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Yeah. Having to get a job and ending up in a customer facing role did more for getting me over a lot of my shit than anything else I tried. There's still things that are just absolute no-gos for me (singing is the biggest one that comes to mind) but I got over all the shit I had to get over to be able to function more or less normally day to day without too much anxiety.
This is what bothers me about many of the youth around me with anxiety. They lean into it.
I'm not saying it doesn't exist, or that it's easy. I'm saying you need to do something proactive or it will never get better.
Everyone has some anxiety, everyone grew up with some anxiety, and yes some people have extreme debilitating anxiety.
Most people should be able to power through, make proactive changes in their lives, and get to a point where they can at least function.
But more and more I see people with mild anxiety leaning into it, regressing and retreating into themselves. Their parents confirming and amplifying the effect. And then they end up worse than they were when they started.
I'm torn because posts like OPs bring attention to those with extreme anxiety, who need allowances and recognition. But it also reaffirms those with mild anxiety, and they identify with it, and they suffer.
Getting a customer facing job was the best thing my buddies kid ever did. Turned her around, 180.
My other buddy got his kid loops for noise reduction in busy environments. He continues to get worse.
Its a matter of perspective, or storytelling if you prefer. If you think you have anxiety because you were born in the introvert camp and that's where you belong, then socializing will always be painful and improvement will be impeded indefinitely. If you think you have anxiety because you are simply inexperienced at socializing and need practice, then you will put yourself in challenging situations and attempt to improve yourself each time.
The stories we tell each other and ourselves are incredibly powerful in guiding our lives.