Recovery from Social Anxiety and Related Conditions
Robert F. Mullen, PhD
Director/ReChanneling
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The primary distinction between social anxiety and social anxiety disorder lies in the severity of symptoms. Not everyone is affected in the same way, as the intensity and persistence of symptoms vary widely from person to person. Although the characteristics and traits of these conditions may appear similar across individuals, each person’s experience is shaped by a unique combination of environment, life experiences, and the diversity of human thought and behavior.
Additionally, it is important to recognize that comorbidities—other mental health conditions that occur alongside social anxiety—are highly prevalent. This underscores the complexity of these anxiety disorders. As such, effective recovery strategies must address not only social anxiety but also its related conditions. Throughout this book, when recovery methods are discussed for social anxiety, social phobia, and social anxiety disorder, they are intended to apply to all three.
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Blame and Forgiveness in Recovery
The urge to assign blame reinforces our anxiety and depression, as it justifies our insecurities and judgmentalism. Unless addressed and resolved, this pattern of blaming can have significant adverse effects on our psychological well-being.
Blaming Others for Our Abuse
It is natural and understandable to blame others when we feel harmed. Yet, as Buddhaghosa reminds us in The Path of Purification, “Holding on to anger is like grasping a hot coal with the intent of throwing it at someone else; we are the ones who get burned[1].” The only person who truly suffers from these noxious emotions is the one who has been wronged.
Those responsible for the harm are frequently unaware, indifferent, or have forgotten their actions. If they don’t acknowledge their role, they leave the injured party bearing the burden of unresolved anger and resentment. Persistently clinging to these hostile emotions is irrational, as it congests our minds with unnecessary negativity.
Seeking Perspective and Understanding
When forgiveness is difficult, it is prudent to consider the situation from the other person’s perspective. What circumstances were they facing? What external factors may have influenced their actions? And what part did we play in the unfolding of events? Thoughtful introspection will help answer these questions.
Every story has multiple sides. Considering alternative perspectives can deepen our understanding of the perpetrators’ motivations and the pressures confronting them.
Assessing these factors does not excuse harmful behavior, but it can facilitate absolution. Forgiving is not an act of weakness; rather, it is a decision that frees us from the need for retaliation, dissolves the cycle of victimization, and enables us to shape our future by resolving past adversity.
Blaming Ourselves for Hurting Others
Taking responsibility for harming another person is a healthy and vital process. While we can’t undo past actions, we can learn from them, commit to avoiding similar actions, and move forward. Self-forgiveness involves letting go of the shame and guilt we create by our actions and reclaiming control over future behaviors.
Forgiving is a powerful act of self-healing. In many cases, our own wrongdoing impacts us more deeply than the victim, and is only reconcilable by accepting responsibility, making amends, either directly or indirectly, and ultimately forgiving ourselves.
The Unique Impact of Self-Blame
Self-blame is particularly damaging for those of us struggling with social anxiety, as it reinforces our sense of unworthiness. This mindset fosters self-pity, contempt, and other self-sabotaging behaviors that erode our self-esteem.
It diminishes our personal value, perpetuating the belief that we are unworthy of care and concern. Such self-directed hostility intensifies our anxiety and inflicts deep psychological wounds.
Forgiveness for self-blame is the most challenging form of forgiveness because our condition tells us we are inferior and worthless. However, clinging to self-pity allows these harmful beliefs to dominate our thoughts and actions. By forgiving ourselves for our fallibility and self-abuse, we can quiet our social anxiety and continue to heal.
Blame and Social Anxiety
We are not responsible for our condition, which should nullify self-blame. Blaming our parents or genetics serves little purpose. , We cannot alter the past.
Recovery is about focusing on the present and its influence on the future. While the past is not insignificant, it does not directly address our current fears and anxieties. We learn from the past; we do not live in it.
Bad Tenants
By withholding forgiveness, we allow both the person who wronged us and the wrong itself to occupy valuable space in our brains. Persistent and unwelcome “bad tenants” depreciate our quality of life.
We should use this mental real estate for growth and productivity. Our neural network has less capacity for healthy input until we make room for positive reinforcement and constructive change.
Holding onto self-sabotaging emotions further aggravates our anxiety and depression. This emotional toxicity compels us toward irrational behaviors that diminish our self-esteem.
Misdirected Blaming
External
External blaming, or externalization, occurs when we attribute responsibility for our own actions to outside forces. Rather than acknowledging our own role in adverse outcomes, we place the blame elsewhere. When our social anxiety makes managing stressful situations overwhelming, it becomes emotionally easier to fault outside sources rather than assume responsibility.
For example, failing an exam might lead us to blame the instructor for perceived bias, rather than acknowledge our insufficient preparation. Similarly, arriving late to work may prompt us to blame traffic, although the real cause is our hangover. These examples illustrate external blaming, where we avoid personal accountability by focusing on false factors.
Internal
Internal blaming, or internalization, happens when we take responsibility for problems that we did not cause and over which we have no control. Our struggle with low self-esteem generated by SAD can make us feel inferior or inadequate, leading us to blame ourselves for situations beyond our influence.
For instance, if a dinner guest seems unenthusiastic, we might question our cooking or hosting skills rather than consider other explanations. Similarly, if a roommate is facing personal issues, we may convince ourselves that their problems stem from something we did or said.
Relying on the behaviors of others for our sense of worth and identity establishes an unhealthy codependency.
Dr. Mullen is doing impressive work helping the world. He is the
pioneer of proactive neuroplasticity, utilizing DRNI – deliberate,
repetitive, neural information. – WeVoice (Madrid, Málaga)
Letting Go: The Path to Recovery
Recovery is only possible when we let go of negative self-perceptions, unrealistic expectations, and harmful beliefs. This process frees us from the ongoing cycle of shame, guilt, and other adverse emotions that keep us trapped in the past.
Forgiving opens us to new possibilities, allowing us to move forward unencumbered by previous mistakes and trauma. Through self-liberation, we create space for new ideas and personal growth.
Forgiving Is Not Forgetting
Forgiveness is an essential tool for expelling negativity. We cannot hope to function optimally without forgiving ourselves and others whose actions affect our emotional well-being. Offensive behaviors may seem indefensible, but forgiveness is a crucial step on our journey toward healing and acceptance.
Forgiving does not mean forgetting or condoning harmful actions. It does not excuse the perpetrator or the deed. Our noble self chooses to forgive, while our pragmatic self remembers. Blaming ourselves or others for harmful behaviors may sometimes be justified, but holding onto the residual emotions is self-destructive.
As Mahatma Gandhi once observed, “The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong.”
By committing to change and embracing our role as architects of our own growth, we reap the rewards of personal transformation. Through forgiveness, we free ourselves to move forward and cultivate a more balanced and harmonious life.
When left unresolved, three types of resentments adversely impact our psychological well-being by sustaining our victimization and abuse.
- Mistreatment of us by others.
- Mistreatment of others by us.
- Mistreatment we inflict on ourselves.
In each instance, we are victims and abusers. Victimized by the transgression against us, we self-abuse with our anger and resentment. When we transgress, we abuse the victim and victimize ourselves with our shame and guilt.
The victimization we embrace when we harm ourselves is aparticularly insidious form of emotional self-abuse. Victims are likely to experience depression and anxiety, which aggravate and perpetuate our condition.
We retain an abundance of destructive information formed by our negative trajectory. Much of this information stems from the unresolved debris of negative emotions that adversely affect our emotional well-being.
They influence our thoughts, behaviors, and relationships. When unresolved, they continue to permeate our neural network with negative energy and obstruct recovery.
Mistreatment by Others
We often hold onto anger and resentment because we convince ourselves that they impact those who harmed us. However, the perpetrators are obliviously unaware of, have forgotten, or take no responsibility for their mistreatment. The only person affected, then, is the injured party.
Forgiving removes our need for blaming; it mitigates our vindictiveness.
Mistreatment of Others
Forgiving ourselves for harming another is accepting and releasing the toxicity of our actions. Our mistreatment not only impacts the recipient but our emotional well-being as well. We feel guilt for hurting them and shame for being the type of person who would cause harm.
It is prudent to remain mindful that the emotional upheaval provoked by our social anxiety can contribute to the cycle of abuse common in such situations. The mistreated often displace their mistreatment or unconsciously hurt others as a result of their pain.
These self-destructive emotions are resolved by accepting responsibility and our humanness, making amends, and forgiving ourselves. When making personal amends is unfeasible, performing a random act of kindness or other compassionate social behavior alleviates our shame and guilt.
Self-Transgression
Self-transgression is particularly destructive. It defines us as deserving of abuse. Self-pity, contempt, and other hyphenated forms of sabotage devalue our self-esteem. Forgiving the self is challenging for those of us with social anxiety because of our negative self-appraisal.
Anxiety and depression make us feel helpless, worthless, and undesirable. A worthless individual feels undeserving of forgiveness, a helpless one lacks fortitude, and one without hope has no reason to forgive. However, the act is necessary to rebuild our self-esteem.
Space is Limited
For Information
It is one of the best investments I have made in myself, and I will
continue to improve and benefit from it for the rest of my life. – Nick P.
Freeing Up Space for New Growth
Our brain’s neural network is inundated with negative information from childhood disturbance, negative core and intermediate beliefs, low self-esteem, negativity bias, and social anxiety – not to mention the constant adversity of world events and society in general.
One of the key strategies in our recovery journey is to flood our neural network with rapid, concentrated positive stimulation. This is crucial to counterbalance the overwhelming negative information that often dominates our thoughts. By evicting the hostile tenants of negative beliefs and self-esteem issues, we create space for new, healthier thought patterns. And forgiveness, my friends, is the key that unlocks this door to freedom.
Retaining the toxicity of our self-destructive emotions aggravates our anxiety and depression, compelling behavioral issues, avoidance, and other personality shortfalls that can severely jeopardize intimacy and other forms of relationships.
Recovery from social anxiety and related conditions requires letting go of our negative self-analysis, expectations, and beliefs. It opens our minds to new ideas and concepts. Holding onto shame, guilt, and other hostile self-indulgences keeps us imprisoned in the past. Forgiving opens us to new possibilities unencumbered by prior acts.
Forgiving takes work. In the words of Mahatma Gandhi, “The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong.”
Forgiving is Not Forgetting
We cannot hope to function optimally without absolving ourselves and others whose actions impaired our emotional well-being. They may seem indefensible, but forgiving is purely subjective. It is for our well-being.
Let’s be clear: forgiveness is not about forgetting or condoning. It’s not about excusing the transgressor or the transgression. It’s about reclaiming our power. Our noble self forgives; our pragmatic self remembers and remains mindful of the circumstance. This is the true essence of forgiveness.
Holding ourselves or others accountable for harmful behavior is a justifiable response. Clinging to the corresponding anger and resentment is self-destructive. We forgive to promote change within ourselves, and, as architects, we reap the rewards.
Stand Outside of the Bullseye
Our social anxiety compels us to personalize, inhibiting consideration of alternative viewpoints. Cognitive distortions close our eyes to options that conflict with our self-centered point of view. We neglect to consider the multiple perspectives of every situation.
When we find it challenging to forgive someone, it is helpful to consider the larger narrative. Stepping outside of the bullseye not only broadens our understanding of the perpetrator’s motivations but also encourages us to evaluate their pressures, temperament, influence, and environment, fostering a more comprehensive perspective.
While imperfect motivations may not justify or excuse the act, taking the time to understand the intent can empower us, alleviating residual hostility and making us feel less victimized.
Write a Forgiveness Letter
Many experts endorse the psychological benefits of writing a forgiveness letter, sharing our perspective of the event. The letter describes in detail the injury or offense. How did it make us feel? What are its residual effects? How did it impact our relationship with the perpetrator?
How would we have approached the situation? What would we have done differently to mitigate its emotional impact? What is our responsibility?
The act of forgiving mitigates our obsession with the incident and our resentment, shame, and guilt. However, it is inadvisable to send the letter for a variety of reasons. This is a subjective exercise that promotes personal growth and emotional well-being.
Whether we journal or write a letter to ourselves, the key is to approach it with self-compassion. This practice allows us to recognize and accept our imperfections, fostering a sense of understanding and acceptance. There is no logical reason to allow a past, intangible act to impede our growth.
Why hold onto something emotionally disturbing from the past that cannot be altered? The past is immutable. We have no control over it. It is the here-and-now and how it reflects on the future that is of value. The only logical response is to accept that it happened and realize it has no material impact on the present unless we allow it to fester. It is time to let it go and move on.
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WHY IS YOUR SUPPORT SO NECESSARY?
ReChanneling develops and conducts programs to alleviate the symptoms of social anxiety and help individuals tap into their innate potential for extraordinary living. Our unique approach focuses on understanding personality through empathy and collaboration, integrating neuroscience and psychology. This includes proactive neuroplasticity, cognitive-behavioral modification, positive psychology, and techniques designed to reclaim and rebuild self-esteem. Every contribution, regardless of its size, supports individuals who strive to make a positive change in their own lives and the lives of others. All donations go towards scholarships for groups and workshops.
INDIVIDUAL RECOVERY. The symptoms of social anxiety make it challenging for some to participate in a collective workshop. Dr. Mullen works one-on-one with a select group of individuals who are uneasy in group settings. ReChanneling offers scholarships to accommodate the costs. What is absent in group activities is provided in our monthly Graduate Recovery Group. In this supportive community, graduates interact with others who have completed the program. Contact ‘rmullenphd@gmail.com’.
Committing to recovery is one of the hardest things you will ever do.
It takes enormous courage and the realization that you are of value,
consequential, and deserving of happiness.


What is missing in your comments about blame is the fact there needs to be accountability on the part of the person or the society that has caused the harm in order for true healing to happen.
Blaming and other ways of trying to come to terms with trauma that is the result of personal or societal wrongdoings does not necessarily reflect a weakness on the part of the person suffering. Many people have a strong sense of justice and cannot feel peace until justice is done. We would live in a different world if individuals and institutions were required to be accountable for the harm they do.
The social anxiety that persons experience when they have been harmed can be because they are not receiving support in seeking justice and or must engage in a court system that is not designed to be a healing place.
Dear Susanna.
Very insightful comments. Thanks for adding to everyone’s understanding of the experience of trauma. in