313 SelfWork: Five Steps to Build Your Social Muscle and Tackle Self-Consciousness and Social Anxiety
The SelfWork Podcast
Margaret Robinson Rutherford PhD
4.8 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 2 December 2022
⏱️ 27 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Generally, when someone is called “a bundle of nerves,” they’re not describing a state of being that’s pleasant or desired. Those nerves could range from the fairly common experience of self-consciousness, where you have a heightened sense of yourself, to actual social anxiety, when the fear of being perceived negatively or being scrutinized by others can lead you to avoid interaction all together or have complete dread of a party or a meeting, going to church or to a family gathering. Of course, anxiety can have a very real source, such as if you fear scrutiny or even emotional abuse from a parent or a coach or a spouse. But in social anxiety, the most innocuous situation can hold dread.
Today, we’re going to talk about what you can do about that dread – how you can allow for helpful self-consciousness or maybe a working term for that would be healthy self-awareness – but also cope with real fear of being in social settings altogether. Your social “muscle” – the ability to be with others comfortably and non-self-consciously – can grow stronger. But what the pandemic has taught even the most socially comfortable among us – that muscle can atrophy as well. And if was never strong in the first place? Then the task to exercise it can seem very daunting.
So, how can you learn how to stop telling yourself that you must look stupid, or out of step, or weird – and begin instead to become more comfortable in your own skin and work with your anxieties around being with others? That’s SW for today!
Here are the five steps toward building your social muscle and leaning into social anxiety!
- Shame will tell you you’re a bad or inferior person because your anxiety exists. Challenge that shame and let go of that belief.
- Transparency and self-acceptance can help lead you to work with your fears. Be open with others you trust about your anxiety.
- Whatever makes you anxious offers a clear direction of what you can choose to learn.
- Naming your anxiety shifts your perception as something that's happening to you, but isn't you. Don't think, "I'm anxious." Think instead, "I'm aware that anxiety is happening to me" or, if you've named your anxiety, "I can feel (name) arriving on the scene."
- Practice this over and over until it becomes your new way of experiencing and working with anxiety.
The listener voicemail is from a woman who sent me a message that ended abruptly with the words, “Women like you…” I’ll share that with you – what I did in response – and what concerns me the most about her message to me. It may not be what you think by the way… a little healthy criticism is a good thing.
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Tara Wells' article on self-awareness and self-consciousness
New York Times article on the pandemic and its impact on social anxiety
NPR's interview with the author of Good Anxiety, Wendy Suzuki
Recent research on narcissism in Psyche.com
You can hear more about this and many other topics by listening to my podcast, SelfWork with Dr. Margaret Rutherford. Subscribe to my website and receive my weekly newsletter including a blog post and podcast! If you’d like to join my FaceBook closed group, then click here and answer the membership questions! Welcome!
My new book entitled Perfectly Hidden Depression has been published and you can order here! Its message is specifically for those with a struggle with strong perfectionism which acts to mask underlying emotional pain. But the many self-help techniques described can be used by everyone who chooses to begin to address emotions long hidden away that are clouding and sabotaging your current life. And it's available in paperback, eBook or as an audiobook!
Now there's another way to send me a message! You can record by clicking below and ask your question or make a comment. You’ll have 90 seconds to do so and that time goes quickly. By recording, you’re giving SelfWork (and me) permission to use your voice on the podcast. I’ll look forward to hearing from you!
Our Sponsors: * Check out BetterHelp and use my code betterhelp.com for a great deal: https://www.betterhelp.com Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is Selfwork, and I'm Dr. Margaret Rutherford. |
| 0:14.1 | At Selfwork, we'll discuss psychological and emotional issues common in today's world |
| 0:19.0 | and what to do about them. |
| 0:20.4 | I'm Dr. Margaret, and Selfwork is a podcast dedicated to you taking just a few minutes today |
| 0:26.2 | for your own Selfwork. |
| 0:29.8 | Hello, and welcome or welcome back to Selfwork. |
| 0:32.5 | I'm Dr. Margaret Rutherford. |
| 0:33.5 | I'm a clinical psychologist. |
| 0:34.8 | I've lived in Fable, Arkansas for now 30 years, and I started Selfwork to extend the |
| 0:40.1 | walls of my practice to those of you who might already be very interested in psychological |
| 0:44.5 | or emotional issues. |
| 0:45.5 | Maybe you're in therapy to those of you who are looking for some answers to issues you're |
| 0:50.4 | having with yourself or maybe was a loved one, but then also to a third group of you. |
| 0:55.6 | Those of you who think psychotherapy is something that only weak or fragile or weird people |
| 1:00.9 | do, maybe even self-centered, but I'm here to suggest to you that that's not true. |
| 1:06.7 | It takes a lot of courage to intertherapy. |
| 1:08.8 | It takes a lot of courage to self-reveal. |
| 1:11.4 | So this podcast is my effort to help you do your own Selfwork, whether you do that on |
| 1:16.9 | your own or with a therapist. |
| 1:19.1 | Do you really want someone who's called a bundle of nerves? |
| 1:22.6 | They're not describing a state of being that's pleasant or desired. |
| 1:26.2 | Those nerves could range from the fairly common experience of self-consciousness, where |
... |
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