More about Social Anxieties and Phobias
- "I can't just start talking! He'll think I'm
superficial!"
- "If I sign my name, I'm sure my hands will shake and
everyone will notice!"
- "I'll go blank. We'll just stand there and stare at
each other."
- "I should be able to make a statement without stumbling
over a word!"
- "I'm so anxious! I know I'm coming across
wrong."
- "I'll never meet anyone. I'll be alone the rest of
my life."
Most people consider the term "performance" to mean some type
of formal presentation of our skills or knowledge. The socially anxious
person, on the other hand, can define the simplest of social interactions
as a performance. Even shaking someone's hand in a casual
setting can lead to performance anxiety and extensive, critical analysis
afterwards. Their anxiety can cause them to forget their train of thought,
stumble over words, respond to questions with one word answers, or begin
laughing at inappropriate moments.
Some people only fear a few situations. Others, suffering from generalized
social phobia, dread a broad number of situations where there
is some chance of receiving disapproval. The following chart lists the
common situations which socially anxious people can dread.
ANXIETY-PROVOKING SOCIAL SITUATIONS
- Acting, performing, or giving a talk in front of audience
- Talking to people in authority
- Expressing opinions
- Job interview
- Expressing disagreement
- Speaking up at a meeting
- Responding to criticism
- Giving a report to a group
- Giving and receiving compliments
- Eating in public places
- Asking for a date
- Drinking in public places
- Answering personal questions
- Urinating in a public bathroom
- Meeting strangers
- Being the center of attention
- Calling someone unfamiliar
- Entering a room when others are already seated
- Returning goods to a store
- Going to a party
- Making eye contact
- Giving a party
- Resisting a high-pressure salesperson
- Joining on-going conversations
- Making mistakes in front of others
- Participating in small groups
- Taking a test
- Bumping into someone you know
- Writing while being observed
- Talking with people you do not know very well
- Working while being observed
- Initiating conversation with someone attracted to
Social anxieties often begin to surface in adolescence, although there is much variation. Some people
describe themselves as shy and inhibited since early childhood;
others develop the symptoms after one or more embarrassing events in adulthood.
About twenty percent of the U.S. population suffers
some degree of social anxiety, with two to three percent
so significantly impaired that they fit the diagnosis of social phobia.
Over eighty percent of people with social phobia never seek professional
help.
Biology and Experience: The Possible Contributions to Social Fears
Researchers have not yet identified the exact causes
of social anxieties. Biological scientists are actively studying the arenas
of biochemical irregularities and genetic
predispositions.
Fascinating studies are exploring the social order and interactions of rhesus monkeys, the primates whose brains are most similar
to humans. The current outcomes show a clear trend that approximately twenty
percent of the rhesus population, both in captivity and in the wild are
"behaviorally inhibited," or socially avoidant. (For instance,
during mildly stressful times they will exhibit extreme anxiety responses
while the rest of the monkey population responds normally.) Researchers
are now able to breed behaviorally inhibited young monkeys by matching
up the right parents.
Substantial evidence with humans parallels this work with primates. Harvard
psychologist Jerome Kagan's groundbreaking research supports his theory
that inhibited children are born with a nervous system
that is more easily stressed and excited -- including increased heart rate
and increased secretion of the stress hormone cortisol -- when they are
faced with changes in their social system. Looking at the available research,
it appears that of all human personality traits, social shyness
and inhibition have the most genetic involvement, including
passing this trait on from one generation to the next.
This means it is possible that some of us are preprogrammed
to watch for others who are more "dominate" than us, to evaluate
the possibility, however slight, of their rejection, and to act in any
way needed to indicate our social submissiveness. If our more subtle gestures,
such as avoiding eye contact, do not reassure us of our acceptance, then
we will act out more primitive responses, by escaping, freezing, or avoiding
contact altogether. These responses, when reflective of a biological predisposition,
will occur instinctually, with little or no conscious thought.
In addition to the biological factors, childhood learnings
can contribute to increasing or decreasing the likelihood of social anxieties
in adolescence and adulthood. Kagan found that by age 7 1/2 the physiological
differences began to narrow between children who were socially inhibited
and those who were outgoing. You might say that as children have more time
to get feedback about their degree of acceptance into
their family, peer group and community, they learn not to react
so fearfully. They discover that they are a welcomed member
of the group and others will tolerate their mistakes or weaknesses. Again,
this result is matched in the primate population. Remember those rhesus
monkeys who were bred to be the most behaviorally inhibited? If the scientists
removed them from their natural mother and allowed mothers with stronger
and more nurturing traits to raise them, these adolescent monkeys became
some of the most socially outgoing!
This, of course, is great news. Even if you are biologically predisposed
to develop social anxieties, your life experiences can influence
your future comfort with people. You can learn how to loosen up
the grip of fear.
The opposite is also true. Childhood experiences may reinforce social anxiety, hesitation and avoidance in
those who are already genetically vulnerable to such problems. From parents
who are shy or reclusive, children can learn that the world is not so safe.
These parents model avoidance as a means to cope with
social anxieties.
Any significant adults or peers can influence
a vulnerable child in the direction of fear and intimidation.
For instance, a third grader "freezes" as she gets up in front
of the class for a presentation, her teacher reprimands her and later her
classmates tease her. After a meal at the diner, a young boy's mother can
chastise him, "You embarrassed me with your behavior," without
informing him of his error or of proper restaurant etiquette. One client
of mine was ridiculed by his mother for years at the family dinner table.
By the time he entered seventh grade, attending his first school with a
cafeteria, he felt too threatened to enter the lunch room. When he entered
treatment in our clinic at the age of 53 he was on disability insurance
from severe social phobia.
Treating Social Phobias
Below is a brief description of professional treatment of social phobias.
See The
Seven Issues in Recovery and How
to Get Comfortable for the self-help skills of this program.
Most people with social phobia can be helped
by a therapy program. Although results vary, it appears as many as 80%
of those who enter treatment programs report significant improvement, and
say that they are able to get their social phobia under control.
Treatment for social phobia generally centers around a combination of
a type of behavior therapy called exposure,
and cognitive therapy. In exposure therapy people gradually
confront the situation that brings on their anxiety. Repeated exposure,
combined with practice in coping with the dreaded situation, is designed
to show people that they can perform satisfactorily without embarrassing
themselves.
Exposure therapy for some disorders may be administered in one-on-one
sessions with the therapist. In social phobia, the treatment
can have an even greater impact if it takes place in a group
setting, because the key feature of this disorder is that anxiety is only
triggered by an activity performed in front of others. Additionally, group
members may benefit by observing simulations and borrowing others' coping
techniques.
Most treatment programs include homework, in which the
patient initiates his own exposure sessions according to plans made in
the group session. A report is then made at the next group meeting.
Exposure therapy alone may not be sufficient to control some people's
social anxiety. Therefore, cognitive therapy is added,
designed to alter their thinking about themselves and their social abilities.
Cognitive therapy examines people's expectations of social situations and
perceptions of their own performance. Typically the individual with social
phobia exaggerates others' competence and expectations while belittling
his own.
This therapy is intended to help the individual with social phobia learn
to separate realistic from unrealistic assumptions. Training in
social skills may support cognitive therapy and exposure by boosting
confidence levels.
Medication is sometimes useful in easing the core symptoms
of social phobias. Individuals whose anxiety is triggered by just a few
predictable situations may be helped by taking medication about an hour
before a feared event. Those with more pervasive or less predictable anxiety
may do better with medication that is administered daily. See our section
on medications
for general information.
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