- Shyness
Still Misunderstood and Often Underestimated
By Jonathan Berent, A.C.S.W
Millions of individuals suffer
from this problem or other "hidden" social handicaps.
They run the gamut in degrees of suffering.
The most common example is fear
of public speaking, the number one phobia in this country. Also
common, is uncontrollable anxiety surrounding interaction with
an authority figure. Each can be stifling and often have serious
ramifications. Consider, also, the following examples:
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Teenagers who develop school
phobia because of underling social fears.
Young adults who are pathologically
over- dependent on their parents.
Children who do not talk because
of social anxiety (elective mutism).
Individuals who are behaviorally
paralyzed because of difficulty with social skills.
Aspiring executives and professionals
whose careers are stifled because of job related social anxiety.
Married persons who are emotionally
debilitated by social fears.
Individuals whose only friends
are their computers and televisions.
Adults who are debilitated by
panic and symptoms of blushing and sweating.
Adults who never date and are
involuntary virgins. |
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Eating disorder sufferers whose
problems stem from social anxiety.
Estimates range that from 3 to
12 percent of the overall population suffers from social phobia
or extreme shyness. Most individuals who are affected never seek
help because of fear of humiliation and embarrassment. For this
reason, social phobics are very much an unstudied population.
Those who do seek help often receive inappropriate or ineffective
treatment. Most current treatment of social anxiety is based
on medication. For many individuals this just breeds further
dependence, which itself is a big part of the problem.
The by-products of social anxiety
include depression; self medication, with alcohol usually the
drug of choice; an inability to compete in today's stressful
society characterized by poor performance and a lack of productivity,
and often family distress.
When people hear the word "shy,"
they often think of children. The reality is that most people
who seek help for this problem are adults. The common response
to children with this problem is "They will grow out of
it." In cases where the problem is substantial, it worsens
over time.
It is important to grasp some
basic concepts about the two closely related dynamics of shyness
and social anxiety: Both terms describe a learned response to
social interaction. I refer to this fear response as interactive
inhibition. When interactions are inhibited by social anxiety,
a person is unable to get as much out of life as is possible.
When individuals who have this problem think that "shyness"
is an unchangeable personality trait, they are creating a major
obstacle for themselves that stands in the way of fulfillment
and productivity. The reality is that shyness is social anxiety.
Social anxiety is a learned response and habit that can be broken.
Furthermore, at the risk of being controversial, as an individual
begins to understand that social anxiety is a combination of
attitudinal, emotional. behavioral, and physical responses, it
will be understood that there actually is no such thing as shyness.
Rather what was understood as "shyness" is actually
social anxiety, a psychophysiological response that can be learned
to be controlled. In other words, it is a way of reacting, not
an unchangeable instinct that has chosen the person in question! |