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Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Dec 17, 2015

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Holly Briggs
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Page 1: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?
Page 2: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?
Page 3: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Who’s Driving the Bus?

Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Page 4: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?
Page 5: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

There are two kinds of anxiety: acute & chronic.

They differ in both intensity and duration. Most of us can adapt to the challenges of acute

anxiety. We feel it in actual threatening situations. Acute anxiety has a time-limited quality to it. Our automatic responses like fight/flight are designed to deal with the

immediate, real situation and then eventually we get on with life.

Page 6: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Chronic anxiety is any sense of threat we have that is perceived, imagined or interpreted. Our anxiety is below the surface and so normally we

are unaware of it. Over time we develop a heightened sensitivity to potential threat. We are threatened by the behavior and actions of

others.

Page 7: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

There is a threat to the loss of self - of who we are – our individuality.

There is the threat of being dominated – being taken

advantage of – of being hurt, or rejected, or overlooked – not

appreciated or not included, not heard, or maybe abandoned.

Page 8: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

When Anxiety rises we become predictable.

We react and quit thinking.

We get stupid!

Page 9: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?
Page 10: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Who’s Driving the Bus?

We develop typical patterns of dealing with our anxiety when it emerges.

Page 11: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

We develop typical ways of dealing with our anxiety and we use our preferred methods consistently. As a result, we

repeat the same mistakes over and over again. Though we feel “safer” in the short term, long term we develop less than ideal

relationships, we lose intimacy, and we lose opportunities for leadership and

advancement.

Page 12: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Ultimately our patterns of chronic anxiety set our default future.

Unless something changes we will end our lives with the same issues

that we have now.

Page 13: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Fight

Flight

Freeze

Caretake

Page 14: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

We become more concerned with how other people are behaving toward us than we do with how we are behaving toward them.

Page 15: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Anxiety always

shows up in a

physical form.

Page 16: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

How does anxiety show up in you?

Page 17: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?
Page 18: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?
Page 19: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Who’s Driving the Bus?

Typically when anxiety emerges we try everything in our power to make the anxiety to

away.

Page 20: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Take Responsibility for Your Own Life.

The only person you can change is you.

Page 21: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

• Chronic Anxiety – (A perceived sense of threat)• Anxiety Relief – (Fight, Flight,

Freeze, or Caretake)• Repeated Patterns of Behavior (5

Typical Ways.)

Page 22: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

• A Trail of “Less Than” Relationships.• Loss of Confidence, Self,

Opportunity, & Satisfaction.• A Future Determined by Default• Are you o.k. with that?

Page 23: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?
Page 24: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?
Page 25: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Five Typical Ways People Deal WithAnxiety.

Page 26: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Conflict

Page 27: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Conflict

• Become critical of others.• Blame & accuse others for perceived issues.• People insist that their way is the only way.• Focus more on others than self.

Page 28: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Conflict

• Behave abusively.• Argue, debate, and fight.• Verbally attack.

Page 29: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Distancing

Page 30: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Distancing

• Excessive periods of non-communication• Workaholism• Excessive time with hobbies• A tendency to get quiet when anxiety arises• Talk that stays shallow – with nothing of personal

importance• An inability to relate to some people in one’s

immediate or original family

Page 31: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Cutoff

Cutoff is a distance posture carried to the extreme,

resulting in a nonfunctioning relationship

Page 32: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Overfuntioning/Underfunctioning

Page 33: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Overfunctioning

• Advice-giving

• Doings things for others that they could do for themselves

• Worrying about other people.

• Feeling responsible for others, knowing what is best for them.

Page 34: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Overfunctioning

• Talking more than listening

• Having goals for others that they don’t have for themselves.

• Experiencing periods of sudden “burnout”

Page 35: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Underfunctioning

• Asking for advice rather than thinking things through independently

• Getting others to help when help really isn’t needed

• Acting irresponsibly

• Listening more than talking

Page 36: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Underfunctioning

• Letting others think for you

• Floating with no goals most of the time

• Setting goals but not following through with them

• Becoming mentally or physically ill frequently

• Tending to become addicted to substances

Page 37: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Triangling

Page 38: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Triangling

• Talking against the boss, the minister, or the teacher to people other than the boss, the minister, or the teacher.

• Gossiping or talking about someone who is not present

• Having an affair

• Taking too much interest in other people’s problems

Page 39: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Triangling

• Thinking more about a child or someone else than about your own marriage or self.

• Talking about your spouse with an adult child.

• Talking about other people behind their backs in order to lessen your own anxiety

Page 40: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

“Don’t just do something – stand there!”

Page 41: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

What’s your preferred style?

• With your spouse?

• With your children?

• When you’re in a position of leadership?

• When you’re not the one in charge?

Page 42: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

What’s your preferred style?

• With your friends?

• With your co-workers?

• With your siblings & parents?

• When you’re pushed into a corner?

Page 43: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?
Page 44: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Buttons – Vows - Lies

“Our default future consists of our expectations, fears, hopes, and predictions, all of which are

ultimately based on our experience in the past. Incidents from our past live on as

prediction, giving us our default future.” The Three Laws of Performance by Steve Zaffron & Dave Logan.

Page 45: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

We develop a defensive routine to protectourselves from being hurt again.

We react when our buttons get pushed.

Page 46: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

What is the threat?

What are you afraid of?

Page 47: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

VOWS

All of us have key moments from our pastthat continue to impact our lives today.

Page 48: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

What vows have you made?

Reflect on your childhood – your family of origin. Is there:

A vow about being hurt?A vow about being dominated?

Page 49: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?
Page 50: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Is there a lie about your significance or importance?

Is there a lie about your capability?

What lies do you believe about yourself?

Page 51: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

What is the Truth?

Page 52: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

We must work to identify - to bring into out awareness - to bring into the light -

the unsaid.

This process of self-awareness is hard work. It takes a lot of courage.

It is a process that takes time.

Page 53: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

What is Possible?

There are very few things that I can’t choose to change.

Page 54: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Anxiety is contagious – but so it calmness.

Page 55: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Become Self-Regulated

• Take responsibility for your own life. Don’t blame others or take a victim mentality.

• The only person you can change is you. Face yourself.

• Recognize & manage your anxiety. Take responsibility for identifying your feelings & processing them.

Page 56: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Become Self-Regulated

• Manage your emotions. Avoidance is a way we minimize anxiety and choose to not take responsibility.

• Learn to calm yourself and become a less anxious presence.

Page 57: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Ask yourself: “What is my role in keeping this

problem in place?”

“How can I change my role?

Page 58: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Manage Reactivity

• Stop• Think – Be self-aware.• Calm yourself – Manage your own anxiety.• Listen to understand.• Ask questions.• Observe.• Clarify your thoughts & your values.• Stay connected. Stay in the conversation.• Say what is “so” for you.

Page 59: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

To be less defensive & automatically reactive to others

requires discipline.

Page 60: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?

Nonanxious responses include:

• Being thoughtful before acting• Staying calm and poised• Using I statements• Maintaining awareness of self• Focusing on the larger purposes rather than

winning the argument• Asking questions• Resisting the impulse to attack or cut-off.

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Page 62: Who’s Driving the Bus? Have you noticed how often our reaction to anxiety drives the bus of our lives?