androbot01 wrote:
Noca wrote:
Anxiety is either improving because you are working on it by exposing yourself to anxiety provoking situations or it is getting worse because you are avoiding what makes you anxious. The more you avoid any given anxiety provoking situation the worse your anxiety will be the next time you encounter the same situation.
I both agree and disagree with you Noca. While it is true that one should not avoid a situation because it is anxiety causing, it is also true that some situations are not worth the fight. What I mean is that to a certain extent a person has to construct their life so it is as anxiety free as possible. For example, for me living with roommates is a situation that I cannot become used to no matter how much I expose myself to it. I think there has to be a balance between productive exposure and detrimental exposure.
Well you definitely have a finite amount of mental energy to put towards overcoming any mental illness and you definitely need a safe place to recharge, even more so for autists.
But as for leaving your house, say walking to my mailbox causes me anxiety. Each time I chose to avoid walking to my mailbox, my anxiety will be worse the next time. Each time I force myself to walk to the mailbox and endure my anxiety, the next time it will be easier. It may never get to the point that I don't feel any anxiety at all during that situation and there may be days where I am so mentally exhausted for whatever reason that enduring the anxiety that day may not be worth it.