What Social Anxiety Really Feels Like – Even For Successful People

Anxiety Stress and Panic Attacks

What Social Anxiety Really Feels Like – Even For Successful People

In a recent interview with The Sun, Ed Sheeran, the singer, has revealed that he suffers from social anxiety that makes him feel like an ‘animal in the zoo.’

For all the upsides of being famous and wealthy, even that kind of lifestyle can’t protect you from social anxiety and Sheeran talks of his constant battle with it. And whilst his lifestyle is a little different from mine (just a little!), I have every empathy with him having battled social anxiety myself from school age and all the way into my thirties.

Ed Sheeran describes living with social anxiety and the attention that comes with people filming and staring at him as making him feel like a zoo animal. I’d have described my own social anxiety as feeling like ‘Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde’ whereby in one situation I would be relaxed, comfortable and at ease and in another situation I would be frozen by fear, overthinking, anxiety and worry.

Yet whether it’s Ed Sheeran, the younger me or one of the many people who come to me for help to overcome it, social anxiety has many familiar patterns that lead to doubt, insecurity, lack of trust and fear.  The better news is that all of these anxious thoughts, feelings, beliefs, patterns and behaviours can all be tackled, amended and changed.

 

Quick Summary

Social anxiety can affect anyone – even highly successful people.

Many people with social anxiety experience:

– fear of judgement
– overthinking social situations
– replaying conversations afterwards
– anxiety before events
– avoiding situations that feel uncomfortable

You may fear getting embarrassed, looking anxious or losing control in front of others: Fear of Losing Control and Anxiety

This article explores Ed Sheeran’s media comments about social anxiety, why social situations can feel so overwhelming, and why these patterns can change.

 

Ed Sheeran and His Battle With Social Anxiety

In his Sun interview, Sheeran talks about how he gets anxiety every day. The anxiety and insecurity that often come with social anxiety have led him to cut his friendship group right back, to get rid of his phone and to keep himself private and out of the public eye. All of these behaviours are quite common with anxiety. Avoiding the things that seem to trigger it can provide a sense of relief.

However, avoidance just tends to re-enforce feelings of anxiety as not only are you confirming to yourself that these things are bad and a threat, but you never learn how to effectively tackle them and cope with them so that they no longer provoke anxiety. All of which contributes to the anxiety continuing and means that you struggle if you are unable to avoid the situation and have to face it.

Of course, I do get where he is coming from. Having people only talk to you so they can get an autograph or photo for social media, and having people stare at you and film you as you go about your business, can’t be much fun. And in the public spotlight, everything gets amplified and exaggerated so no wonder he talks about feeling like a zoo animal and seeks to avoid that.

In his interview Sheeran also talks about how he could never be sure whether people hanging out with him were really his friends for him as a person or just there because of who he is. He also describes how he struggles to comprehend why his wife chose to be with him and about his insecurities, as well as how he doesn’t like being around large groups of people.

As Sheeran says in his interview, “I don’t like large groups of people, which is ironic given I play shows to thousands of people. I feel claustrophobic and I don’t like being around many people.”

Why Social Anxiety Feels So Exhausting

I think that anyone who has ever had social anxiety can relate to that doubt and uncertainty around others. I used to hate large group events such as meetings and training, particularly where I didn’t know people or felt they were better than me in some way. I didn’t think I had anything worthwhile to say to them, that they’d think I was boring and that I would somehow mess up and seem like a bit of an idiot.

Sometimes I would even doubt if friends actually liked me really and would dismiss any compliments or positive feedback I received as if somehow I didn’t deserve it. I would obsess about people looking at me and thinking I looked weird or dressed weird and, such is anxiety, I would often be certain that was what they were thinking (so much so that on occasion my anxiety left me in tears and unable to leave the house). I was sure that I had to hide my insecurities and perceived weaknesses so other people couldn’t use them against me in some way or so that it wouldn’t give evidence to people that I really wasn’t good enough. After I overcame my social anxiety and became more open about it, even close people were surprised as I had hidden it from them so well.

Yet social anxiety can fill your head and take over your mind. You worry about upcoming social or work things for days in advance, you dread them taking place and often secretly hope they will be cancelled. During events you may become quiet and fade into the background and the whole time there is the overthinking, the never ending overthinking. You think and analyse what you are doing and saying and how others may be perceiving it and reacting to it. Sometimes you can spend so long thinking about the best way to say something that by the time you have it ready in your head, things have moved on and you don’t get to say it anyway.

Then there’s the overthinking about what other people think about you. Like they are judging you or think you are ugly, fat, stupid, boring, weird, an idiot or anything negative along those lines. You may worry afterwards about what you did and said, even if it seemed innocuous at the time.

It’s one long whirlwind of anxiety, stress, worry and dread that only ends when with a few close people or when you are on your own. Often it would feel like it would be easier to just avoid those anxious things, yet we are social animals and we also need those social connections in our lives.

That’s the biggest twist of social anxiety. As humans we have a need to be connected to other humans and we don’t want to be ostracised or ‘expelled’ from the group, and people with social anxiety generally do want to be around others, it’s just that it comes with all those terrible anxious thoughts and feelings that make it so uncomfortable so much of the time.

 

Social Anxiety Is A Learned Pattern

Social anxiety often feels automatic and uncontrollable, but these thoughts, feelings and behaviours are learned anxiety patterns.

And learned patterns can change.

Instead of automatically avoiding situations, you can gradually begin feeling calmer, safer and more comfortable around other people.

 

Help To Overcome Social Anxiety 

Is it possible to overcome social anxiety? It sure is!

Social anxiety often involves:

– anxious anticipation before situations
– physical anxiety symptoms
– fear of judgement
– overthinking during conversations
– replaying interactions afterwards
– avoiding situations that feel uncomfortable

Over time, these patterns can start feeling automatic and difficult to control.

But as people begin changing those fear responses and feeling safer in themselves, social situations often become far easier and less emotionally exhausting.

It can be exhausting so no wonder people do what Ed Sheeran has described doing, and try and cut out and avoid those things that seem to create the anxiety.

And the whole time there is that worry about being judged or that people will think badly of you in some way. You worry about saying the wrong thing or doing the wrong thing, or that people are judging how you look or that they will think you are stupid or an idiot or some other negative thing. When I had social anxiety I would say very little in some social situations for fear of saying or doing something that would be ridiculed and that would make me look stupid.

Those beliefs, that people may be judging you or thinking negatively about you or that you aren’t good enough or that you aren’t worthy in some way, lie at the heart of social anxiety. They can also lead to replaying social encounters after they have happened and self criticism or negative distortion that adds to the worry the next time there is a similar thing going on. There is that ongoing worry and focus on what people are thinking about you, like you are trying to read their minds, and it always seems to be something bad or that leads to you being harsh towards yourself.

Social anxiety can make everyday situations feel exhausting, uncomfortable and emotionally draining.

But these patterns can change.

As people begin calming the fear responses, reducing overthinking and feeling more comfortable in themselves, social situations often become far easier and more manageable again.

You can learn more here:

Social Anxiety Hypnotherapy in Ely & Newmarket
Understanding Anxiety in Ely
Hypnotherapy Reviews in Ely

Or, if you’d prefer to talk things through first, you’re welcome to book a free consultation.

There’s no pressure, just a chance to understand what might help.

To your success

Dan Regan

Hypnotherapy in Ely & Newmarket

 

Could you use some help to overcome your social anxiety? Book a Complimentary Hypnotherapy Strategy Session now to talk about it: Appointments

Find out what dozens of other people have said after their hypnotherapy sessions with Dan: Testimonials

And check out these powerful hypnosis downloads that can start helping you right away: Hypnosis Downloads

 

Related Social Anxiety Articles

Social Anxiety and Self Criticism
Anxiety and Worrying What Other People Think
Can Other People Tell How You Feel?
Why We Overthink Social Situations

 

 

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