Progress is slowly but
surely being made in my recovery from Social Anxiety Disorder.
Last time I wrote about my anxiety I was talking about overcoming
speaking on the phone and driving a car. I hit a plateau in that
time, as I ran out of things to work on, but now I've set my sights
on getting a job.
As far as I'm concerned,
working or going to school are the worst of my problems. These are
long-term commitments that I feel I will get trapped in and panic, and cannot get out of without having the
guilt of letting someone down. These are my biggest fears. Going to
school is not necessary, but working is. Fortunately I have
experience in the grocery industry, and have an opportunity here for
a job at a local store.
This is a very interesting
process for me. In my mind I feel that if the job is just given to
me, I can show up and do the work, yet the people involved aren't
going to make this easy on me (said with a wink). I'm under the
impression that the job is mine, but I still have to do everything I would have to do if I was anyone else off the street. Certainly this is
no slam dunk (I may not get the job), but regardless of that I
am getting some much needed experience and confidence. I am at once lazy and don't want to do this, and appreciative of the opportunity to do it.
The back story is that I live near someone who is pretty high up in the grocery chains corporate
office. He's a cool guy and told me he could get me a job.* I have
avoided it for months, but I have finally made up my mind to get the ball rolling and see
where it takes me. I have nothing to lose, and a lot to gain from
this.
Two
Sundays ago I filled out an application, which required me to go to
the store and be told I had to go back home to fill it out online. The application wasn't nearly as difficult as I thought it would be, and I was quickly done. I was a bit let down that I couldn't bring it back in to the manager, mostly because I felt it was such a big leap to actually have gone to the store, I wasn't sure if I could repeat it.
But I still had to go back to let the manager know I had filled out the application, and that I was serious. This is where things got interesting for
me—and I learned something about myself.
If
faced with a tough decision to do something right now, or put it off
until a “better” day, I will choose to do the thing NOW.
Last night my anxiety got the best of me and I spent the
evening crawling up walls. I was very anxious and depressed. Anxious
because of the uncertainty I faced having to go back to the store, and depressed because
of the hopelessness tied to fighting the inevitable.
I went to sleep with a
heavy heart, but when I woke up the fear was gone and I knew what I
would do, and why I would do it this morning.
I had thought to do it
Monday, to postpone as long as I could. The logic behind this was simple. Going back was the last thing in the world I wished to do. I thought dying would be more convenient for me, or even applying somewhere else. Anywhere but there!
Then going Monday required me to sit on my hands Thursday,
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, and Monday could come to find me
postponing this again. In those four days I had plenty of time to
fret and worry—hell, I could think myself so far under the table
that I could lose all my confidence.
The alternative, as I saw
it, was to go to the store immediately to keep moving forward.
Between these two choices,
I chose the one that required less mental anguish—less anxiety,
less depression. I knew, and I was proven correct, that if I just did
it, I could put it behind me.
I know this because I'm
beginning to understand the nature of the fear in my mind. The mental
anguish I experience inside myself is not consistent with the world
around me, which is often peaceful and serene. The anguish exists
because I exist, which makes it both difficult and easy to remedy. Getting rid of it is as simple as getting rid
of, not necessarily the self, but the things that prop the self up.
Namely the fear of change;
wanting the world to be just so, and not accepting it as it is.
The self is an
illusion of the “unchanging.” Of course the self is just a
concept that we project onto reality. We are constantly changing,
never the same as we were before. The self only exists when we're
aware of the self, and yet we can lose ourselves in many things like
sleep, or a drug, or a game, etc.
You can never step in the
same river twice, they say. So the human mind creates the self as a
way to give clarity and meaning to the ever-changing world, by having something that can be counted on not to change. The self is something
to hold onto in chaos. If the self were only ever used to serve this
purpose, it would be a great thing, but I for one have clung too
tightly to myself, mistaking the anchor for the ocean.
A side effect of this is
self-consciousness. I focus too much on myself in order to maintain
it and ignore the rest of the world which is in constant motion.
The truth of the matter is that the ocean of reality is usually
tranquil. Sometimes a storm can batter the seas, and certainly
anything caught in that storm is in danger, but this is rare. What
hurts me the most is maintaining the self, and the mental anguish I
experience when I try to fight against the ocean around me. I drown
not because I am sailing upon a sea, but because I hold onto the
anchor as it sinks in an attempt to stay in place. If I simply let
myself go where the tides take me, the suffering will be
minimal.
So this morning I woke and
I did the thing I most feared in an attempt to not have to fear
doing it.
The fear of doing
anything is more toxic than the doing.
I wonder what else I can apply this to? Can you apply this to your own life?
* In my defense I have 7+
years of grocery experience, managed dairy, frozen foods, and
grocery, and can find my way around produce, meat, and bakery/deli. I
can even run a register! It's not like I don't know what I'm doing. A
lack of confidence isn't my problem. It's the fear of letting people
down, the fear of the unknown, the fear of change. These things I
will get over. *
Further Reading:
Tao of Anxiety: Series
Further Reading:
Tao of Anxiety: Series
Waiting is tough. Once I got notice of a mandatory appointment late on Friday after it was supposed to happen because I had been late dealing with the mail. Then I had to wait all weekend to see how much trouble I was in. Turned out, none at all, but it was nerve wracking and the next week after I was totally worn out. I have tools to manage it but I have no way to stop it.
ReplyDeleteSo I wonder please did you get the job ? I am in suspense here.
Thanks for sharing your situation so openly and courageously. This would make me far too anxious I would just go blank.
I don't know when I'll get it...should be in the next week or two. I'll definitely blog it :D
DeleteWaiting is the hardest part of anything. The mind is powerful!