klin wrote:
Thanks all for responding -- interesting to hear everyone's replies.
@ Redxk , Ok, this is what I was thinking. Perhaps an undiagnosed person who has a lot anxiety might not recognize it was environmental. I'm wondering if this might be something like what I experience.
Would you say that "the environment" includes recognition or anticipation of social obligations as well as general sensory stimuli, or exclusively the latter?
I understand your thinking here. Both of them are constant, underlying everything... You used the word anticipation, and I think that's exactly what I've heard it called: anticipatory anxiety. It usually gets compounded by the so-called "secondary" anxiety, which is the anxiety we have
because we anticipate future anxiety. It gets to the point where it's just always there as the way we perceive reality.