
  • When you approach an activity with public safety crutches
    Let’s imagine that you’re afraid of making a mistake when giving a presentation. In response to this fear, you rehearse word for word what you want to say so your mind doesn’t go blank, spend hours trying to anticipate all the things that could go wrong, or even postpone the deadline multiple times until you feel ready. This safety behavior is unhelpful because it keeps you from doing the things you need to do or enjoy doing.
  • When you approach a situation with mental safety crutches
    Other times, playing-it-safe behaviors are very private and discrete actions, like planning in your mind what to say when you’re on a date; lying down in your bed and coming up with a master to-do list for your week; replaying in your mind how exactly a situation unfolded so you can be sure you didn’t make a fool of yourself. No one sees these safety behaviors, but they’re still actively taking up a lot of time and energy you could be spending on things that are important to you.
  • When you quickly decide to get out of a situation
    In 1976, Jerry Seinfeld, a famous American comedian, walked up on stage, took the microphone, looked out into the audience, and froze. When he finally found his voice, all he could remember where the topics he had prepared to talk about. He rattled them off without pausing and then hurried offstage. The entire performance lasted about ninety seconds. This is called escaping. If you are scared about a situation, you get out of it as soon as possible. Yes, you are being safe if you run out of a dark alley because you took a wrong turn. But if you leave every time you start to have a difficult conversation with a partner, the relationship will suffer!

Now, just because two people have the same playing-it-safe reaction to a scary event doesn’t mean that their driver is the same. For instance, when preparing for a TV interview, one person may rehearse every day for a month beforehand to avoid “saying the wrong thing or making verbal mishaps,” while another person may rehearse every day “to avoid blushing or crying during the interview.” And that’s why, noticing what playing-it-safe behaviors you’re doing to minimize, avoid, or decrease the discomfort that comes with certain activities is key to getting unstuck and start living.

Here are actionable tips for you to spot if your playing-it-safe behaviors are unhelpful:

Answer the questions: 

  • What are the three activities you’re avoiding on a regular basis?
  • What are the three activities you’re approaching with public safety crutches?
  • What are the three activities you’re approaching with mental safety crutches?
  • What are the three activities you’re trying to escape from as soon as possible?

After answering those questions, check your WHYs.

Here is a question to guide you in figuring out your WHYs behind those playing-it-safe actions:

  • What would happen if you stopped using that particular playing-it-safe move?
  • How would you feel if you didn’t do it?
  • What will be the worst-case scenario if you don’t play-it-safe in that situation?



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