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  • It's not an illustrious category to belong to of course, but there are plenty of us at

  • least. We worry about work, money, being left, illness, disappointing, over-promising, madness

  • and disgrace, just to start the list. We worry in the early hours, we worry on holiday, we

  • worry at parties and we worry all the time while we're trying to smile and seem normal

  • to good people who depend on us. It can izeel pretty unbearable, at moments. A standard

  • approach when trying to assuage our blizzard of worries is to look at each in turn and

  • marshal sensible arguments against their probabilities. But it can, at points, also be helpful not

  • to look at the specifics of every worry and instead to consider the overall position that

  • worry has come to occupy in our lives. There is a hugely fascinating sentence on the topic

  • in an essay by the great English psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott: 'The catastrophe you fear

  • will happen has in fact already happened.' When we worry, we are naturally fixated on

  • what will occur next: it's the future, with its boundless possibilities for horror, that

  • is the natural arena for exploration by our panicked thoughts. But in Winnicott's unexpected

  • thesis, something else is revealed: the disaster that we fear is going to unfold is actually

  • behind us. There is a paradox here: why do we keep expecting something to happen that

  • has already happened? Why don't we better distinguish past from present? Winnicott's

  • answer that it's in the nature of traumatic events from childhood not to be properly processed

  • and as a result, like the dead who have not been adequately buried and mourned, to start

  • to haunt us indiscriminately in adulthood. But they do not make themselves felt in straightforward

  • For example, we may panic

  • that we are about to be humiliated and shamed. There are no particularly strong grounds for

  • this in objective reality, but we are utterly convinced nevertheless, because this is precisely

  • what happened to us when we were tiny and at the hands of a parent. Or we worry intensely

  • that we are about to be abandoned in love not because our partner is in any significant

  • way disloyal, but because someone who once looked after us at a very vulnerable point

  • definitely was. A benefit of understanding how much our worries owe to childhood is a

  • new sense that it isn't so much the future we should be distressed about as the past.

  • We can replace dread and apprehension with something sadder yet ultimately more redemptive:

  • mourning. We can feel profoundly sorry for our younger selves as an alternative to being

  • panicked for our future selves. Appreciating the childhood legacy of worries, we also stand

  • to realise that we can adapt and improve on how we respond to what alarms us. If we have

  • been well parented, we will have been bequeathed a repertoire of good moves to latch on to

  • when crises occur: we know how to reach out, seek help, perhaps move away and only take

  • as much responsibility as we are due. We have access to a corridor through our troubles.

  • But when we have lacked this kind of tutelage, we remain in significant ways, in relation

  • to our troubles, like the frightened children we once were. We may be tall, drive a car

  • and sound like a grown-up, but faced with concerns, resort to our toolkit of childlike

  • solutions: we overreact, we go silent, we scream, we have a little sense of other options,

  • we feel extremely limited in our powers of protest and agency, we lose all perspective.

  • To which it is appropriate, and in no way patronising, to remind ourselves of what can

  • in our deeper psychological selvesstill be an entirely implausible thought: that we

  • are now adults. In other words, in response to the kinds of terror we knew so well at

  • the age of four or eight, we don't have to be either as afraid or as powerless as

  • we were. We can mount a direct protest, we can make an eloquent case for ourselves, we

  • can complain and defend our position, we can rebuild our lives in a new way elsewhere.

  • There are two ways to mitigate risk: to try to remove all risk from the world. Or to work

  • on one's attitude to risk. Knowing that many of our fears have childhood antecedents

  • as do our responses to them can free us to imagine that history won't have to repeat

  • itself exactly. Adult life doesn't have to be as terrifying as our childhoods once

  • were and our responses to our fears can have some of the greater vigour and confidence

  • that is the natural privilege of grown-ups. We'll still be worried a substantial portion

  • of the time, but perhaps with a little less fragility and fewer burning convictions of

  • total upcoming catastrophe. Thank you for commenting, liking and subscribing. We also

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  • on your screen now.

It's not an illustrious category to belong to of course, but there are plenty of us at

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為什麼我們總是擔心,如何應對? (Why We Worry All the Time and How to Cope)

  • 108 13
    Wei-Ting Chou 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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