|  |  |  Healthcare Training Institute - Quality Education since 1979CE for Psychologist, Social Worker, Counselor, & MFT!!
 Section 
13 Anxiety in Psychological Dysfunction
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 The Vicious Cycle Generalizations, catastrophizing, and dichotomous thinking all act to generate 
a primal response. Shortness of breath is an example of a primal response. If 
you recall, a primal response is one that is applied to automatic, unconscious, 
involutional activation or inhibition of a behavior pattern. A freeze reaction 
and mental blocking are examples of primal responses. These primal responses sometimes 
create a vicious cycle. Think of a client you have that exhibits primal responses 
as a response to anxiety.
 
 ♦ Symptoms that Pose a Threat
 The spiraling, or vicious cycle in anxiety 
disorders, can be seen as you observe how a particular symptom may, in itself, 
pose a threat. This threat occurs either by impairing performance or by indicating 
to a suggestible person that it is a sign of a serious disorder. These secondary 
effects make your client feel even more vulnerable. As the sense of danger increases, 
more primal responses are activated, and these, in turn, may present further handicaps 
and threats. Unfavorable feedback from others has a similar negative effect.
 
 Here's an example of how this cycle, from impaired performance signs of a 
serious disorder, creates a vicious cycle.
 
 I treated a client, Joe, who 
had to give regular team presentations at work. Joe perceived a serious flaw in 
his performance. He based this "perception" on negative responses 
from the team, such as yawning, restlessness, etc. Also, he felt he had a lack 
of organization, poor inflection, and rambled. Next, he had fears such as, "I 
may not be able to hold their attention--They may look down on me because of my 
lapses--I may not be able to keep going." These ideas increased his sense 
of vulnerability and stirred up anxiety and other defensive mechanisms.
 
 ♦ How Joe's Anxiety Led to Further Dysfunction
 The anxiety 
itself led to further dysfunction.
 First, the unpleasant emotional experience 
served to distract him from the task at hand just as would a sudden, sharp pain.
 Secondly, he interpreted his anxiety as a sign that he was not functioning well, 
that he did not have control over himself -- that is, the intensity of his anxiety 
rather than any accurate assessment of his actual performance is taken as evidence 
of his dysfunction. He is in the grip of notions such as, "This is a sign 
that I'm not making it."
 
 As Joe's attention is diverted to his anxiety, there may, indeed, be an increase in his outward show of "nervousness" 
as well as increased difficulty in performance. He became increasingly "weak 
and powerless," he sensed his greatest danger and his vulnerability to disapproval 
from the audience. He began to believe that he could not depend on his functional 
capacities to see him through this crisis.
 
 However, if Joe receives 
positive signals from the audience, he believes that he is performing well, 
he is less likely to feel threatened. He thinks, for instance, "At least 
I'm getting across somewhat to the team," and "They seem receptive so 
I guess they are not going to attack me." Any interference with his voluntary 
control over his thinking and speech, over his posture and over subjective sensations 
such as nervousness, will decrease his self-confidence.
 
 ♦  "I'm not in control of my body."
 However, symptoms such 
as swaying, a quivering voice, faint feelings, loss of fluency, rigid posture, 
all mean to him, "I'm not in control of my body." The sense of one's 
control slipping often means that "anything can happen," and voluntary 
control is especially devastating to people who place a high premium on having 
control because of their need for autonomy.
 
 The negative evaluation of 
self, of their performance, and of the audience's response increases the anxiety, 
which further interferes with performance and reinforces the notion of being deficient.
 Reviewed 2023
 Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References: Goodman, F. R., Kashdan, T. B., & İmamoğlu, A. (2021). Valuing emotional control in social anxiety disorder: A multimethod study of emotion beliefs and emotion regulation. Emotion, 21(4), 842–855.
 
 Maxfield, M., John, S., & Pyszczynski, T. (2014). A terror management perspective on the role of death-related anxiety in psychological dysfunction. The Humanistic Psychologist, 42(1), 35–53.
 
 Riley, E., Mitko, A., Stumps, A., Robinson, M., Milberg, W., McGlinchey, R., Esterman, M., & DeGutis, J. (2019). Clinically significant cognitive dysfunction in OEF/OIF/OND veterans: Prevalence and clinical associations. Neuropsychology, 33(4), 534–546.
 
 Zhu, G., Sun, X., Yang, Y., Du, Y., Lin, Y., Xiang, J., & Zhou, N. (2019). Reduction of BDNF results in GABAergic neuroplasticity dysfunction and contributes to late-life anxiety disorder. Behavioral Neuroscience, 133(2), 212–224.
 
 QUESTION 
13
 The negative evaluation of self may further interfere with what? To select 
and enter your answer go to .
 
 
 
 
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