Welcome to the United States of Anxiety Observations from a reforming neurotic

Jen Lancaster, 1967-

Book - 2020

Every day, Americans are bombarded with terrifying news about crime, the environment, politics, and the health consequences of the foods we've been enjoying for years. We're judged by social media users, pressured into maintaining a perfect home, and expected to base our self-worth on retweets, faves, likes, and followers. Our collective FOMO (fear of missing out), and the disparity between ideals and reality, is leading us to spend more and feel worse. With wit and wisdom, the author charts a path out of the quagmire that keeps us frightened and ashamed.

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  • Letter from the Author
  • Part I. One Nation, Under Stress
  • Anxieties Unbound
  • The State of Our Stressed-Out Union
  • Part II. Physiological Needs: Food, Sleep, Clothing, Shelter, and Wi-Fi
  • You Are What You Eat?
  • Fear of a Fat Planet
  • Fashion Forward
  • Gimme Shelter
  • Part III. Safety Needs: Personal/Financial Security, Climate, and Family Health
  • Life Is Hazardous to Your Health
  • Global Warring
  • New Sheriff in Town
  • All Politics Is Local
  • Part IV. Social Needs: Friendships, Intimacy, Family, Love, and Belonging
  • But What about the Children?
  • Momming So Hard
  • Friending Is Not a Verb
  • Part V. Esteem Needs: Joy, Creativity, Happiness, Desire for Fame and Glory
  • The Lobby for a Hobby
  • Remember My Name
  • Funny Girl
  • Part VI. Self-Actualization Needs: Thinking, Learning, Decision-Making, Values, Beliefs, Fulfillment
  • Now What?
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • About the Author
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Lancaster (Here I Go Again) humorously considers the role of anxiety in American life in a delightful and perceptive book packed with tips on how to relax. Lancaster uses "Maslow's Hierarchy"--a theory developed by mid-20th-century psychologist Abraham Maslow that identifies critical human needs--as a framework for considering how people's needs (physiological, safety, social, esteem, self-actualization) are being met today. Lives are more stressful than ever, Lancaster writes, adding: "I'd give anything to go back to the innocence and ease of my 1970s childhood, despite growing up in the golden age of serial killers." The author shows how distractions (TV, social media) change one's sense of need and result in stress. The need for shelter, for example, is manipulated by home renovation shows that make one's own home feel inadequate; the need for financial security is impacted by social media platforms that encourage people to gawk at other people's wealth; and the need for friendship has been upended by a desire to get likes rather than to be liked. Lancaster recommends forgetting the noise and focusing on what genuinely makes one happy, such as developing a hobby and accepting oneself, flaws and all. Lancaster is very funny, and her insightful, always entertaining critique may motivate readers to back away from social media, if only a little bit. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

The bestselling author looks at why we have become a nation plagued by anxiety. According to a 2018 Gallup Poll, writes Lancaster, most Americans experience stress on a daily basis. In fact, "we are more likely to be stressed out than the residents of almost every country in the world." Overwhelmed by her own skyrocketing anxiety, the author was determined to understand why. Through her research, comparing conditions of today with those of prior generations, she found, unsurprisingly, that one of the main culprits is social media, which "gives us real-time metrics about our popularity, vis-à-vis likes, follows, retweets, et cetera." Eventually, this "leads us to compare everyone's highlight reel to our day-to-day reality, and it's a drain on our mental well-being." Looking at Maslow's hierarchy, she writes that "the abundance of and access to [food], particularly when consumed in the company of others, should be what decreases our collective anxiety." However, due to diets and unhealthy body-image expectations, "we've replaced the stress of not having enough to eat with the need to demonstrate how much better we eat than our peers." Additionally, with the advent of TV shows dedicated to renovations and interior decorating, the "idea of shelter as the most basic need has morphed into a tangible demonstration of our value as people and an important expression of our souls, greatly upping the ante in terms of stress." Thankfully, the book is not all doom and gloom, as the author includes enough humor to keep the pages turning. Despite the constant need to remain plugged in--and to maintain the polished sheen of our online identities--Lancaster explores how social media can also make us feel connected. Armed with wit and insight, she plots a simple, easy-to-follow course to navigate our anxieties and better manage our levels of stress. Though not groundbreaking, this is sound advice we all should heed. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.