Seven Percent Slower: A Simple Trick For Moving Past Anxiety And Stress
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About this ebook
Are you speeding up and rushing around when anxious, stressed, or afraid? Seven Percent Slower is a friendly, easy-to-read guide to understanding and breaking the speed habit that fuels your anxiety and stress fires.
When anxiety, stress, and fear show up, you speed up. The bad news is that this is making things worse for you. The good news is that you can learn to break the speed habit. If you are on a quest to find a calmer, less stressed, and less frantic life, learning to slow down can go a long way toward achieving that goal.
Seven Percent Slower will help you understand how the fear center in your brain drives your speed habit, why this was a good idea thousands of years ago, and why this is a bad idea in the modern world. The book will teach you how to recognize your speed habits and how to slowly change them over time. Seven Percent Slower will help you understand why you may be resistant to slowing down, how slowing down can change your life, and how concepts like mindfulness come into play.
Full of practical advice and sprinkled with humor, Seven Percent Slower is destined to become a useful addition to your stress management and coping skills toolbox.
Drew Linsalata
Drew is the creator and host of The Anxious Truth, a stunningly popular anxiety podcast that's been in full swing since 2015. With over 500,000 downloads (and growing), The Anxious Truth enjoys a large, vibrant and engaged social media community of amazing humans supporting, inspiring, encouraging and empowering each other to overcome anxiety and fear. Listen to a few episodes of the podcast and you'll know right away that this isn't what you're used to hearing about anxiety. Drew's unique, no-nonsense approach to solving the anxiety problem combines his strong, confident voice with genuine care, compassion and a desire to see others learn and succeed.You can find Drew, his podcast, and his community at theanxioustruth.com.Having been through not one, not two, but THREE different periods of debilitating anxiety, panic, agoraphobia, and depression, Drew turned it all around in 2008. Armed with a deep understanding of the cognitive nature of this problem, courage, and an intense desire to solve the problem once and for all, Drew rid himself of the irrational fear that fuels the disorder. Now living a normal, happy, productive life without avoidance and retreat, Drew spends a fair amount of his time tending to his podcast, writing about anxiety disorder issues, and interacting with the large community surrounding his work.A technology entrepreneur by day, Drew's true passion is using his own knowledge and life experience to teach and empower others as they work to solve their own anxiety and fear problems. When he's not podcasting, writing or taking care of business, you can find Drew attempting to be a proficient guitarist or in the gym. A fan of scientific inquiry, Stoicism, Taoism, and Buddhism, Drew is also a lifelong night owl that's probably staying up too late right now.Oh, and Drew realizes that writing about himself in the third person is a bit ridiculous, but that seems to be the way it's done in these parts, and there's nothing wrong with a bit of ridiculousness now then!
Read more from Drew Linsalata
The Anxious Truth: A Step-By-Step Guide To Understanding and Overcoming Panic, Anxiety, and Agoraphobia Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5An Anxiety Story: How I Recovered From Anxiety, Panic and Agoraphobia Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
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Book preview
Seven Percent Slower - Drew Linsalata
SEVEN PERCENT SLOWER
A Simple Trick for MOVING PAST ANXIETY AND STRESS
By Drew Linsalata
Seven Percent Slower: A Simple Trick for MOVING PAST ANXIETY AND STRESS
All Rights Reserved
COPYRIGHT © 2021 Drew Linsalata
This book may not be reproduced, transmitted, or stored in whole or in part by any means, including graphic, electronic, or mechanical, without the express written consent of the publisher except in the case of brief questions embodied in critical articles and reviews.
Cover design by Zeljka Kojic
Edited by Hilary Jastram
Text Description automatically generated with medium confidenceThank You
I would like to take a moment to thank you. All of you.
Listeners of my podcast.
Readers of my books.
Members of my social media community.
Those of you who I have the honor and privilege to work with directly.
You are the fuel that drives the creation of this book. Seven Percent Slower was born years ago during my anxiety recovery work, but it had not seen daylight since maybe 2009. My interaction with people like you allows ideas to surface and sometimes re-surface. While ideas are wonderful, you get the credit for giving them strength, and helping them grow, and find practical application.
I appreciate you more than I can say, and I thank you from the bottom of my heart for being such an important part of this project, even if you didn’t know that you were.
Resources
My Website
https://theanxioustruth.com
My Social Media Links
https://theanxioustruth.com/links
My First Two Books
https://theanxioustruth.com/recoveryguide
https://theanxioustruth.com/mystory
My Podcast
https://theanxioustruth.com/listen
Table of Contents
Foreword
Introduction
Chapter 1 — No Days Off: The Frantic Life of an Anxious Brain
Chapter 2 — SPEED: A Natural Response to Anxiety, Stress, and Fear
Chapter 3 — What Does Your Speed Response Look Like?
Chapter 4 — Why Rushing Around Is a Bad Idea
Chapter 5 — But then I’ll feel things!
(Why you might not want to go slower.)
Chapter 6 — Why Go Seven Percent Slower?
Chapter 7 — Is This Mindfulness? Do I Have to Meditate?
Chapter 8 — Learning To Go Seven Percent Slower: Acknowledging
Chapter 9 — Learning To Go Seven Percent Slower: Action
Chapter 10 — The Benefits of Going Seven Percent Slower
Chapter 11 — So I’m never allowed to go fast?
Chapter 12 — Beyond Seven Percent Slower
Those Resources (One. More. Time!)
About The Author
Disclaimer
Foreword
Hello, and a warm and sincere well done for picking up this book. I know that reading any content relating to your fears can be challenging, but rest assured, this book is a safe space for you to be you. As a psychotherapist who specializes in working with anxiety disorders, let me assure you that this excellent book can be an invaluable tool in recovery from disordered anxiety. I am someone who was crippled by anxiety for many years, and refreshingly, I recognize that Drew has outlined some of the elements of my own recovery that I have previously failed to put into words.
For many years I believed that my anxious feelings were something I needed to rapidly fix. Like many others with disordered anxiety, I am an intelligent problem-solver; I simply want to get stuff done, so I can move on and get on with more life tasks. I, like many others with disordered anxiety, am also good at getting stuff done. So, it came as a huge surprise when these scary feelings of doom, unease, and fear struck me from seemingly nowhere and didn’t seem to go away. I developed excessive fear, then a fear of this excessive fear. I began to fear panic, which inevitably became a problem that I wanted to fix and get done! I didn’t like this at all, nor did the part of me that wanted to hastily remove annoying obstacles in my life. Inevitably, I made overcoming anxiety a task
that I wanted to rush through, which—as you’re probably familiar with—does not work.
Back in the midst of my anxiety disorder, I didn’t have the resources available today to help me learn about my condition. I just thought I had lost my mind, and I would be forever trapped in a purgatory of fear. I thought I’d be spending every day for the rest of my life being hypervigilant of anxiety and its many symptoms and sensations. However, learning about excessive, disordered anxiety, including the biomechanics, the science, and the psychology, led me to begin to trial and error my way out of its clutches. My road to recovery was not simple, nor was it linear, but thankfully the information available from the right people today can help your recovery go along more smoothly. Drew Linsalata is a fantastic educator on the topic of anxiety disorders, and his teachings are a wonderful asset to anyone recovering.
Why is it important to slow down during recovery from an anxiety disorder? An important aspect of my own recovery was learning not to rush through things. I had to postpone that often useful part of me that wanted to complete everything as fast as I could. As you may or may not know by now, exposure to your fears is essential when tackling certain presentations of anxiety, including panic disorder, agoraphobia, social anxiety, driving anxiety, flying anxiety, etc. This doesn’t mean we have to jump in at the deep end, but it does mean that we have to dip our toe in the water to test it out. We must begin to lean toward our fears in the knowledge that anxiety and its many symptoms are safe to experience and cannot hurt us. This was a daunting prospect for someone who struggled to even leave his room for six months, but I’m here today and proud of what I achieved; I am now one of the leading voices on anxiety disorders in the UK.
One of my golden rules when working with clients is to do what non-anxious you would do, despite being anxious.
When we are experiencing fear, and our fight-or-flight response is engaged, it can feel instinctual to want to run away or venture toward a place of safety.
This is okay to feel this—it is normal. Drew and I have felt this many a time. However, part of recovery is to ignore this fear response in times when we don’t need it. Part of recovery for me was to continue to do what non-anxious me would do. I would ask myself, Would non-anxious me want to rush through this exposure?
Would non-anxious me be desperately foraging for a bottle of water or some safety object/ place/person right now?
Learning to slow down to a pace that my non-anxious self would operate at was so important in my recovery.
Ultimately, recovering from excessive anxiety is when we turn the brain’s threat response off in situations where we don’t need it—usually normal, everyday situations. We do this by showing the threat response that this situation we want to feel normal
in is not dangerous. This means resisting the urge to rush, to be frantic, to count down the seconds until we can escape, or to step hastily toward where we feel we may be less anxious. With panic disorder and agoraphobia, the threat response learns from our behavior and decides whether or not to trigger in the future—dependent on our behaviors. If it remembers that you rushed, ran away, white-knuckled,
or sought immediate reassurance in a situation from your recent past, it will trigger anxiety again and again. It won’t necessarily get worse, but it can often leave us in a place where we feel stuck.
Drew’s suggestion of taking things Seven Percent Slower is perfect. It’s a concept taken from the abstract and a helpful reminder that we don’t need to fervently writhe in our scary exposures, but