Is Distraction a Compulsion In Anxiety Recovery? (Episode 157)
Disordered: Anxiety Help
Josh Fletcher and Drew Linsalata
4.9 • 665 Ratings
🗓️ 29 May 2026
⏱️ 40 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Can distraction be a compulsion in anxiety recovery? It is a question that comes up constantly in the anxiety community. Many people are told to simply "distract your mind" when they feel anxious, but if you are doing it specifically to escape a feeling, it can quickly turn into a safety behavior or a compulsion.
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Want to talk about this episode with Drew, Josh, and others that are sharing your struggle and understand? We're hanging out in the Disordered Community space:
https://disordered.fm/community
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In this episode of Disordered, the guys break down the crucial difference between using distraction as an urgent escape mechanism and choosing to intentionally shift your attention toward something meaningful. Drew and Josh look at how the intent and the presence of urgency dictate whether an action is helping your recovery or keeping you stuck in the anxiety loop.
Intent vs. Escape: Why how and why you distract yourself matters far more than the activity itself.
The Role of Urgency: How sprinting to an activity to stop an anxious feeling turns a healthy action into a compliance mechanism.
Attentional Control: The practice of moving your focus to value-driven actions even while anxiety chats away in the background.
Rewiring the Amygdala: Why teaching your brain that you are safe requires turning your attention away from the threat response.
Listener "Did It Anyways": Inspiring stories from the community, including overcoming a years-long fear of flying and navigating major life challenges while continuing to take brave steps forward.
Recovery is not about achieving perfect distraction to prevent difficult feelings. It is about building psychological flexibility and learning that you can coexist with discomfort while choosing where to put your focus.
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The Disordered Guide to Health Anxiety is available as a paperback or on Kindle
https://www.disordered.fm/the-disordered-guide-to-health-anxiety/
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Struggling with worry and rumination that you feel you can't stop or control? Check out Worry and Rumination Explained, a two hour pre-recorded workshop produced by Josh and Drew. The workshop takes a deep dive into the mechanics of worrying and ruminating, offering some helpful ways to approach the seemingly unsolvable problem of trying to solve seemingly unsolvable problems.
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Got a question or did it anyway to share? Send us an email or voicemail on our website.
Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | Hey guys, my name is James. I'm from Canada. You can use my name. I just wanted to get your guys' |
| 0:06.9 | opinion on distraction as a compulsion. As I see a lot in the OCD community specifically, |
| 0:13.3 | people will recommend to distract your mind. But if you're doing it to escape, feeling a certain way, |
| 0:19.7 | I view that as a compulsion. |
| 0:21.3 | I think if you just naturally live it by your values, your body will self-regulate and |
| 0:26.1 | distraction will become a product of that naturally. And another thing is trust within yourself, |
| 0:34.1 | responding to intrusive thoughts with the idea like maybe maybe not |
| 0:38.6 | living with the uncertainty but I'm going to choose to trust myself and learn to trust |
| 0:44.0 | myself again and stick with my values those are a couple of things that I've found very |
| 0:49.3 | helpful your podcast has been helpful thank you guys welcome toordered. This is episode 157 of the podcast. We are, |
| 0:59.9 | I don't know when we're recording, but today we're going to talk about distraction as a potential |
| 1:05.1 | compulsion. Can distraction be a compulsion? It's a good question. The answer is yes. See you next week. Anyway, I'm Drew Lin Salata. I am one half of Disordered. I'm a therapist that specializes in the practice of anxiety and anxiety disorders in New York, a former sufferer of the things we talk about here on Disordered, a psychoeducator, social media guy, podcaster clearly, and I'm joined as always by my co-host |
| 1:29.1 | from across the pond. That would be, I'm Joshua Fletcher, also known as anxiety. Josh, I'm a |
| 1:36.1 | psychotherapist and author who lives in Manchester in the UK. It is currently 32 degrees. I am melting. |
| 1:43.8 | My organs are boiling. |
| 1:46.1 | I'm unsticking myself from surfaces and myself. |
| 1:50.5 | Yeah, it's quite unpleasant. |
| 1:52.6 | But what is pleasant is co-hosting this wonderful podcast. |
| 1:56.1 | It is. |
| 1:56.7 | It is one of my favorite hours of the week when we do this. |
| 1:59.0 | No joke. |
| 1:59.7 | Seriously. |
... |
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