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Home » Social Anxiety in the Modern World: Dr. Fallon Goodman (Transcript) 

Social Anxiety in the Modern World: Dr. Fallon Goodman (Transcript) 

Here is the full transcript of Dr. Fallon Goodman’s talk titled “Social Anxiety in the Modern World” at TEDxUSF conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Each person who entered our therapy clinic answered a stack of questions before beginning treatment. And during my years as a therapist there, there was one question I always reviewed before meeting with a new client. It asked this, “What is your purpose in life?” Define as a central motivating life aim, something you’re trying to accomplish. Now to be fair, this is a difficult question. Identifying a single purpose in life feels really hard. It also feels consequential. Many people spend years searching for and developing their purposes, and some never find it.

Common Responses to Purpose

But typically, we see responses like this: “To be an engaged parent,” “to make meaningful change in my community,” “to build a career I’m proud of,” “to live for a long time, keeping it simple.” But then there was the answer of one young woman who I worked with. Before meeting with her, as I always did, I flipped to see how she described her purpose, and she wrote this: “To avoid being noticed by other people.” This young woman, a bright, witty, compassionate high schooler, decided that her purpose in life was to make sure that other people did not know that she existed.

This is the power of social anxiety. At its core, social anxiety is about the fear of being rejected. When we feel socially anxious, we become hyper-focused on how we are appearing to others. We scan the room looking for signs of threat and disapproval, signs we might have slipped up and are at risk for rejection. And then we seek comfort in signs of approval: smiles, head nods, laughs, and so on.

And while social anxiety can be exhausting, it exists for a reason. Social anxiety tries to protect us from rejection, and it does that by tuning us into the nuances and norms and dynamics of a social group so we can match our behavior to fit in with them and ultimately avoid being rejected.

Social Anxiety and Human Nature

Now, this is a good thing because humans are social; we exist in social groups, we rely on each other whether or not we like that, but also more simply because rejection is painful. Take a moment to think about your own rejection experiences, however cringeworthy; all have them. Maybe you were ghosted after a first date, been there? Maybe you were rejected from your dream job. Maybe you were ousted from a friend group. Rejection is unpleasant, and social anxiety tries to protect us from it.

But social anxiety becomes problematic when it begins to interfere with the life you want to live. And this happens when your fear of rejection becomes intertwined with your view of yourself. When you believe you will be rejected because you think you have some inherent flaw, deficiency, or failing of character. You were ghosted after that first date, and you believe it’s because you are not lovable or attractive enough.

You were turned down from your dream job, and you believe it’s because you are not intelligent or competent enough. You were ousted from that friend group, and you believe it’s because you are not interesting or funny enough. A fear of rejection is really a fear of being less than. Less than we want to be, less than we think we should be, or less than we believe society wants us to be.

Social Anxiety Disorder

And over time, this belief system can develop into social anxiety disorder. When a person has social anxiety disorder, they become overly concerned about other people scrutinizing them, evaluating them harshly, and ultimately rejecting them. So much so that they begin to construct their lives around avoiding rejection. Because if you can avoid being noticed by other people, then those people have fewer data points on which to reject you.

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Now, social anxiety disorder is one of the most common mental illnesses in the world. Many estimates put it second only to depression. In the United States alone, more than 12% of Americans at some point in their lives will have diagnosable social anxiety disorder. That’s roughly 40 million people.

Now, worldwide, the estimates are lower; they’re 4%, which in and of itself is interesting. But based on current population estimates, 4% of the world’s roughly 300 million people will potentially have social anxiety disorder at some point in their lifetime. And despite how prevalent it is, it’s widely misunderstood, widely misdiagnosed, and often missed entirely.

This is because several myths about social anxiety pervade our culture. The first myth is that people with social anxiety are happier alone. The stereotype of someone with social anxiety is a recluse who’d rather be hiding away alone in their bedroom than out interacting with the world. And this is simply not true.

Debunking Myths About Social Anxiety

In research conducted in my lab, we find that people with social anxiety disorder desire strong, healthy, intimate relationships to the same degree as those without mental illness. And they do socialize; they’re not robotic aliens. And when they socialize, they often enjoy doing so. In fact, when we ask people with social anxiety how happy they are, they report feeling happier when they are with other people than when they’re alone.

This is because not all social interactions are stressful. Maybe someone feels socially anxious with friends, but not their romantic partner. Or they feel anxious with strangers and acquaintances, but not people like their neighbors or co-workers.

So even though some interactions are stressful, people with social anxiety are not devoid of the basic desire for human connection. They just have trouble obtaining it in certain situations with certain people. Okay, so maybe then people with social anxiety do socialize, and when they do, they enjoy it, but it’s with a small, tight-knit group of people.