Future tense Why anxiety is good for you (even though it feels bad)

Tracy Dennis-Tiwary

Book - 2022

"A psychologist confronts our pervasive misunderstanding of anxiety and presents a new framework for reimagining and reclaiming the confounding emotion as the advantage it evolved to be"--

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2nd Floor 152.46/Dennis-Tiwary Due Apr 30, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Published
New York, NY : Harper Wave, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublilshers [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Tracy Dennis-Tiwary (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
ix, 237 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 217-228) and index.
ISBN
9780063062108
  • Prologue
  • Advice from the Patron Saint of Anxiety
  • Part I. Why We Need Anxiety
  • What anxiety is, what it's for, and how it relies upon our powerful human ability to imagine the future
  • 1. What Anxiety Is (and Isn't)
  • Anxiety is a complex emotion, related to fear but distinctly different It varies along a spectrum of intensity from everyday worries to crippling panic, but no matter where we fall on that scale, the role of anxiety in our lives may not be what we think it is.
  • 2. Why Anxiety Exists
  • This emotion has evolved to make us more resourceful in the face of uncertainty. The biology of anxiety reveals why we need this difficult feeling-and why it has to be unpleasant to do its Job. Anxiety transcends our basic fight/flight responses because it is rooted in our primal strivings for social connection and future rewards.
  • 3. Future Tense: Choose Your Own Adventure
  • Anxiety emerges because we are creatures who think about and prepare for the future. But our misunderstanding of anxiety keeps us from seeing this, and so we experience it only as something negative and disabling.
  • Part II. How We were Misled about Anxiety
  • Why and when our understanding of anxiety went wrong and how science and modern life exacerbate this misunderstanding
  • 4. The Anxiety-as-Disease Story
  • The psychological and medical sciences turned anxiety into an ailment. But even before that, medieval views of emotion and the life of the soul demonized anxiety. We learned to think of it as something to avoid and suppress, which only causes it to spiral out of control.
  • 5. Comfortably Numb
  • By thinking of anxiety as an unwanted affliction, we do everything in our power to do away with it. The widespread overprescription of anti-anxiety medications and painkillers is a prime example-one that has had damaging, even fatal, results.
  • 6. Blame the Machines?
  • Digital technology is a driver of unhealthy anxiety because it facilitates escapism and disrupts nourishing social connections. Blaming technology for all problematic anxiety, however, is a mistake-it misses the complexity of the problem while keeping us from seeing how to use digital technology in better ways.
  • Part III. How to Rescue Anxiety
  • Seeing anxiety as an ally will improve every part of our lives and can promote exceptional resourcefulness, creativity, and Joy. In rescuing anxiety, we rescue ourselves.
  • 7. Uncertainty
  • Uncertainty puts us on edge. By leaning into that discomfort to figure out what to do about uncertainty-even in the middle of a global pandemic-we open doors to possibilities we never imagined before. When we do so, anxiety is the secret sauce.
  • 8. Creativity
  • When we accept the discomfort of anxiety and listen to what it's teaching us, we become more creative-whether we're creating works of art or figuring out what to make for dinner.
  • 9. Kids Are Not Fragile
  • Too often, we react to our children's anxiety with accommodation and overprotection. We do so with the best of intentions and because we believe they are fragile, but we are wrong. We can help kids be their strongest and most resilient when we stop fearing their anxiety-and our own.
  • 10. Being Anxious in the Right Way
  • If you've read this far, you've changed your mindset about anxiety. It's time to do something about it.
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Anxiety enabled cavemen to escape predators by sharpening their focus, speeding up their hearts, and heightening their senses. Now anxiety is considered a disease. But can it still be a good thing? The future tense, according to psychologist Dennis-Tiwary, is made up of uncertainty, anxiety, and hope. Anxiety's role is to provide information about a situation and spur action. Unlike worry, which is the other side of the coin, anxiety is the body's reactions to uncertainty. The difficulty comes with our attempts to destroy this alarm system instead of paying attention to its warnings. Often this leads to addiction, panic, isolation, and depression. Parents, so eager to remove all anxiety from their children's lives, often don't allow their kids to learn how to harness the body's energy. Dennis-Tiwary uses examples from her life and practice as well as scientific studies to support her theory that anxiety is a positive and necessary force. The result is a fresh, hopeful approach to anxiety that will soothe readers facing a world filled with pandemics, war, and political turmoil.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.