anything goes with emma chamberlain - living in fear [video]
Episode Date: May 21, 2023[video available on Spotify] i recently found myself in an unusual state of terror and fear. i've always been very afraid of bad things happening to my loved ones. but weirdly, i've never really been ...that afraid of bad things happening to me. in retrospect, i look at the things that i used to do when i was a teenager that were sort of careless, and it's hard for me to even comprehend now. i felt like nothing bad would happen to me. but recently, i have completely gone the opposite direction, where now i'm terrified of the world around me and how it might hurt me. and that's not healthy either, because when you're living in that state of mind, you sort of stop living your life. there's risk in everything. and you have to have a healthy understanding of what risks are worth taking and which are not. and i've sort of gone on this journey the last few months trying to find a healthy and happy medium. i'm not 100% there yet, but i'm getting much closer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I recently found myself in an unusual state of terror and fear.
I've had anxiety and terror and fear throughout my life, but it's been very focused on a specific topic in my life.
I've always been very afraid of bad things happening to my loved ones bad things happening to people like hair about
But weirdly, I've never really been that
Afraid of bad things happening to me
Now don't get me wrong. There have been situations where I've been scared
for my own well-being, but it's always been very situational. Like there's a clear
threat and that's why I'm frightened. It's never been like me laying in bed at
night afraid of something bad happening to me. I've always laid in bed at night
and worried about bad things happening to people I care about. And that's been sort of the source of a lot of
my anxiety for my whole life. The only sort of anxiety that was prevalent
growing up for me was anxiety around whether or not people like me,
which in retrospect is not worth my energy, right?
Because it's like, who gives a fuck?
Okay, who fucking cares?
But that was sort of my only anxiety around myself
was about whether or not people liked me, whether or
not people were mad at me, whether or not I did something wrong and hurt someone's feelings,
etc. But I would say the majority of my fear and terror growing up was about bad things happening to my loved ones. But recently, that's changed.
And I have been living in this state of constant fear and terror about bad things happening
to me.
Now I still have very bad anxiety around bad things happening to my loved ones, but now compounded on to that.
I'm scared of bad things happening to me. And this is brand new because as a teenager,
I did not give a fuck about myself. And I didn't even realize that I didn't, but I didn't.
Like in retrospect, I look at the things that I used to do that were sort of careless,
and it's hard for me to even comprehend now
because I'm so newly protective of myself
and paranoid about my well-being.
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to learn more. I would say my level of fear and terror about bad things happening to me is not
rational or balanced. It's a little bit too much. You know, it's a little bit too extreme.
It's not like this healthy level of protectiveness. It's like, I don't even wanna go outside.
You know, whereas when I was a teenager,
I just did not give a fuck.
I would walk around scary areas of Los Angeles or New York,
late at night, by myself,
like areas that are known for not being safe, I would walk around by myself not giving a fuck.
I felt like I could defend myself against anything if I wanted to.
I felt like nothing bad would happen to me, you know.
I don't know if I was blissfully ignorant about the world around me.
I don't know if I was under the immature impression that I was immortal for some reason.
I don't know if I just was not that big of a fan of myself.
Therefore I didn't care. I don't know. I don't know why I was so fearless.
As a teen.
But regardless,
those days are over and I have
completely gone the opposite direction.
We're now
I'm terrified of the world around me and how it might hurt me.
And this is bizarre. Okay, this is bizarre for me because it's just not like me. And here's
the reason why I think this is a problem. Something that needs to be fixed. I've over corrected
Subconsciously right? I've gone my whole life being relatively fearless
Unless there was like a obvious threat
Where almost anyone would feel threatened or nervous or scared or anxious
where almost anyone would feel threatened or nervous or scared or anxious.
And living like that wasn't
necessarily good. You know walking around dangerous areas at two in the morning by yourself as a teenager, not a great idea,
you know, should be avoided if possible.
Not worrying about myself was a sign that I didn't
value myself enough. And it was a sign that I had some sort of ignorance about
how brutal reality can be. And that's not good. But then for some reason that I can't necessarily pinpoint
I completely pivoted in the opposite direction and I'm now hyper fixated on the world around
me in a way that's a little bit too anxious, a little bit too paranoid, a little bit too
scared. And that's not healthy either. Because when
you're living in that state of mind, you sort of stop living your life in a way. There's
risk in everything. And when you're hyper aware of risks, you start to see the risks in
everything, driving somewhere, getting on a plane, traveling
to a new place, even taking a nightkill when you're sick.
You start to see the risk in everything, and it makes you not want to do anything, because
there is risk in everything.
There's risk in walking across the street.
You could get hit by a car.
And in life, you have to have a healthy relationship
with the risks that you take on a day-to-day basis.
And you have to have a healthy understanding
of what risks are worth taking in which are not.
And so it's just been bizarre for me to go from one extreme to the other.
And I've sort of gone on this journey the last few months trying to find a healthy medium
and a happy medium.
And I'm not 100% there yet, but I'm getting much closer.
And so I wanted to talk about that journey.
And what a journey it's been.
I really don't know what caused this fear and paranoia,
but there are a few possibilities. Number one, it could be as a result of the world.
Part of becoming an adult is really feeling the weight and the gravity of the news and
the headlines.
I feel like as a kid, you're able to sort of separate yourself a little bit more from
a heartbreaking headline or a scary headline.
And in a lot of ways, the adults in your life are shielding you from that type of news
and that type of information, not always and not every young person has that experience, but
for the most part adults try to protect children from
scary realities of the world that they're not ready for yet.
Part of growing up is
seeing those headlines, seeing those scary things on the news and
seeing those headlines, seeing those scary things on the news, and fully being able to comprehend the gravity and the weight of those things.
And it's really painful and uncomfortable and scary and anxiety inducing.
And we're seeing the news all day long, whether it's playing on the TV in the other room or
it's on social media or it's on the little news app on your phone that pops up, has
like little pop-ups on your phone or it's on the front page of the newspaper, although
nobody's reading a newspaper anymore.
But you know, the news is everywhere now.
It's more shoved in your face
than ever. And I'm not saying that's a bad thing because I think it is important to be
informed to a certain extent, right? I mean, I guess, I don't know. I mean, to an extent,
well, that's a conversation for a whole another day, you know, but whatever.
But I think maybe this newfound paranoia is stemming from me really looking at the news
and at the headlines and feeling their gravity and feeling
their weight for the first time. Because if you read every headline and you fully
feel that pain that comes with it, you know, something bad happened, something
catastrophic happened, you read it and you feel that pain.
I mean, it's more pain than one person can feasibly handle.
You know what I'm saying?
Like it's almost like you have to sort of put a wall up,
but sometimes it's hard.
And it's frightening.
The news constantly shows the bad stuff.
That's sort of the point of the news.
To fill you in on all the bad shit that's going on.
With maybe a rare story that's good every 10 years,
I swear to God, it's pretty much all bad.
And constantly being exposed to that
can paint a picture of the world in your eyes
that's terrifying.
It can make you feel like the world around you is burning, which in a lot
of ways sure it is. But it can make you feel like only bad things ever happen when that's
not true because good things do happen as well. And for sanity purposes, You have to remember that good things happen too. You know, it's not all bad.
You know, there are good people in this world. Good things do happen in this world.
But when you're constantly being exposed to the news, all you're seeing is the bad news.
So that becomes your reality.
And I'm not somebody who necessarily seeks out the news a lot.
You know, there are some who always have the news on, always are reading the news.
I'm not that type of person.
And even I feel like I've been impacted by the influx of bad news constantly.
And so I hypothesize that that could be a part of why I've had this sort of subconscious shift.
But I've also hypothesized that it could be as a result of a maturing perspective on mortality. As a kid, everybody around you is telling you how much life you have ahead of you.
Oh, when you're older, you're going to do this. Oh, when you're older, you're going to do this.
Oh, my God, you have so much life ahead of you. You can do this. you can do this. You're constantly being told that because telling a child that tomorrow is not promised
is pretty evil, right?
So a lot of us are constantly being reminded as a kid that we have so much time. Because that's the only thing you can tell a kid, right?
But in a lot of ways, that's maybe not the right idea because it's kind of not true.
It might be true, but tomorrow's not promised for anyone Which is a really challenging reality, but it's true
Life is very precious
And I don't know if young people can comprehend
How fragile life really is
And I don't know if it's even healthy for kids to comprehend that because it's uncomfortable, it's really uncomfortable.
It's much easier to just say, oh, you know, you have so much life ahead of you and there's
this sort of hyper positivity when it comes to talking about life to kids, and I do think that might be the only way to do it.
But the problem with it is, is that when young people then grow up, it's sort of like finding out Santa isn't real.
It's like, wait a minute. Tomorrow is not actually promised for me. At any given moment, some shit could go wrong
to someone that I love or to me.
But it's interesting, I feel like my anxiety
as a kid was around the people around me, not around myself.
I was worried about other people.
Why?
Because the people that I cared about the most
were all adults and nobody was going around telling them like
Your future so bright you have so much time
They were telling me that so I wasn't worried about me because I was like everyone's telling me I
Got my whole life ahead of me
Which kind of made me feel immortal in a way?
But nobody was saying that to the adults around me, you know
I'm hearing adults talk about getting older and this and that. And, and I was worried about
them. But I wasn't worried about me because that was not really the, the narrative around
being a young person, right? But now as an adult, I am realizing how truly not immortal I am.
And it's not like I was ever consciously or purposely looking at myself as immortal.
It was all subconscious. It was not a deliberate choice.
It's become painfully clear to me. How many times a day I could die? You know,
whether I'm driving in my car or I'm on a plane or I'm walking by myself on a street where I can't see anyone else walking with me, you know,
or I'm home alone or I'm cooking on the stove. Like, whatever it might be, I could die doing anything. My stove could explode, I could crash my car. The plane I'm in could come tumbling down into the ocean
someone could
Jump out from a bush and stab me. I mean, I know it sounds like so so crazy, but it's like
It's it's not crazy though because anything's possible and those are things that you read in the news and those are
Stories that you hear online and those are stories that you hear online. And those are things that you see in movies. And those are, you know, those are things that happen. And they're not
common. They don't happen all the time. They do when they don't, right? Like the likelihood
that it's going to happen to you is slim. But it's not, but it's not that slim. And I guess part of being
an adult is realizing, oh shit, any of those things can happen to me at any given moment
and I could just be fucking wiped from the planet at any given moment. And that's just reality. It is a scary reality when you are fully able to grasp it.
But prior to now, I just couldn't grasp it.
I just could not grasp it.
I think I felt like I could grasp it, but I really couldn't.
Like I really wasn't thinking about it.
I also wonder if, you know, this sort of new understanding of mortality
and how fragile life is is giving me a new sense of gratitude for being on this planet,
because it is really a miracle to be alive in a lot of ways. It is a miracle to be alive. And I've never felt that way.
I definitely used to take life for granted. And I also think struggling with depression a little bit,
depression a little bit, especially as a young person, made me value my life even less, which is not comfortable to talk about, but it's true.
When you feel depressed, you do not value life.
You do not value being alive at all.
You spite life, you spite being alive.
And I struggled with depression a lot as a young person,
even today I do.
But I think a combination of blissful ignorance
and depression as a young person made me really not see the value in life.
It made me take life for granted and I think it made me careless in a way about how I took care
of myself because I was just like, fuck it. I don't care. I just don't care. I don't care to even try to find value in it. And I'm just
going to try to survive and be here and get through it. But now I see it as what a miracle it is
to be on this planet. And what a miracle it is that I have the life that I have. You know,
I have the life that I have. You know, I think my new sense of gratitude for being on this planet has shaken me up
a little bit in a way, because I wonder if maybe my brain is overcomensating for lost time. It's like, wow, I've been really ungrateful for my life. And now I need to feel so grateful
that I protect myself from the world in an extreme way to sort of
compensate for this loss of time.
Does that make sense? Like Like I spent so much time not
caring about my life and not valuing my life.
And now my brain wants to like overcomensate
with extreme amounts of gratitude, which is good.
But also an extreme amounts of gratitude, which is good, but also an extreme amount of
protectiveness around myself that's actually preventing me from comfortably
and normally living my life at all. It's almost similar to how a parent, a particularly protective parent treats a child, right?
An overly protective parent loves their child so much that they shield their
child from the world and don't let them experience the world at all, which then makes the child
dislike and resent the parent and then go and do even crazier shit as an act of rebellion, right?
So it all ends up backfiring and it's okay. I don't know if that's the best sort of metaphor, but
well, we're trying it, okay?
With myself, I am so grateful to be alive
and I'm so grateful to be living in a physical body
and to be doing this.
You know what I mean?
I'm just so happy to be here.
Even when it's challenging, I'm just so happy to be here
that I don't wanna fuck it up,, I'm just so happy to be here that I don't want to fuck it up.
So I'm shielding myself from anything that could possibly go wrong.
As almost an active gratitude being like,
oh, I don't want, like,
I'm so grateful that I'm alive that I don't want to go and die doing some shit.
But at the same time,
what's so great about being alive in the
first place is that you get to go experience the world. That's the whole fucking point,
right? And so I'm miserable because I'm scared to do everything in anything. It's backfiring, right? I also will say that I do have a particularly
unusual circumstance in my life that also might be adding to my sort of paranoia and fear
fear around my safety and well-being, that being a public figure to an extent, right? Being on the internet, being widely available and widely accessible on the internet.
In some ways, it's not frightening.
Like me sitting here and talking into a microphone doesn't
frighten me necessarily because it's not a security risk, okay? But you know, me showing my day-to-day
life like I used to on the internet, if you're unfamiliar with what I used to post on the internet,
I used to post my day-to-day life, me going to the grocery store that I always went to,
me going to, you know, my favorite clothing store,
me going to my favorite beach,
me going to all my favorite places,
me doing my day-to-day life, I used to film everything I did.
I used to film my home, I used to film everything, right?
Well, that's actually really scary,
because if somebody wanted to find me, they could find me.
And I've stopped filming where I go.
I don't show the grocery store I go to now.
I don't show, you know, my neighborhood around where I live. I don't show the grocery store I go to now. I don't show my neighborhood around where I live.
I don't show my favorite clothing store.
I don't show these places anymore because that's not safe.
So I think I'm particularly paranoid about my safety because there's a little bit more information
about me on the internet than there is about, say, the average person who is just using
social media as a casual user to share with their friends and family.
You know, I'm sharing with a bit more people, which is a fucking blessing in a fucking miracle and something that I enjoy a lot.
But, you know, there are some downsides to that, which is that there's a safety concern there.
You know, and I've had to sort of shift around the way I do things for my own safety. I can't show the places
that I like to go anymore, etc. Right? And also, I think to an extent too, I'm a target, certain scary things like being stalked or being robbed or something like that.
Those could be the sources of my newfound fear.
It might be a combination of all of them.
It could be all of them.
I can't really tell yet.
And maybe at some point, I'll be able to properly analyze, but
I think I'm too deep in it now.
So I can't really tell what it is.
This new terror has impacted my life in many, many areas.
I used to never be terrified of flying on planes, which was great because I fly on planes
all the time, more than ever in my life.
I've never traveled more in my life.
And perfect timing.
Every time I've gotten on a plane in the last four months. I've been convinced, I have convinced myself that
the plane was going to go down. And prior to this, literally, I would get on a plane and
be like, oh my God, this is the best. And I would like sit down and be like, oh my
God, I'm going to order a sparkling water when the little cart gets to me and, oh, maybe I'll watch a movie or, oh, I'm gonna go to sleep.
You know, and it was like blissful, not anymore.
Now every time I get on the plane, I am a wreck.
A wreck.
It's mainly internal.
Like, if I'm flying with other people, I really try not to express this because I don't
want to make anyone else upset, right?
I try to keep it inside, but it's been really challenging for me because, you know, my
heart's beating, I'm sweating, I'm so scared.
I'm taking everything as a bad sign, like the flight attendant, like messes up my name,
says like, oh, you're Emily, right?es up my name says like,
Oh, you're Emily, right?
Okay, and I'm like, oh my God, that's a sign.
Like I just am taking everything as a bad sign.
I'm so stressed out.
It's hard for me to fall asleep if I'm taking a red eye.
Like I can't, I'm anxious, I'm nervous, I can't do it.
It takes a lot for me to calm down.
And the whole ride, I'm in like an agitated state.
Anytime there's even a little bit of turbulence,
I'm like, this is it, I knew it.
And I'm like telling myself, I knew it, I knew this was it.
And then it never is, you know?
I've also been incredibly afraid of a home intruder.
I have lived alone since I was 17.
And even before that, I was home alone all the time
because my parents worked my whole life, you know?
So since I was like 11 years old, I've been home alone.
And I don't have siblings, so I was really home alone.
And it was never really frightening to me.
I mean, I had one occasion as a teenager where
I've told the story before,
but basically I had a creepy person coming
and banging on my door incessantly every time my mom would leave for like a 48 hour
period. And it was fucking scary. That was really scary. But see, that was a direct threat, right?
That was a direct threat. Somebody banging on my door for 20 minutes directly after my mom would
leave for 48 hours straight anytime my mom would leave. That hours straight and each time my mom would leave.
That was scary.
But other than that, I was not afraid of being home alone.
And like living alone was not a problem for me.
But recently I've been having a really hard time falling asleep by myself.
I close my eyes, I'm trying to fall asleep.
All I can think about is opening
my eyes and seeing somebody in my window, opening my eyes and, you know, someone's, someone's,
well, I get really afraid of even my alarm, my house alarm going off, you know, like my,
I arm my house at night with a security system so that if anyone were to break in, it would set off crazy alarms. I have a fear of that alarm going off.
That sound going on, and me knowing that something's wrong, right?
Like that scares the shit out of me.
I cannot, it's been so hard for me to fall asleep when I'm by myself because that's all I
can think about is someone breaking in. I've even been afraid of traveling to new places or traveling
at all, you know, being in a hotel has been really scary for me because in a way, like,
if somebody were to steal the master key for the whole building, they could just get in
my room. I mean, obviously, you know, there's the deadbolt on the door, but
it's like somebody could fucking bang the door down. I don't know. I don't know who has access to my room. Wanted in a hotel. You know, what if the hotel
got taken over by thieves or something? And thieves were coming in and robbing the hotel.
by thieves or something. And thieves were coming in and robbing the hotel.
There's a lot out of my control at a hotel, you know?
I've been scared of walking around in big cities, especially, because you know, there's
a lot of people and it's a little bit more unhinged in a way.
Yeah, like hanging out in LA in New York used to be fun for me.
Are you said hang out everywhere in LA and hang out everywhere in New York.
At any hour of the day, I did not give a fuck.
I was like walking around here, walking around there, not being afraid of anything, talking to anyone, doing whatever. I was so aloof.
And now I'm scared. Like I'd rather get in a taxi, but I'm also paranoid about getting
in a taxi because like, who knows who that taxi driver is? Getting in an Uber? Who the fuck
is that Uber driver? I don't even know who the Uber driver is. I'm scared. And then I'm scared of walking because I'm like, you
know, I'm just available. Like anyone can come up and grab me, stab me, punch me, anything
can happen. Going on the subway in New York, any type of public transportation, there are
so many horror stories about that constantly. People getting pushed in front of the subway, people getting stabbed on the subway, people ringing weapons
onto the subway. Like, you know, it just feels like how do I even get around anymore without
being afraid, except for driving myself, which that scares me too, because I'm like, what if
someone throws a rocket in my window and like, kills me, This is how my brain's been working. Okay. I've also had
this weird fear that I'm being spied on and I'm being watched and I'm being listened
to. Like I'm constantly afraid of my phone being hacked or something and someone can see
me. They can see what I'm doing. They can hear what I'm saying. Or you guys are going to be like, oh my God,
I'm a unique therapy.
OK, and I know that.
But listen, this happens, OK?
Because I'm going to tell you how I got through it
because I'm much better now.
This was just a moment in time.
And I've, and I got myself through it.
This is not to say that I couldn't benefit from also
maybe more assistance.
We can always use more assistance.
There's no such thing as too much, but I've also been really paranoid about my health,
constantly feeling like something is going wrong, you know, feeling like my chest is really
tight and being afraid that like something's wrong with my lungs or getting really light
headed for some reason, you know, maybe I'm dehydrated, maybe I'm hungry, whatever, like,
you know, but getting light headed for an unknown reason and feeling like I'm going to pass
out or I'm going to have a seizure or something, you know, like constant health anxiety and
fear that I'm dying. So you can imagine my headspace has definitely impacted my life.
Obviously, living in this state of mind will just have you in this constant state of anxiety
and fear, which is so incredibly uncomfortable, constantly feeling, like just constantly afraid. There's
a physical reaction that comes with that. Too much adrenaline, mental anguish, all of that
comes with being in this type of mindset, which is also exhausting, mentally and physically
exhausting, right? I found myself sleeping a lot during this time when it was really bad. I found myself unable to
to be emotionally available in a lot of ways because I was so exhausted. My energy was probably not
very fun to be around for the people who I love and want to spend time with because they're probably
like, Emma's a fucking wreck. She's a wreck. Like she's so afraid. She doesn't want to do anything
because she's afraid of everything.
And I was able to cover it up at times,
but not all the time.
It would slip through the cracks.
I was really struggling.
And although I'm still experiencing it a little bit,
it's gotten so much better for me.
And I've been able to sort of work on this on my own.
And so I thought I would share with you
how I got through this because it was fucking terrible.
Now listen, everyone's problems and struggles
and issues are relative, right?
You know, some of you might be looking at me
living in this state of terror
about bad things that could happen. And you know, you
could say to me, but Emma, nothing fucking bad happened. So wipe up the pity party and
get the fuck out of here and shut the fuck up with all that. I totally understand that.
Because what a miracle it is that the worst thing that happened to me during this hard
time was that I was just psychologically a mess, right? It would be so much worse if all
of the bad things that I thought were going to happen did happen. And there are people
out there where these bad things do fucking happen. You know, I don't want, you know, me talking about this to send
a message that, oh, my life sucks, oh, my life, this, my life, that not at all. I just know
that I'm not the only one that has dealt with this extreme paranoia and in feeling of
protectiveness around themselves that has gone too far.
And so the only reason why I'm even bringing this up is to hopefully help someone else
who is trying to get through this and find a healthy balance themselves.
You know, like just share my tips and tricks how I fucking got through it because it's something I've never experienced and
My only goal here is to help someone, but it's not to say that like I'm not asking for pity. I'm not asking for
Anything like that. This is all
With hopes of helping somebody else who's going through the same thing.
And it's an uncomfortable thing to talk about because it's almost like in order to talk
about this, you have to be coming from a really fortunate place where the bad things didn't
happen.
You were just really scared that all the bad things were going to happen.
And that is a fortunate, fortunate place to be in.
And so I don't want to ignore that either.
Being paranoid about yourself and being scared about your well-being
is in a weird way a fortunate thing to have to worry about.
Because there are some people who don't get to worry about it
because the bad thing did happen to them.
So, you know, I think that's important to mention.
So all of that to say,
this is how I got through it. Number one, I really made it a priority to be mindful about the media
that I consume. I am the poster child of talking about boundaries with the internet.
I feel like very not Gen Z for this in a lot of ways because it's like not the, I don't
know if it's necessarily the cool thing to be like the grandma who's like, we need to
be setting boundaries with the internet.
You know, it doesn't sound very meta, right?
But I've really, really tried to control the media that I consume.
You know, like when I'm online, I really try to focus on watching things that make me feel
good, watching things that teach me something, looking at things that make me feel good, looking
at things that teach me something. And I try to control the amount of news that I see.
And whether it's turning off notifications from the news app on my phone, or it's telling
the algorithm on Instagram that I don't want to see news on my explorer page by like saying I'm not
interested in this or whatever you can do that. Same thing on YouTube. Whether
it's doing that, like whatever it may be, trying to get the news out of my
peripheral so that when I do decide, okay it's time for me to check in on what's going on.
I can do it in a controlled situation.
Like okay, I'm making the choice right now for the next 30 minutes to go check in on what's
going on.
And it's like a controlled experience rather than it's sort of coming to me when I'm not
ready at all times, right?
Because it's on every platform.
It's on every social media platform. It's all over the ready at all times, right? Because it's on every platform. It's on every social media platform.
It's all over the internet at all times.
I think sort of having a more controlled routine
of consuming that type of information is healthy
and setting that boundary for yourself is really important.
Also not watching as many scary things,
like, you know, cutting back on the scary movies,
cutting back on the crime documentaries,
watching things that are uplifting a little bit more.
It also really helped me to just face the fears.
Every time I would fly on the plane
and I would be so scared to do so.
By the end of the flight, I'd be like, wow, I was wrong. Everything was okay.
Every time I slept home alone, when I maybe could have gone to my boyfriend's house,
or gone to my mom's house, or done whatever. Every time I successfully slept through the night, I showed myself, wow, I was wrong. You know, I
misread that situation. Everything was fine. Every time I left the house, even though it
was easier to just stay home, I showed myself, wow, that actually wasn't so bad and it actually made my day better, you know,
bearing the pain in the fear over and over and over again, enforcing yourself through
that discomfort, eventually over time shows you, I have nothing to be afraid of. And that
applies with so many things, that applies with so many things. I mean It applies with much more mundane things like
Maybe you get anxiety going into taking a test or doing a job interview
The more you do it the less afraid you get because you start to realize wait a minute
There's really nothing to be afraid of it's like exposure therapy in a way, right? So I sort of did
Exposure therapy with myself where I wouldn't let myself
fold and go and run and hide to something more comfortable when I was afraid. You know,
when I was afraid of sleeping home alone, I would fucking push through it and just do it.
You know what I mean? Just do it. I wouldn't go running and
crying to my boyfriend or my mom. It would be kind of tough to run to my dad
because he lives six-hour drive away, but you know my boyfriend or my mom live a
little too close. It would be easy to go and run to them when I'm scared. You know what I mean?
But I would force myself to just get through it.
And eventually it showed me what I think is an instinct, right?
What I think is an instinct, something telling me,
oh my God, things are gonna go wrong.
No, that's just my fear talking.
You know what I'm saying?
I think I started to convince myself that when I would get paranoid
about something, that that was a sign that something bad was actually going to happen. When the truth
was, I was just scared and hyper analyzing the possibility that something bad could happen.
And I was convincing myself that that bad thing was going to happen. And that me being afraid was a sign that it was going to happen, right?
When in reality, it was not really a sign, it was just me being scared.
And that was really helpful.
And to sort of go off that, exposure therapy in a way can help ease your mind and show you that being scared isn't a sign that the
thing you're scared of is going to happen. It just means you're scared. But what
goes hand in hand with that is the fact that still anything is possible. Seeing
that your fear in paranoia isn't a sign can help you to ease your fear in paranoia in the moment,
because you can tell yourself, well, this is not a sign. This is just how I am. I just am afraid of
this, right? So it can help ease your fear a little bit. But what still remains is the fact that
it could still happen at any time. Anytime you go to do something that's scary for you,
still happen at any time. Anytime you go to do something that's scary for you, that could be the time or something bad happens. And so that doesn't just go away through exposure
therapy. What that goes away through is accepting that bad things might happen. And this piece
of it has been the hardest for me, accepting the fact that I can't control if bad things happen to me.
I can't control that.
Anything is possible at any given moment.
And all I can do is make smart choices, take care of myself as much as I can without
protecting myself from the world around me to a point that isolates me.
And the rest, I can't even worry about because it's out of my control.
That's something that's easy for me some days and hard for me other days.
And it's something I'm still working on.
But I think the combination of facing the fears and then accepting that the fears may though still happen is the perfect
recipe. But one half of that is a bit harder than the other half. The acceptance is a huge
challenge that I'm still working on. I've also been really focusing on gratitude when
I find myself so afraid of something flying on
the plane falling asleep alone walking in the street driving whatever it might be
when I find myself afraid I try to distract myself by running through a list of
all the things I'm just so grateful for, which I know sounds like so. Sounds like
something your mom would say or like your grandma or your least favorite teacher, you know,
or your therapist or something. Think about what you're grateful for, but it's really true.
It's really true. Finding at least one thing that you can just be so grateful for, whether it's the mere fact that you're just alive on this planet,
or it's your relationship with someone who's special to you,
or it's something exciting that recently happened to you,
whatever it might be,
shifting your thought process and using that energy
to just be grateful can really put things into perspective.
Because a lot of this paranoia is diminishing the good things that are happening in your
life.
So I really try to replace it with gratitude.
As much as I can, it's hard, it's easier said than done.
But I really try to do that. And last but not least, I sort of self-south myself.
It's a great skill to have, takes practice.
I have moments where I'm like the self-southing queen.
And I find myself getting anxious
and I immediately think like, okay, what do I need right now?
What's going to help to relax me?
Do I need to exercise?
Do I need to move around a little bit?
Is that going to help put things into perspective for me or do I need to call someone that I love
and just be social for a little bit?
Like, is that going to help me?
Sometimes I'm really good at that, and sometimes I'm not.
But in these moments when I'm afraid,
I really lean into self-soothing,
you know, trying to find what's gonna soothe me,
what's gonna relax me.
Is it taking a hot shower? Is it calling
someone on the phone? Is it exercising? Is it going and running errands? Is it facing
a fear? Head on and just getting over it. Pushing through it? Is that what would help
soothe me? Proving myself wrong? What is it? You know, figuring out what's going to help
you get through that moment
and what's going to help put things into perspective for you and then doing it. That's it. That's
all I got. I really never thought that this would be something that would be so challenging for me. I just never, I've just never even experienced anything remotely similar to it.
Like, my mindset has only ever been the complete opposite.
And so this is just a fascinating turn of events in Emma's little brain.
But, you know, I'm on my way to finding that perfect healthy balance.
And if this is something that you're struggling with too, you'll get there too.
Okay, it's just it's a lot of practice and a lot of proving yourself wrong and a lot of
acceptance about the truth that the world is unfair. You know, we'll get through this together.
And if you're not struggling with this or you don't struggle with this,
rock on.
Regardless of if this is something you deal with or not,
we got this. We're going to get through this together Through rain, through shine. We will fucking get through it.
Anyway, thanks for hanging out, letting me have this one-sided, except not full. It's one-sided right now, because I'm talking into the abyss of my room,
but it's not really one-sided because you're somewhere right now listening.
So I appreciate you for listening and hanging out for my little therapy session. It was a
pleasure as it always is. You can follow anything goes where you stream podcasts. For occasional video
episodes though, you got to be on Spotify. Okay, that is where you can see me talk occasionally.
Follow anything goes on Instagram,
at anything goes or on Twitter, at AG podcast,
follow me if you want, at Emma Chamberlain.
Check out my coffee company, Chamberlain Coffee,
if you'd like.
Today I'm drinking a little cold brew,
literally the same, I'm always drinking a cold brew, literally the same shit. I'm always drinking
a cold brew. That's not true. Actually, sometimes I'll have a little herbal tea or I'll have
a little matcha latte or I'll have a little hot latte. Like it happens, but for the most
part, I'm a creature of habit. You can use code AG15 for 15% off on ChamberlainCoffee.com.
Check in with anything goes every Thursday and Sunday for a new episode.
I always appreciate the time we spend together. And I'm just so grateful that you hung out with me today.
So thank you so much.
And I hope you have the most beautiful, awesome day.
And I will talk to you very soon.
And until then, just keep being awesome and tough
and a badass because that is what you're so fucking good at.
So keep fucking doing it and don't stop doing it.
All right, I'll talk to you later.
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