Anxiety
Coping with Fear, Anxiety, and Stress in Today's World
Learning more about anxiety helps you gain resilience.
Posted September 15, 2020 Reviewed by Lybi Ma
No matter where you get your news — the internet, TV, podcasts, social media — reading, listening, and watching are likely to make you feel anxious. The health crisis of Covid-19 and the resulting economic fallout combined with political divisions and social unrest have many people feeling more worried and anxious than ever before.
Fear and anxiety can be overwhelming and cause strong emotions. Learning not only to cope but to thrive will help you and the people you care about, to be healthier and more resilient. Let’s take a moment to look at anxiety, where it comes from, what the different kinds of anxiety are, how it may be affecting you or someone in your family, as well as some tips for coping with it.
What factors influence how we develop and handle stress and anxiety?
Everyone reacts differently when stress occurs in life. We are all playing the game of life with four major “cards” in your hand: your genetic makeup, personal development, life experiences, and beliefs and emotions. Each one of these cards can enhance or detract from your ability to manage with the hand you’ve got. Together, they determine your overall capacity to manage your anxiety.
1. Your Genetic Makeup
Your genes give you the raw materials from which your emotional experiences are built. They define how your nervous system operates. They establish your “set point” for anxiety and stress—whether you naturally tend to be highly sensitive and vulnerable or hearty and resilient. Your “gene card” defines your natural tendency for experiencing and managing anxiety in your life. It’s the one card you must keep in your hand.
2. Your Personal Development
Whatever the gene card you are dealt, you inevitably find yourself face-to-face with a family. You are in a relationship with your parents or caregivers, and you may or may not have brothers or sisters. Your extended family may be large or small, functional or dysfunctional or somewhere in between. Whatever your situation, your experiences in childhood and adolescence have a profound effect on how you experience anxiety and handle uncertainty and change. Whatever family you were born or raised in, your personal development card is embedded inside you, but you can choose to re-examine and revise it, and maybe even return this card to the deck.
3. Your Life Experiences
Life is an unpredictable journey. You set out on a path, thinking you know where you are going. Along the way, you face obstacles, take detours, and even change direction from time to time. Sometimes you trudge up steep hills or get stopped in your footsteps by something totally unexpected. Sometimes you coast or gain momentum moving forward. One thing is for certain: You never know what is around the next twist in the road. You can find yourself anxious about any aspect of your life at any time. Some worries you can control, some you can’t. Some hardships seem impossible to get through. Others are catalysts for growth. They are all part of life’s journey.
4. Your Beliefs and Emotions
Your deep-seated beliefs and emotions about yourself and the world around you can become self-fulfilling prophecies. They determine what makes you anxious and affect the amount of anxiety you feel. And they can also influence how you interpret and label your experiences. What you believe and feel can help or hinder you. If they are positive and self-affirming, they can push you to do your best. If they are negative or self-defeating, they can hold you back. If you want to change them, you will need to devote time, attention, and patience to the task of digging them out and understanding them, and it can be done.
Anxiety Is a Wake-Up Call
Anxiety is a message inside our body telling us to pay attention. Getting real about anxiety leads you to uncover the hidden driver of life and business success. Accepting it as a natural part of the human experience is to get real about what living consciously actually means. Like a rubber band, too much anxiety will cause us to snap. Too little anxiety and we stay stuck. Living with just enough anxiety will help you grow and change as you move through uncertainty.
The Three Faces of Anxiety
Too little anxiety: The face of complacency
Having too little anxiety is like living life with your head in the sand. You naturally avoid change and over-value the status quo. Not surprisingly, people like this live in a protective bubble. Maybe their parents spared them from difficulty, or maybe they learned at an early age that they needed to protect themselves from uncertainty and change. Too little anxiety people can be too detached, cautious, idealistic, or over-pleasing, Whatever the reason, this approach to our disruptive times doesn’t work anymore. You must look squarely in the eye of the storm.
Too much anxiety: The face of chaos
Most of us are too familiar with too much anxiety. Some people are even vulnerable to making too much anxiety a habit. One problem is that many of us are too attached to success. Our need to be right and in control drives our behavior and creates unhealthy energy around us. Underlying this attachment is fear— of failure, inadequacy, insignificance, or being taken advantage of. Emotionally, people with too much anxiety are out of touch with themselves at the moment. Inside, they are often being held hostage by negative emotions like anger, sadness, and fear. On the outside, they wear their feelings on their sleeves, bringing their inner chaotic energy to everyone around them.
Just enough anxiety: The face of success
Just enough anxiety is the sweet spot for productive energy, the right level of tension that drives you forward without causing you to resist, give up, or try to control what happens. With just the right amount, anxiety creates the optimal conditions for learning so you can stretch beyond your current reality into your desired future. It allows you to close the gaps between who you are and who you wish to be.
Keep Things in Perspective
These are some of the actions you can do to support yourself:
- Take breaks from watching, reading, or listening to news stories, including social media.
- Take care of your body. Take deep breaths, stretch, or meditate. Try to eat healthy, well-balanced meals, exercise regularly, get plenty of sleep, and avoid alcohol and drugs.
- Make time to unwind. Do some activities you enjoy and treat yourself to special times.
- Connect with others. Talk with people you trust about your concerns and how you are feeling.
Call your healthcare provider if the anxiety interferes with life’s activities for a sustained period. No doubt some people have anxiety disorders that need expert attention and support like therapy, coaching, or medication.
Life today is about keeping up with a rapidly uncertain world. Economic, health, environmental, and sociopolitical changes are more complicated and unpredictable than ever. To feel at home in uncharted territory and to make friends with ambiguity and anxiety we must develop coping skills. The more we learn about anxiety the more resilient we will become.“The happiest among us keep the pressure turned up or down to that point where we have a challenge we believe we can manage.” Gilbert Brim Ambition
References
bob.rosen@healthycompanies.com
Healthy Companies 703.351.9901
If you, or someone you care about, are feeling overwhelmed with emotions like sadness, depression, or anxiety, or feel like you want to harm yourself or others call your mental health provider, 911, or the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s (SAMHSA’s) Disaster Distress Helpline: 1-800-985-5990 or text TalkWithUs to 66746. (TTY 1-800-846-8517).
Rosen, Bob, 2014. Grounded: How Leaders Stay Rooted in an Uncertain World. San Fransisco, Jossey-Bass
Rosen, Robert H., Just Enough Anxiety, New York: Portfolio, 2008
Rosen, Bob, Conscious, The Power of Awareness in Business and LIfe, New Jersey, John Wiley & Sons, 2018