Hi there. I'm Emma from Therapy in a Nutshell.
Today you'll learn how you accidentally feed anxiety. I'm going to break down the amygdala's
role in determining whether something is safe or dangerous and how you can leverage that
to rewire your brain to be less anxious. And I've got some great stories to tell, including
how I was nearly killed by a herbivore. This is day three from my 30-day online anxiety
course. So let's dive in. [Music] Your brain is wired to adapt to circumstances. It can
physically rewire itself based on how you think and the experiences you have. The human
brain is one of the most complex and brilliant and amazingly powerful creations in the world. So
why the heck does it make so many people anxious? Why does it make so many anxious thoughts? Why can
it make us so miserable sometimes? There are some ways we accidentally teach our brain to be more
anxious. So let me show you how. Okay. So your your brain and your body like to have an internal
sense of safety. I think that's their default mode. And when we feel safe we can relax. Our
body can rest and digest, heal, connect, feed, and breed. So let's say that you're happily walking
down a trail while you're listening to music, when all of a sudden a huge person jumps out at
you from behind a bush. Like, Ahh!" You yell, like you jump backwards, you your body surges with
adrenaline And what happens is when we perceive a threat our body triggers the fear response.
But let's say then you realize it was just your friend pranking you, then you realize that you're
actually safe. And your body has this built-in way to restore that sense of safety in your body.
So you laugh it off. This actually burns off adrenaline. You talk about it, like, "Hahaha, did
you see your face?" Right? And you both tell the story to your friends, you connect with other
people, and your heart rate and your breathing rate return to normal and your internal sense of
safety is restored. So what happened here? Your brain quickly processes that sensory information
and sends it to the amygdala, which is like your brain's fire alarm. When your amygdala perceives a
threat it sounds the alarm. It triggers a fear or an anxiety response. And this is like your brain
saying, "Hey, there might be a bear," and this response activates your body's fight-or-flight
system. It gets you ready to either face the threat or escape from it. So you jumped backwards
- that's flight - and you yelled - flight. Right? These are both adaptive ways to deal with a real
threat. And when you saw that it was just your friend, your amygdala reassessed the situation and
realized, "Okay. Phew. I am safe. We can turn off battle mode." Right? The parasympathetic response
kicks in, you laugh it off, you shake it off, you tell the story, you connect, right? Your
sense of safety is restored. Your brain and your body have this natural hardwired ability to
resolve fear and stress. So now let me tell you how this system can get hijacked, how we can end
up feeling like this constant state of anxiety. But let me tell you a story. So I was once working
with this group of teenagers. We went camping and hiking in the Tetons. And one of these girls,
who we'll call Megan, was terrified of bears. So even in our large group camp surrounded by
literally hundreds of other campers, she was constantly terrified. She was afraid to sleep in
a tent, so she slept sitting up in a car. She was afraid to go to the bathroom, so she didn't drink
very much water so that she didn't need to go to the bathroom as often. She was constantly like
worrying about bears, and she was constantly like clinging to a like a gaggle of girls and and
thinking about bears and talking about bears. And every time she heard like a rustle in the bushes
near our camp, she would freak out, she would cry, she would like run away from the sound and like
go cling to her group of girls. So again, let's look at the brain. What was happening? There was
a stimulus - the rustle in the bushes. There was a perception - "This is dangerous." The amygdala
would fire off a quick alert, and the body would go into fight/flight/freeze mode. And Megan did
everything she could to flee. She'd run away, she'd cry for help, she'd cling to others. And
when she was running away and clinging to others she felt a sense of relief. It felt better,
right? These are all avoidance behaviors. And then guess what? She survived. Nothing physically
bad happened to her. But here's a really important thing to understand: your brain is plastic.
It physically and chemically changes based on how you think and how you act. So when she avoided
the rustling sound, her brain essentially learned, "Phew, I could have died. I have to keep
avoiding rustling sounds to keep my human alive, so I'm gonna make my human more anxious, right,
to keep my human avoiding these these things that seem to be dangerous." Now, your brain is
not designed to make you happy; it's designed to keep you alive. And this is how we accidentally
make ourselves more anxious. Your avoidance trains your brain to increase anxiety. It keeps you stuck
in the loop where, instead of addressing a danger, which allows your amygdala to reassess and restore
a sense of safety, avoidance keeps you frozen in a state of ongoing anxiety. So your confidence
in your ability to face a threat decreases, and your anxiety increases. So now whenever you
hear a rustling sound your brain is going to pair it associated with bears, and your amygdala is
going to activate that fear response. Okay. So now let me tell you the rest of the story. We
took that group of girls on a hike. It was a beautiful hike through the Tetons to Amphitheater
Lake. I mean, it was gorgeous. Um Megan did not want to go. She was scared that there might be
bears there. But when she realized that if she didn't come she'd be alone at camp, she decided to
come. So she faced her fears. And we were hiking in a large group along a popular trail. We took
reasonable precautions. We brought food, water, bear spray, and we knew to stay clear of wildlife
(unlike many dumb tourists in Yellowstone). Now, some of the other hikers on the trail told
us that bears had been spotted in the area, but this isn't uncommon in the Tetons, and so
we determined that it was safe to continue. And because of my decades of experience in the
wilderness we knew how to stay safe and how to choose acceptable risk. So we hiked our hike,
and on the way up we even saw a bear from the distance of a couple hundred meters. And guess
what? It ignored us. We kept hiking. The lake was beautiful, the sky was clear, it was awesome.
When we hiked back to camp, like we were singing and laughing - even Megan. Right? The girls had
this incredible experience, and for many of them it was a once-in-a-lifetime experience. And
interestingly enough, for the rest of the trip Megan did not feel scared about every rustle in
the bushes anymore. She would hear a rustle and go look for a squirrel or a small bird. And she would
tell that story of the bear on the hike like over and over again. And she was more relaxed, and she
enjoyed herself through, like, for the rest of the camp. And so you can see how her sense of safety
was strengthened by facing her fear. Okay. So what happened here? When Megan faced her fears and
she survived, her brain learned to re-categorize rustles as most likely being safe, and she even
learned to downgrade bears from, like, extreme danger to, like, oh, manageable danger. Right?
Her amygdala stopped firing off the fear response, and she felt less anxious. So when you face your
fears, your anxiety decreases and your confidence increases. Your sense of safety is restored.
Now, if you constantly avoid any situation where you might encounter a rustling sound, then your
brain never gets a chance to learn that not every rustling sound means there's a bear. Avoidance
makes your brain increase your anxiety levels. So what can we do instead? Let's explore the other
option, the approach response. So let's say you you're afraid of public speaking, and you've been
avoiding it for a long time. Maybe you have to, you're expected to do it work, but you uh make
excuses. You call in sick, you make other team members do the presentations. And maybe you've
declined any promotions that require you to do more presentations. And the longer you go
without presenting, the more you avoid it, the more anxious you feel when you think of any form
of public speaking. And by the way, even worrying and rumination are types of avoidance. And we're
going to talk more about that later. But now let's say a new job has come up, a job that requires
public speaking, and you decide it's time to face your fear, and you tell yourself that anxiety is
just a sign that you care about doing a good job, and you convert that energy into preparing for the
presentation. You start practicing, like carefully preparing presentations and sharing them with
like your spouse, your kids, your mom, right? And you start practicing in front of them, and
gradually you start to feel more confident. Maybe you still feel really anxious about presenting
in front of your your business, but you feel a little bit more confident. So then you decide to
lead a presentation for your small team at work, right? Like, and of course you still feel nervous,
but you do it anyway, and it goes well enough, right? You don't die. You survive, right? As you
approach the situation instead of avoiding it your amygdala starts to recognize that you're not in
immediate danger, that you can survive giving a presentation, and your brain begins to update
its associations. It begins to update what it's paired, and it learns that public speaking is not
as dangerous as you originally thought, right? And eventually it re-pairs public speaking with
something that you can do, you can handle, right? And eventually you're able to give a presentation
to the entire company, right? With each successful experience of approaching the fear, your anxiety
levels start to decrease, and your amygdala starts to realize that the situation isn't as threatening
as it once believed. Essentially, your sense of safety gets restored. The more you approach
public speaking and have positive experiences, the more your brain adjusts its fear associations,
which - leading to decreased anxiety over time. It's just important to remember that, you know,
initially you're going to feel quite a bit of fear or anxiety, right? You can't wait for that fear
or anxiety to go away first before facing your fear because that leaves you helpless. We can't
directly force feelings to change. So instead you need to allow the anxiety to be there, face your
fear, and then afterward your brain learns like, "Oh, phew, that was safe. I can decrease my
human's anxiety in that area." Right? The intense emotions you feel, that anxiety, ahead of time
actually primes your brain to be more plastic, to rewire, to be more flexible, right? The other
really cool thing about facing your fears is that you learn you can handle feeling anxiety. You
become confident that it's safe for you to have feelings. So essentially, what's happening here is
that you are rewiring your brain. You're teaching your smoke alarm, your amygdala, to be more
accurate, to know when it's actually in danger and when it's actually safe. So a healthy person
still has some fear responses, right? They're just much more accurate and knowing which ones to
believe. By facing your fears you're fine-tuning your threat assessment system while at the same
time increasing your belief in your own abilities. "But Emma," you might say, "What if you're facing
a real threat or a real danger? Or what if you've had trauma, like you've actually been harmed
in the past?" That is a great question. What if that rustle in the bushes is actually a bear? Or
what if you actually lose your job because you're such a bad presenter? Let me tell you about the
time I nearly got killed. Right? And this video is already getting too long, so I'm gonna split
this video up into two parts. And for those of you on YouTube you can find the whole video on the
paid course on my website, therapyinanutshell.com. Okay. So let me tell you about the time I nearly
got killed by a herbivore. So I had recently finished grad school. And I was in the backyard
of my parents' house, and I was brain-tanning a deer hide. It's a process that takes about
eight hours. And I was working this hide, and all of a sudden, like, the hair is on the
back of my neck went up. You know that kind of funny feeling, like that sense that you have
that you're in danger? Right? And I turn around, and there, standing like 50 feet away from me, was
this huge moose. And my dog, Geneva, she starts running straight at the moose, barking her head
off, like, "Bark bark bark bark!" And I'm like, "Geneva, no! Come!" But Geneva got there super
fast. And that moose, like, did not move an inch. He just picked up his huge foot and went goosh.
Like he tried to crush her. And she like turns, and she's like - and she dodges. And literally
that moose missed her by like an inch, and its its hoof left like a six-inch deep hole
in the lawn where he nearly like crushed my dog. So then Geneva comes, turns around, comes running
toward me, and the moose is like chasing her down. So the moose is chasing my dog straight at me.
So we dive under a sheep camp, which is like a trailer. Right? And the moose is just right
outside, like just like inches from my face, like pawing and pounding the ground. And me and
my dog, we're just like frozen, like hiding under that trailer, like hoping to not die. So yes, we
ran. We avoided that real and immediate threat. Um eventually the moose wandered off into the
neighbor's yard. We called Animal Control. The cops came. They cornered it into the other yard
so that they could get someone with a tranquilizer gun and like a big trailer to haul it up the
canyon. Um in the meantime I'm like telling the cops like, "Just leave it alone. It'll go away on
its own." And they're like, "No, we can't leave it alone because we're responsible for everyone's
public safety." So I put the dog inside, and I go back to working on my hide because
this is a process, you can't stop in the middle, right? And about 20 minutes later the hair on
the back of my neck goes up again, and I look, and in the same place in my yard I see that huge
moose staring at me. And I just say to the moose, like, my dog's not there to antagonize the
moose, and I just say to the moose, "Hey, moose, like go that way. Like run up the canyon and
you'll be safe." And it does. It like turns away and trots up the canyon, like the road toward the
canyon, and the cops like literally follow like the moose with their lights blazing. Right? So so
what happened here? Right? Um with this fear cycle I was initially feeling safe, and then I perceived
a threat, and yes, it was actually dangerous, um and I actually ran away, froze, and survived.
And now I'm telling this story to everyone I know. I'm talking about it and laughing about it, right?
And this is literally the body's way to resolve that pent-up fight/flight/freeze response and
return to a sense of safety. Right? We literally shake it off, right? Our our body physically
shakes to burn off that adrenaline. And we laugh, and we tell stories, and our body returns to
that parasympathetic state, that that state of feeling safe, safety, like rest, where you can
relax and rest and heal and eat and connect with other people. So how does that work with the
anxiety cycle, right? Like what happened to my anxiety around mooses? Right? It definitely went
up. Like our amygdala learns from our experiences, including traumatic ones. And when I'm - and
I wouldn't consider that necessarily to be a traumatic experience; just a genuine threat
experience. When I'm in moosey areas, when I'm in areas where I know moose are around, like near
water, near willows, I am on high alert for moose, and I will avoid them whenever I can. Because I
avoided that moose and survived, my anxiety went up. But the other interesting thing is because it
was a real threat and I handled it the right way, my confidence also went up. I know that I can
probably escape a moose the next time. Like I think my threat assessment system is pretty well
tuned, that I, like, we can learn what to do with real danger. Or we can at least know what we can
and can't do about real danger. We can take action to fight or flight or even freeze briefly. We can
handle real danger by choosing to actively avoid it. The key here is choice and action. So the
thing that causes disordered anxiety is really when we, number one, feel like we're in danger
when we're actually safe, or number two, when we avoid danger while being physically immobilized,
when we're stuck feeling frozen and anxious. And that keeps that anxiety loop open so that we don't
return to safety. Let's do another example. Let's say you have anxiety about an upcoming test. And
this test is really important to your grade, which is really important to your future success. But
it's not physically dangerous, right? But instead of using that anxiety you feel about that test to
motivate you to study, you want that anxiety to go away so you distract yourself with TikToks, right?
That anxiety response about your test is stored in your body, and your body is immobilized, and you
never feel that return to safety. Your anxiety just builds and builds, and your confidence
in your ability to handle that test decreases. So the key to to breaking the anxiety cycle -
and we're gonna - obviously this whole course teaches how to break this process down. But the
key to breaking the anxiety cycle is choosing to re-evaluate threats and choosing action that
increases confidence, because confidence is what restores your internal sense of safety.
And to do this you've got to face your fears. The tricky thing is that we humans are super
good at avoidance. We are experts at using mental gymnastics to avoid our feelings. And this
is the sneaky way that we actually make our brain more anxious. So in the next video we're going to
explore how avoidance makes you more anxious and the sneaky things that you don't even realize
you're doing that are keeping you anxious. And then in the video after that you'll learn the
antidote to avoidance. So in this course you're going to learn how to relate to anxiety, how
to break the cycle of anxiety so that it's not running the show anymore, and you'll stop doing
the things that make your anxiety grow. You'll learn to gradually and safely face your fears
so that your confidence grows and your anxiety decreases. If you want to purchase the entire
course with all the extra exercises, with the workbooks and with access to me in Q and A's where
we can learn how to face anxiety, please check it out on my website, therapyinanutshell.com.
Okay. Thanks for watching. Take care. [Music]