All I had to do was ask her to check for certainty and her anxiety began to reassert itself.
This was clearly a client who was struggling with a pervasive sense of uncertainty (because that’s what anxiety IS) and was desperate to establish a feeling of certainty. Unfortunately, the only thing that she was able to feel certain about was that she had a pervasive sense of uncertainty. So she did what humans do and ignored all the data that contradicted her certainty. Those moments didn’t count. They weren’t her real experience.
From my perspective this client wasn’t suffering from “anxiety” so much as cognitive bias and a rather nasty paradox: the only thing she was certain of was a deep and abiding uncertainty. We talked about developing some strategies for noticing and amplifying feelings of certainty, safety, and calm. And the first question she asked was “What if it doesn’t work?”
We shared a genuine laugh over that. Her self-diagnosis appeared to be spot on. Fortunately, I was able to demonstrate a very effective technique right there on the spot, and she was reassured (again) that she did, in fact, possess the ability to feel calm and safe. If we can experience it for a moment, we can experience it for another moment. Life is, in the end, just a series of moments.
Thankfully, my client did discover that she had the internal resources to feel better in any moment, and learned to find certainty in that. She deployed her creativity, and her hopefulness, and her ability to distract herself – all of which were massive strengths for her – and turned them toward noticing and amplifying the feelings of safety and certainty that she DID have. For a change.
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