This seems as useful as telling depressed people to stop being depressed. Fear of embarrassment is one of the strongest drives humans have. Probably appearing to be a fool in the ancestral environment led to fewer mates or less status. It’s not something you can just voluntarily turn off or push through easily.
The best strategy, I think, would be to work around it. Convince your brain that it’s not embarrassing. Or that no one cares. Or pretend no one is watching. Or do it around supportive friends.
It’s not something you can just voluntarily turn off or push through easily.
Actually, it is (sample size of 1). I used to be frightful of social circumstances because of fear of embarrassment. I really did get entirely over it just by saying to myself “Self, this is ridiculous. Stop being embarrassed.” Pure willpower can do amazing things. Unlike depression there isn’t a pharmacological effect going on here. You aren’t embarrassed because of some chemical imbalance. You’re embarrassed because you allow yourself to be. It is entirely mental.
Convince your brain that it’s not embarrassing. Or that no one cares.
That’s essentially what I’m saying to do.
EDIT: I should say however that there are a few cases where anti-anxiety medication can help. For most people however this is not the issue.
‘username2’ is a community pseudonymous account that exists to be used by anyone who knows how to access it. You should expect that posts with this username come from different people.
I’m the same username2 you are responding to, but not the OP. Some emotions are “in your head” in the sense of being due to chemical and hormonal imbalances which you have limited non-pharmacological control over. Others are “in your head” in the sense that it is just neural software you were born with, but can be rewritten. Embarrassment is the latter.
Please forgive the snarky response but… Don’t be embarrassed. Embarrassment is in your head only.
This seems as useful as telling depressed people to stop being depressed. Fear of embarrassment is one of the strongest drives humans have. Probably appearing to be a fool in the ancestral environment led to fewer mates or less status. It’s not something you can just voluntarily turn off or push through easily.
The best strategy, I think, would be to work around it. Convince your brain that it’s not embarrassing. Or that no one cares. Or pretend no one is watching. Or do it around supportive friends.
Actually, it is (sample size of 1). I used to be frightful of social circumstances because of fear of embarrassment. I really did get entirely over it just by saying to myself “Self, this is ridiculous. Stop being embarrassed.” Pure willpower can do amazing things. Unlike depression there isn’t a pharmacological effect going on here. You aren’t embarrassed because of some chemical imbalance. You’re embarrassed because you allow yourself to be. It is entirely mental.
That’s essentially what I’m saying to do.
EDIT: I should say however that there are a few cases where anti-anxiety medication can help. For most people however this is not the issue.
Every emotion is in your head only, so that’s not useful advise. The same argument could be made for virtually every form of social insecurity.
If I may ask—you are the same registered user who made the initial comment. Why reply to yourself? Are you multiple people using the same account?
‘username2’ is a community pseudonymous account that exists to be used by anyone who knows how to access it. You should expect that posts with this username come from different people.
Ah, I see. Thanks.
I’m the same username2 you are responding to, but not the OP. Some emotions are “in your head” in the sense of being due to chemical and hormonal imbalances which you have limited non-pharmacological control over. Others are “in your head” in the sense that it is just neural software you were born with, but can be rewritten. Embarrassment is the latter.
Good point.
Yeah good point, Brillyant.