When I was in grade school, I learned a valuable skill that
I am sure you all learned as well—a skill so invaluable that it still haunts me
to this day. I learned how to play the recorder. More importantly, I learned
how to play Ode to Joy on the recorder. As those whiny, piercing notes
reverberate through my mind, I propose a new ode of a much more important
nature: an ode to anxiety.
Anxiety is almost unmentionable these days, yet it affects
so many of us, myself included. When I first got involved in the mental health
world by taking the NAMI
Family-to-Family course, I am sad to admit that I thought of anxiety as one
of the lesser mental illnesses. Now that I have learned more about it, and have
learned what it feels like to deal with crippling anxiety and
obsessive-compulsive disorder, I can state with no uncertainty that anxiety can
be a very serious affliction. Unfettered, debilitating anxiety wreaks havoc on
the lives of millions of Americans in the United States. Anxiety can range from
mild forms that slightly impinge upon forming new relationships, to
all-consuming compulsions that overtake the mind and leave its victims carrying
out tasks that they know to be illogical, but they feel compelled to carry them
out all the same.
However, I can attest to the fact that recovering from
anxiety is possible, even though the path to recovery is sometimes marred with
crater-sized potholes and frightening precipices. My ode to anxiety is a song
of hope, a song of redemption, and a song of myriad shrieking recorders.
Because on the other side of the terror of anxiety comes perspective, and, as
sense of humor returns, the levity of the situation is spotted.
Once anxiety is kept in check, it actually can be quite
helpful. When balanced, I find that a certain amount of anxiety and
obsessiveness is quite healthy. With that being said, I leave you with three
thoughts:
1.
Continuous
anxiety can lead to success. The checking, double-checking, and
triple-checking of the anxious mind often leads those who struggles with
anxiety to become ultra-prepared. We handle logistics for events and meetings,
we pack for international trips, and we scan resumes and reports ad nauseam for
any sign of errors. When healthy, we, the folks with anxiety, can achieve great
things.
2.
Anxiety
helps us survey the scene. Dealing with anxiety makes us much more cautious
than others. When approaching new situations and new faces, we take our time on
passing judgment. This helps us take a mindful, strategic approach—and can give
us advantages when plotting our next move.
3.
Lastly,
anxiety makes sense. Our ancestors, our long-ago people, had to be anxious
at times to survive. In order to escape that threatening animal with big teeth,
in order to navigate the group dynamics within their tribes, and in order to
find a safe place to rest their heads each night, our ancestors needed anxiety. Without it, we just
wouldn’t have survived, and the people of today, anxious brains and all, would
not be here today.
So embrace your anxiety, and the good and the bad that comes
from it. Join me in this ode. Pick up your dusty recorder and play a few notes.
Play it until all of the dogs in your neighborhood join in the hideous
banshee-notes of your chorus. Anxiety is here to stay, so we might as well let
others know about it. It’s once we can find the humor in it that we can make
some changes for how individuals with anxiety are treated. If you can play the
recorder, which I know you can, you can play an ode to anxiety.
This post was written by Jordan Brown.
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