In this episode, we dive deep into the world of anxiety and explore why merely coping with it might be holding you back – and ultimately make you feel even more powerless.
Discover how anxiety can subtly become part of your identity and learn practical strategies to reclaim your true self.
Join me for a heartfelt discussion filled with personal insights and expert advice on breaking free from anxiety's grip and thriving beyond it.
Don't miss out on this transformative conversation!
Dr Friedemann's Takeaways:
Friedemann Schaub, MD, PhD, is the award-winning author of The Fear + Anxiety Solution. Dr. Schaub has helped thousands of people with his Personal Breakthrough and Empowerment program to overcome their fear and anxiety by addressing the deeper, subconscious root causes of these emotional challenges.
Learn more at: https://DrFriedemann.com
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com//DrFriedemann
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/dr.friedemannschaub
PINTEREST: https://www.pinterest.com/drfriedemann
TWITTER: https://www.twitter.com/DrFriedemannS
LINKEDIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/drfriedemannschaub/
Dr. Friedemann Schaub: What I'm about to tell you may come to
you as a shock. It may appear rather controversial. But I want
you to know that what I'm saying comes from love and compassion
for you. And for anyone who is struggling with anxiety. Because
I know anxiety, I have been struggling with anxiety, you
know, for several decades, and I have been helping countless of
my clients to overcome anxiety without medication. So I'm
familiar what anxiety is like, where it comes from, but also
what it can do to us. And so one of the things that I always find
really, really difficult about anxiety and in some ways also
annoying, is that anxiety, get sometimes cuddled by us, it's
almost like as if we are taking the anxiety as a general excuse
for us, not really showing up as the best versions of ourself.
And we don't do this consciously. It's like what
happens when we let the anxiety do this to us? It's when the
anxiety becomes our identity, when we are seeing ourselves as
anxious people, and not as anything else, when we are not
really understanding that anxiety is just a small aspect
of us. Yes, a loud one. And the anxiety can certainly feel
intense. But in the end, it is not really describing all our
gifts and talents and truth that are inside of us. Now, the
problem is that so many people are told, Well, you're an
anxious person. So you need to just learn how to manage and
cope with the anxiety. And then there are all these messages out
there that are basically just reinforcing. Yes, it's so hard
to being anxious. And yes, of course, you're so brave to still
show up with anxiety, it's all true. And it's only a little
step towards real healing and towards real empowerment, which
I believe is really what the anxiety can lead us to. The
point is just that I have seen countless times that anxiety can
somehow diminish who we are, so that we are actually showing up
as a lesser version of ourself. So here are five ways the
anxiety can make you a diminished version of yourself,
a person that you look at and say, well, that's not really who
I want to be. But somehow, I didn't realize that this is who
I became. Number one is, anxiety can make you act very selfishly.
What I mean with that is that when we are anxious, and when
we're so focused and absorbed by this emotion, we lose sight on
anyone around us, or what other people need or want, doesn't
really appear as important as us just having to struggle with
that feeling. Because somehow we are saying, well, you know, my
anxiety has precedent and my anxiety is more urgent and more
important than anyone else's issues. And so we just become
more self centered, and not really seeing ourselves as
people that actually are here to be of service to make a
contribution to, to give to others as much as we are also
able and willing to receive. So number two is that anxiety also
can make us look for for short term relief where we just avoid
anything that feels uncomfortable. We let's say have
problems with with social gatherings. So we are the ones
who are just last minute, cancel everything just because the
anxiety is too much or we're you know feeling like that. Because
anxiety so great. We can really deal with, you know, tasks at
hand or, or things that our job would require us to do or maybe
even paying the bills and so that form of avoidance
procrastination, not wanting to leave the comfort zone is also a
way that makes us feel smaller and More power less then really
our most confident and authentic selves. And the more we are
acting, then in that way that just goes for how can we get
short term relief, the more we're losing trust in ourselves,
because maybe we had good intentions and said, Yes, of
course, we're going to do this. And of course, they're going to
go to this birthday party. And of course, they're going to, you
know, finally clean up the house, and then the anxiety
overcomes us. And then we are just seeing ourselves once
again, as flaky, as incapable. And as I said, this is not what
the anxiety is intending for us to be. And other ways, of
course, with this, you know, getting relief that we self
medicate, that we drink too much, that we are going into any
kind of drugs just to feel a little bit better. And once
again, not really dealing with the issue understanding what's
the anxiety really here for what is it trying to tell us? What is
the underlying root causes a wound that hasn't been healed?
But we're just saying, well, the anxiety is a constant, it's
here, it's a little bit like this annoying noise that we
cannot really stop from the neighbor who is doing some
construction. So I just going to put my headphones on, or I just
going to drink myself into Oblivia. Because I cannot really
make it go away. Well, that's not true. If the anxiety is a
part of you, that actually needs you to take the lead and show
that No, it's not unsafe to be here, no, we are not unlovable
are not good enough. No other people are not a threat, if the
anxiety needs you to prove the opposite of what it has been
believing, well, by giving in to this instant relief need, you're
pretty much reinforcing, then that idea, that notion that the
best way to exist is in a smaller and smaller comfort
zone. Now, another one of those pitfalls where anxiety literally
makes you a not very good person, is when it takes a way
your core values. And that's something that really shocks me
always, when I see people, all of a sudden, because of anxiety,
become more racist, become more homophobic, become more afraid
of the other, more just limited in their ability to look beyond
their own beliefs and see that people of different cultures or
colors or lifestyles are also just people with needs and love
and hearts. And that shutting out anything that is perceived
as a threat, that takes away our decency, that takes away our
ability to have compassion. And that is a way that often people
try to protect themselves and building these walls around
themselves. But as they're protecting themselves, and
creating these big obstacles, they're also walling off their
hearts to themself. And if we are not letting people in, and
we are not having access to our own hearts, basically everything
that makes us us. And that is a very, very slippery slope. When
you're living away from your core values. When you're living
in this fear and anxiety, if everything outside of you
becomes a potential danger, then the next thing that can happen
is that you will also be manipulated by those forces that
try to take advantage of your fear.
And then there is also the problem with anxiety. That is
that it sometimes makes us very impulsive and makes us do things
that we later regret how many people have quit their jobs
because they felt too overwhelmed or anxious or how
many people have been giving up in relationships because it tell
themselves that they're just not ready. I'm dealing with so much
anxiety right now and the expectation which is often an
imagined expectation of the other person is too great. Or
how many people would say like no I I really cannot go into get
any kind of coaching or therapy or something like this. Because
this is too uncomfortable to vulnerable. I rather just going
to isolate myself and sit by myself with my anxiety and all
those impulsive reactions that are about instant relief. In the
end lead to nothing. They don't really make us heal ourselves,
they don't make us even recognize our potential or, or
see the opportunities for more joy and more connection in life.
Again, this is where anxiety has all about short term, and
usually doesn't look into the long term ramifications, the
long term outcomes. And then there is, of course, where
anxiety can also make us really a lesser version of ourselves
when we are selling ourselves out, when we are telling
ourselves that others are really what we need to feel safe and
comfortable. Just like a client of mine told me that basically,
he feels so anxious about being liked the need to be liked, that
he constantly pretends to be someone else. And he really is.
And if there is something uncomfortable, like an
uncomfortable truth, or something comes maybe out that
he's not very proud of, he either tells a lie about it, or
he hides it. And, and he does not want to admit who he really
is, just because it's more important to get some kind of an
approval, and a sense of belonging, then just being his
true self. Now, of course, that always backfires. Whether you're
pleasing, or you're a chameleon, or you're just someone who is
always giving to others and never asking anything back. In
the end, no one really knows you. And in the end, you're so
dependent on what you may get from others, that you are not
your own source of comfort and safety, you make other people to
that source. And that makes you feel even more powerless.
Because you cannot control other people, no matter how much you
bend over backwards, you cannot really control whether they're
in the mood to like you whether they want to, in that moment,
give you a little pat on the back, or, you know, give
something back to you. Or if they just take you for granted
or just are grumpy themselves and, and make you feel like Oh,
I must have done something wrong. All this is to say that
anxiety doesn't need you to react to its concerns to its
worries, it's dilutes anxiety, like a child just wants to get
away from anything it's afraid of. And our job is to not just
give in to that impulse, our job is to say I can see the anxiety.
And I understand that there is a consistent messaging of the
anxiety that needs to be understood and needs to be
listened to, I understand that there may be something from the
past that made me more comfortable hiding out in a
wardrobe with a book and not wanting to deal with the
fighting parents downstairs. And that ignoring the traumas and
just dealing with the symptom, this anxiety doesn't make that
go away. Because that matrix of self defense is sticky, it stays
inside of you and it doesn't change until you are changing
it. And the way to change it is to step up as a person that you
want to be and that you actually see the anxiety as a catalyst to
become rather than becoming that what the anxiety feels in the
moment comfortable with which is a person who is small person who
is dependent, a person who rather prefers to invisible a
person who just tells himself that no one cares. So why should
you whatever these anxiety messages are, don't let them
make you the person that you later on regret, to have become.
We all are more than the anxiety tells us we are. We all are more
than the people of the past allowed us to be in what the
anxiety is really, really requiring us to do is to look
inside for those gifts and strength and treasures and for
that truth that really defines us that sets us apart that makes
us unique. So help the anxiety to outgrow itself defense. And
don't give in to the self defense compulsion. Don't give
in to that need to have instant relief. Don't give in to those
limiting beliefs that the anxiety may still somehow
bombard you with. Don't let the anxiety make you that smaller
version that the anxiety believes you still are but
instead step up and show to your anxiety You know, that's not who
we are. And that's not what we're standing for. That's not
how we want to live. And even sometimes it's hard to do the
opposite what the anxiety is expecting you to do. When you do
it. When you go through all these things I told you, all
sudden the anxiety we'll see, I can trust this person. And this
is how you will outgrow your anxiety. There is a way and it
starts today, one step at a time. So don't let yourself be
held back by the illusion of that anxiety is all that you can
and all that you are