Avoiding Risk and How to Socialize in the 21st Century

I had a thought several months back while on vacation with my family, as my wife had both of our kids elsewhere and I had a few minutes alone which, as any of you who have or have had small children can attest to, is the only time I get to actually think.  Throughout the millions of years of human existence and the tens of thousands of years of civilization, our species has communicated via a single medium: face-to-face, with words, gestures, posture, and facial expression.  Over the course of the past decade, perhaps a bit more, that has radically changed.  Of course, the telephone has been around for over a century, and for the majority of that time has been a mainstay in the American household.  Written correspondence has also been a thing for centuries; but the supercomputers in our pockets have represented an evolution in human communication unlike anything before.  Now I have a speaking/listening device everywhere I go, rather than on the wall in my parents’ kitchen connected to a coiled wire.  Not only can I talk to whomever I want from nearly anywhere, but I can text, email, or access any piece of information my heart desires from the middle of the woods, or on that vacation with my family, if I so choose.

 

The question is: what does this mean, and how is it truly affecting people, particularly young people, whose brains are still developing and have never lived in an age when there wasn’t more iPhones than there are people?

 

As recent as the early 2000’s, there were very few other options to engage risky communications than face-to-face.  It wasn’t common for people to ask someone on a date via email, or end a relationship, or face any general conflict other than in person or, to a lesser extent, over the phone.  Research strongly suggests that the more that people are exposed to anxiety provoking stimuli, the less anxiety they begin to have.  In the digital age, we haven’t mitigated the risk of embarrassment caused by rejection, however we have virtually eliminated the need to ante up the guts to make the initial advance.  Approaching a relative stranger and asking for a date is terrifying, but asking for what we want is great practice, and people who lack the ability to ask for what they want seldom get it.  Further, people who don’t believe they can get what they want often suffer from a common mental disorder: anxiety.

 

A New York Times Magazine article last year cited a study by the American College Health Association, which asked university undergrads if they had experienced “overwhelming anxiety” during the past year.  62 percent said that they had, up from 50 percent just five years earlier.  Now I’m not insinuating that the recent surge in anxiety among young people is exclusively the result of the digital infiltration of every facet of their lives.  That would be oversimplifying and it is truly way more complicated than that.  However, to what extent is the avoidance of social risk compromising their ability to handle stress and pressure?  It’s an interesting question, and unfortunately not one that we can answer right now, though we can offer some potential solutions that may help bolster you or your young person’s ability to handle the stresses associated with social life.

 

When I work with someone who comes to me and complains of anxiety, I start by asking three questions: What’s your diet like?  What’s your sleep schedule?  And how often do you exercise?  If any one of those three fundamentals are off, the results can be pretty bad, and so if that’s the case, the first thing we do is strategize ways to correct the diet, the sleep habits, or the physical activity (or any combination of those).  As it relates to young people, whose brains are still developing and are experiencing a surge of pubescent hormones, the necessity for those three spheres to be in order is even greater.  A healthy lifestyle obviously isn’t a cure all, but it’s certainly the most straightforward place to start. 

 

So take care of yourself, put your phone away and make sure you spend at least a half hour each day actually talking to another human being in the flesh.  Practice constructive criticism and other forms of risky social engagement with friends.  Force yourself and your kids outside of their comfort zone and face what comes with it; the expansion of your comfort zone will make you a little less susceptible to the crippling anxiety that so many of us are dealing with.


The Perks Of Resilience

An overwhelming majority of Americans report that spring is their favorite season.  I think the reason is pretty obvious.  Spring is about rebirth, optimism, and opportunity; but more than anything, spring is the reward we get for our resilience.  Winter can be brutal: frigid temperatures, unpredictable snow storms, risky travel conditions, the flu…  But, given little other option, most of us endure.

 

Resilience has become somewhat of a buzzword in the mental health field over the past several years, and justifiably so: resilience is what helps people rise to challenges, and bounce back from adversity.  Resilience is what helps us create opportunity from crisis, and it is the psychological fuel for creation and innovation.  Like every other attribute that helps to measure one’s overall mental health, resilience is not a characteristic that each of us possesses at a set quantity.  Rather, resilience is a quality that we can acquire and enrich upon, though for most of us, increasing resilience means slightly altering our perspective.

 

Central to resilient people’s worldview is how they relate to crisis.  When faced with challenging circumstances, we essentially have two options as to how we view ourselves: solution focused survivor, or victim of circumstance.  Resilient people tend to focus on the potentiality of a positive outcome, even in the midst of difficult conditions.  They maintain a belief that their actions can affect the ultimate outcome in almost any situation, possessing what is called an internal locus of control.  Of course, there are obvious limits to that which each of us controls, and factors beyond the scope of anyone’s influence are less important.  What is more important is our belief in our respective power to make choices and to cope.

 

Lastly, it has become increasingly clear that resilient people are more apt to ask for help than less resilient people.  This may seem as a contradiction to what was written above, that resilient people have a strong belief in their individual abilities to manage and affect crisis.  Yet, we can’t forget that humans are naturally social animals, and our survival has always been dependent upon group unity.  Resilience is about solution-oriented modes of thinking, propelled by one’s inner belief that a solution exists, and that they have the tools to find it; sometimes the best tool at our disposal is simply asking for help.