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May 1, 2015

Your Anxiety Isn’t An Excuse To Be An Asshole

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Hey. Yeah, you, with the anxiety. I’d like to talk to you for a second, because I feel – between the all-consuming monster that is Introvert Culture, and the enabling, garbled pseudo-psychology that is Tumblr Advice – that we’ve gotten a little out of control about what it means to be anxious, and what that entitles you to. While it’s an excellent thing that we’re finally talking somewhat openly about mental illness (or, well, anxiety and depression, which are basically the only things the internet likes discussing asides generalized introversion), it’s important that we talk about these things in a constructive way. So let’s do that. But first, some credentials, because I don’t like yelling about things I don’t understand. (Yes, I do.)
I have been diagnosed with Generalized Anxiety Disorder (for the first time about two years ago), and have since taken various medications at different times for its symptoms. I have long taken Ambien for my anxiety-induced insomnia, which I initially thought was its own, separate thing. I have taken Xanax for the more acute symptoms. I have also taken a whole host of herbal and holistic remedies, and have drank more tea and taken more long baths than anyone should in a lifetime. I have practiced #RadicalSelfCare and #RadicalSelfLove. And though my particular symptoms tended to manifest very physically – constant tremors, splitting headaches, severe indigestion —  I also experienced many mental signs of the disorder, ranging from “extreme distress in social situations” to “inability to effectively communicate at work and in my personal life.” So I get it, I do.
And I’m probably one of those people that Tumblr would hate, because you know what finally made my symptoms dissipate nearly-entirely? You know why I no longer take Ambien, Xanax, or any of the many herbal remedies (except on planes, because those things are Fucking Scary)? It’s because I am now getting regular physical activity, eating a balanced diet, and working a job that does not trigger any of my stressors. I also have a dog now, which is by far the most soothing and helpful thing that’s ever happened to me. Point being, though, I was able to work on myself actively and intelligently – which mostly involved treating my body much, much better – and I was able to manage my symptoms. Do I still have a tendency to get into my unproductive anxiety spirals? Sure. But it’s not the same as it was.
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But that’s not the point, because what worked for me won’t work for everyone, and I get that. I could very well still be in the depths of my anxiety, when I was on the verge of losing every important relationship I’d ever built, including my long-term boyfriend and my parents, none of whom could deal with my constant shit. I could still be at the place where I was losing jobs and missing out on others, because my tension and hesitation was keeping me from following up on perfect opportunities. I could still be there, as many people are today. And if I were, the last thing in the world I would need is this dumb fucking self-care rhetoric that essentially tells you, “You’re a golden anxiety flower, and everyone else has to deal with you.”
Seriously, nothing is worse than the writing and the ~comic strips about mental illness~ and the pandering videos which tell us that people with anxiety are these fragile butterflies who must be catered to at every turn. “Just take care of yourself,” this rhetoric says. “Practice self-care! Take a bath! Cancel your plans! Don’t explain yourself! If your friends can’t give you space and be totally understanding, that means they’re not your friends!!! They’re toxic! GET THEM OUT OF YOUR LIFE. You have no obligation to keep around Toxic People. If you need to throw your phone into a river and spend two weeks locked in your room eating Ding Dongs, that’s what you need!! :3”
Do you know where someone would be if they practiced this terrible, indulgent advice? Jobless, friendless, and very possibly homeless. (Of course, this advice is directed to coddled young people on the internet, not single mothers of three who have no choice but to forgo treating their anxiety to keep a roof over their childrens’ heads. But who cares about them?? [Insert robotic laugh here.]) The point is, this terrible and enabling advice a) only applies to people who can afford to drown their sorrows with a Lush bath bomb and a glass of Pinot Grigio, and b) encourages you to treat everyone around you like total shit, because your anxiety is some sort of Get Out Of Jail Free Card to abuse and neglect your social circles.
But the truth is that your friends/family/coworkers are HUMAN BEINGS, TOO. Just because they don’t have clinical anxiety or depression (and maybe they do, you don’t know their life), that doesn’t mean that they can act as your neurotypical punching bag until you finally decide you’re well enough to act like a decent person again. If you ignore them, cancel on them frequently, snap at them, take out your stress or anger on them, or simply not pull your emotional weight in the relationship, they have every right to drop your ass as a friend. Maybe they will be kind and deal with some of your episodes because they love you, but if they are not getting more out of that relationship than they’re putting in, they should walk away. Do you know why? Because anxiety is very capable of making you a Toxic Person, and indulging your worst impulses only makes you more of one. When a very close friend told me, honestly, “I don’t know if I can be your friend anymore. You’re so angry and stressed all the time,” she was absolutely right. She was GRACIOUS not to drop me as a friend. I didn’t deserve her, because I was being selfish, and taking everyone in my life for granted.
Your anxiety is not an excuse to be an asshole. It’s not an excuse to not follow through on things, or be caring, or be dependable. If you break the social contract and decide to be the full asshole your anxiety-riddled self wants to be, fine. But you don’t deserve close friends, because no one deserves that. No one has to put up with your bullshit, and if you don’t actively work on making yourself a better and more rewarding person to be around, no one should wait around for you. Only in making conscious, proactive decisions towards better-ness did some of my closest people start warming back up to me after a serious low point, and I am forever lucky and grateful that they did. Because I could very well be alone right now, after a long stretch of believing that I was a Special Anxiety Snowflake who was entitled to being a selfish, irritable, flaky jerk. I got through to the other side, and maybe you will, too. But not by being an asshole. TC mark

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        • Avatar
          Duuhmb 29 minutes ago
          So what's your excuse now that you're still an asshole?
            see more
            • Avatar
              CMOConnor 5 hours ago
              This article is filled with hate, self hate.
              Anxiety comes in many different forms, you had/have generalized anxiety disorder with some physical symptoms and acted like, and I quote, an "asshole." I have severe anxiety, PTSD, and several physical symptoms. Yet, I have never once acted like an asshole to a friend, family member, or even a total stranger.
              I have upwards of 20 attacks a day, work 40 plus hours a week, and maintain a very active social life. I push through them, but it in no way lessons them or their violent attack on my body and mind. I have no triggers, I can be sitting in a meeting with CEO's when my heart starts racing, I can't breathe, my vision starts to go blurry and black, and every part of my body says I'm going to pass out. Yet, I still look them deadpan in the eye and respond with a highly intelligent answer. I can be at the grocery store, at a best friends house, walking down the street hand in hand with my husband, or alone on my couch.
              When it is hard for me to follow along I simply explain to the person what I'm going through, ask for a couple of seconds, and regroup. Anxiety attacks= 20 plus times a day; asshole= zero time a day. I've yet to meet another person with anxiety who treat people badly, in fact most are overly nice because we are so concerned about people discovering out about our secret. We are so scared that we are being selfish or assholes we go above and beyond not to be.
              Sounds like you had a rough period of time in your life, were an asshole, overcame it, and now think you are an expert on the subject. Your experience and choices during your low point were yours, and just that. This article, in my humble opinion, shows me that you are in fact, still an asshole and have no true understanding of anxiety.
              This article is not about anxiety, it is about your personal experience, selfish people, people who are assholes, and you needing to forgive yourself. Please do so, please educate yourself more on anxiety while you're at, and please stop writing hateful articles that group very successful and extremely loving people like me into your garbage.
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                • Biffard P. Misqueegan 7 hours ago
                  The connection between 'tumblr mental illness culture' and people with mental illness being jerks is baloney. The fact that both those things exist is not proof that they are connected. That internet sub-culture is a life-line for those who never had the opportunity or ability to pull off this boot-strap nonsense.
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                    • swatbot 11 hours ago
                      When my anxiety gets bad I have dissociative symptoms, something called derealization where I'm unable to follow a conversation, let alone plan social events or phone people. That's on top of IBS symptoms for hours per day. Not everyone with anxiety gets all of this, but some of us do. I can't say I 'indulge' in these episodes when I feel like it. Right now, I'm the clearest I've been in a while. As it stands, I've been lucky to get this far in life with these problems. So people with anxiety have my empathy and sympathy, both.
                      Some of my acquaintances with anxiety are unable to communicate when they have problems. Any one of us may have related issues like OCD, surviving some kind of assault, or other chronic health conditions etc. Anxiety often goes hand in hand with other things, some of which involve serious trust issues that also impede social circle maintenance. I can't just waive my symptoms off and presumably they can't either. If you know how, please share advice instead of calling us all assholes, because I've been working on this with therapists for years as have others I know. What was that about pseudo-psychology? I've had friends who succumbed to serious anxiety and couldn't keep up the friendship, and I don't feel the need to call them assholes just because I am sad.
                      Yes, some people can act like jerks and be mentally ill and it's important to talk about that, but some others are barely just surviving, while manifesting similar behaviors, and actually can't make it on their own without help. That's why it's called an 'illness'. The author here, despite having an encounter with some variety of anxiety that changing her job fixed, doesn't seem to really understand the many ways anxiety manifests. And so they lump in the act of neglecting social circles with verbally abusing your friends as if those both plant you on team asshole.
                      Sure, you aren't entitled to friendship, especially if you neglect others, but with the widespread presumptive blame game about mental health that typically employs the language this author is using, it's easy to assume it's best not to trust other people with these things, which hardly improves the social side for those of us dealing with these things
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                        • Barbara Ford 17 hours ago
                          You know where I am in life? disabled, friendless, jobless and lonely...at age 35. All because I ignored my symptoms hoping they would go away. Ignoring them caused them to get worse and that took a toll on every job and relationship. So excuse me if I get in the bath with my pinot grigio and attempt to Ctl-Alt-Dlt my life now...hoping I'll find a reason to live.
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                            • swatbot > Barbara Ford 12 hours ago
                              You've definitely brought up something important. Lots of people with mental health issues wind up alone, they don't have a chance to be 'jerks'.
                              I don't know where these 'coddled' mentally ill people are, if anyone ever comes across them, can please let me know what resort they are staying at? I want in. Maybe at that resort you can change jobs and get a dog or something and that will auto-magically push the anxiety away.
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                              • Kestrel 3 days ago
                                I do not like this post. Maybe you were a constant asshole when you struggled with anxiety, but most out there with anxiety repress their feelings and don't lash out at their friends. It sounds like you just treated your friends like crap because you could. I do not treat my friends like crap. I do my best to take care of others and meet their needs. As do many people with anxiety - those who have anxiety are generally some of the the most selfless, caring people you'd ever know. Yet reading this brought up the multitude of fears of "I must be a burden on others, I knew it" "I probably bother everyone" and "I'm a horrible person" - and you know what? That is so messed up. I'm so sorry to all the people who have read your post and have begun to once again have their illogical fears run through their minds. I feel that you mistakenly addressed this to a large audience when your message really doesn't apply to that many people. But of course this is the Internet so now thousands of people will share it and those with anxiety will once again get it thrown into their faces about how difficult they are to deal with. Please, to those who are reading this, try to use logic and evidence (I know it's difficult to do) to truly assess whether you are a burden to others. Please remember that just because you have anxiety doesn't mean this applies to you. (again, I'm sure this applies to some people, but not everyone). We are reminded continually, whether externally or internally, of how ridiculous we are. Of how hard it is to understand and deal with us. Trust me, we get it. It is hurtful and insulting to see a post telling those with anxiety to "remember, don't be an asshole!" I know you only meant to tell people who actually use anxiety as an excuse... But addressing it to ALL people who already have issues with thinking they do everything wrong.. . you know people with anxiety who aren't assholes are still going to take it and run with it.
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                                  • Allie Curry > Kestrel 18 hours ago
                                    Thank you so much for this. I have "friends" sharing/liking this on facebook and when I saw it I immediately felt like there was a finger pointed at me like, "YOOOUU. You're the asshole. This is why you have no friends." Even though most of these people are just acquaintances and don't actually know I have such severe anxiety. Sad to think there are others out there reading this and thinking the same.
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                                      • swatbot > Allie Curry 12 hours ago
                                        I agree. I'm immediately suspicious because the anxious people I know in my life who have adopted the language in this article have not from my perspective become healthier and kinder human beings as a result. To rephrase: Role-playing/adopting the language of some stereotypical baby boomer complaining about coddled kids these days doesn't fix things.
                                        For a person who supposedly had anxiety fixed by walks and changing jobs, she doesn't seem to get that many people with anxiety do know what is going on and feel helpless about it. That's why it's called a mental illness, not a stress headache. It doesn't mean you can act in a way that is externally consistent at all times. If the author said 'your behavior comes off as hurtful or neglectful' that's one thing, instead the author says -you- are an asshole, -you- . (edit) I'm not surprised to see some in the comments reading the article as just perpetuating stigma.
                                        I do think the article makes a valid point in there that some people can be both mentally ill and jerks at the same time, but it's buried. Instead they've found an easy target that already faces stigma and problems and have come back to verbally put the ol' boot in.
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                                        Alison 4 days ago
                                        I've struggled with anxiety my whole life. I deal with intestinal issues every day (that I believe are directly related to my anxiety). I have, as one therapist described, "obsessive irrational thoughts." I've done my best to deal with life in spite of my anxiety and regularly put myself in situations that I know will be uncomfortable because I know that I have to do that in order to get from point A to point B. And sometimes it really sucks but, like everything else, you just have to get through it.
                                        Recently I was volunteering at an event and felt so anxious that I just got up without saying anything to anyone and left. And I'm sure maybe this makes me an asshole but it was the choice to leave vs. public humiliation/inability to speak/crying in front of a group of people. So I left. And I felt bad for a little while and I obsessively wondered if this one choice was going to sever all future ties with this organization. And I worried about that for a while. And then I decided that I did what I needed to do and there's no reason to put myself in unnecessary pain over it. You really just need to pick your battles sometimes with anxiety.
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                                          • Laura Palmer a month ago
                                            i know you said you dont read comments on this artical but girl you are so one point!!!! im so done with uwu culture.
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                                                Willow a month ago
                                                I honestly thought this would be different, so I was prepared to be really frustrated. Instead you actually commented on on of the things (trends? I hate that word) that annoy me the most, and can actually be really damaging to some people with mental disorders.
                                                This is actually advice most people should follow, no matter what their mental health is.
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                                                  • Jeneva Griffin 2 months ago
                                                    Seriously great article. Thank you for writing this. My ex best friend continues to slander me on the internet because she was a total butthole to me and I couldn't be her punching bag anymore. And here's the kicker, she never actually told me she suffered from depression but continues to talk badly about me because I decided I couldn't be in the friendship. I hung in for years and then then she started lashing out at me in some of the most dispicable ways you can think of. Saying things to me that you wouldn't say to your worst enemy. And I found out later that I'm not the first person she's done this to. It truly is hard because she was such a dear friend to me. I would absolutely go back to the friendship if she would just be open about her illness and own the fact that she's a jerk when she's down. Heck, I can be a jerk too. I know that nobody is perfect. Being the person on the other side of the person who has an illness is so hard.
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                                                        MC 2 months ago
                                                        Thank you so much for this article. I live with a 23-year old step son who has been diagnosed as socially anxious. We have made room, we have coddled, we have cared, we have been compassionate. What led me to this article was searching "socially anxious or a jerk." While I have compassion for his condition (and believe me, I have my own history as we all do), he does not have the right to use his illness to be rude. Reading this helped me understand that I can have compassion for his struggles but do not deserve to be treated with disrespect and have boundaries crossed by an adult child. Because I live with him, I can see where he is actively using his SA to be a jerk. I have questioned myself for a long time and taken a lot of crap from him because I thought I had to coddle his behavior and be the "strong one." The part of the article that says, "You are a golden anxiety flower and everyone has to deal with you" is how our family operates. While I don't believe he will change, I now see that it is not healthy for me to let him use his condition to be rude.
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                                                              JP > Guest a month ago
                                                              Oh get over yourself and stop being so precious. Get into therapy and stop pretending there's nothing you can do about your 'struggles'. There's plenty of help out there, and only manipulators who want to use their 'struggles' as leverage for an easier ride through life pretend otherwise. She's not dismissive of people with anxiety. She's dismissive of people who use it as an excuse to be a shitty human being. But of course, you already know that. It's just that if you were to be honest and respond to what she's actually said, it wouldn't allow you to feel like a victim.
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                                                            • Briala 3 months ago
                                                              what does this have to do with anxiety though? It sounds like you had some other mood disorder to work through, aside from general anxiety disorder. Ive had to deal with anxiety in the past too, and know others who currently do as well. One of these people is the sweetest and most reliable person in the world.
                                                              I only spent time beating myself up over it, but i never lashed out at other people.
                                                              You are also being very condescending and self-righteous as well as projecting your own issues on other people.
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                                                                • shawna 3 months ago
                                                                  I've been on both ends of this. Just now coming out of a brief spell of not leaving my house, being on the brink of an episode every time my husband challenged me, and ignoring all obligations I had except for my job, it took my best friend telling me that she felt abandoned by me to re-evaluate myself. Now that I'm forcing myself to come out of it, I remember that it does actually take some self awareness and motivation. I know that medication doesn't make me a better friend or person, only I can make that choice.
                                                                  That being said, my understanding towards others that suffer from anxiety and depression like me only goes so far. There is a fine line between suffering from a disorder and taking advantage of the fact that you friends and family will probably love you no matter how little you bring to the relationship.
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                                                                    • Monica Lonon 4 months ago
                                                                      As someone with anxiety, I've always had a problem with being too nice and letting people step all over me. I study psychology, I want to go into that field so I can help people. I'd never cancel plans with anyone without good reason, because I don't want anyone to feel bad about themselves the way I did and sometimes still do. Sometimes I do mess up, like I forget to text one of my friends for a week or take a nap instead of texting my girlfriend like I planned to. But people with anxiety aren't always selfish when they take care of themselves, because I am loyal to friends and family, that's just how I am. It's healthy to take breaks and spend a day in with netlflix and blankets occasionally. I'm always there for my friends, and I want them to be the same in return. People with anxiety need to recharge and relax sometimes, and my friends and girlfriend have always accepted that.
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                                                                        • Jessie 4 months ago
                                                                          People with severe anxiety, The kind that "getting a dog and eating right" doesn't help (that's not anxiety disorder, by the way. that's "Gosh I'm sort of worried") already generally have a very small handful of friends, and they generally don't make plans because they know that they may have to cancel. True friends and family will understand and do "low key" activities. You wouldn't take a diabetic friend to a cotton candy fest, You wouldn't take some one stricken with cancer and going through Chemo to a salon to get their hair done. why would a DECENT friend take some one stricken with anxiety and panic attacks to like..a crowded club or some shit?
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                                                                            rosha 4 months ago
                                                                            I'm so tired of people getting all riled up about how protective "introvert culture" is. What introvert culture? Over 70 percent of the workforce in the U.S. work in open offices. And don't even think about giving an honest portrayal of yourself in a job interview if you hate small talk, recognize that "effectively multitasking" is cognitively impossible for everyone, but especially so for you, and dare to mention that you prefer a structured work flow and environment. Introvert culture does not exist IRL, god forbid it exist on the internert.
                                                                            I tried the whole ignoring my own boundaires in favor of being a good friend, employee, daughter etc, and the thing is it got in the way of me being any of those things. If I don't find the time to be alone and relax there's no way I can even be in the headspace to be an enjoyable person to hang out with. I don't think my extrovert friends are assholes because they can't entertain themselves, they're just different, and I'm not going to demand they be different in order to qualify as a non asshole.
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                                                                              • HiJanx 4 months ago
                                                                                You're right, you do have GAD: Generalized Asshole Disorder of the Grandiose type with Excessive Entitlement Features .
                                                                                It seems to me that a true friend will love you no matter how screwed up you are. Sure, this may make your social circle very small but I'd rather have friends I can count on & who accept me for who I am (😁) than friends who "don't think they can be my friend" due to my "toxicity." I understand what you are saying but what works for you doesn't work for everyone else who is diagnosed with GAD. Furthermore, & I'm sure you're aware of this, the symptoms of GAD tend to change over time. It can go into complete remission. It can go from mild symptoms to necessitating hospitalization & to moderate symptoms requiring psychotropic medications on a daily basis.
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                                                                                • Terry "Death to Equality" Xu 4 months ago
                                                                                  Your mistake is assuming one needs an excuse to be an asshole
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                                                                                      Quarkmire 4 months ago
                                                                                      Um- there's a middle ground between " Special Anxiety Snowflake Asshole" and "Most Well-Adjusted Ever." I have friends who have gone through incredibly traumatic situations and this advice would make them feel terrible; a burden and isolated. You need to find a balance in dealing with these things, which you obviously have, but literally yelling at people who are already going through incredible pain is the worst advice ever. Please be more empathetic to people who have gone through trauma and who's worse enemies are themselves.
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                                                                                      • ftyjyry 4 months ago
                                                                                        It's a better excuse than most people have, which is none.
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                                                                                            rawpower 4 months ago
                                                                                            I would never be with anyone with mental illness, and thanks to living with two people that do have anxiety/ OCD, I can easily detect it in people and friends.
                                                                                            Ain't nobody got time for that. I don't know why you're painted as innocent people, too. People with mental illness are amongst the most unstable and toxic people I know.
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                                                                                            • Nope 4 months ago
                                                                                              Chelsea,
                                                                                              You've brought up several ideas and lumped them into the word 'asshole'. The part about pulling your emotional weight in a relationship is in my opinion the most misguided part of your rant: when someone is suffering from anxiety and depression, they're not canceling plans to be a self-indulgent narcissist begging for a sympathy card, they'd much rather feel capable of being the person their friends and family knew but can't, and because of that they feel like a burden or undesirable person with whom to associate. This is why isolation is such a common symptom of mental disorders.
                                                                                              I have close friends with mental disorders who I know aren't reliable, but I'm not so dependent on their presence that I'd leave them in the dust if they don't answer my phonecalls. If that was your experience, you need to find better friends.
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                                                                                                • shawna > Nope 3 months ago
                                                                                                  I agree with Gwendolyn. As a person with anxiety, I know that managing my issues my responsibility. I also know that asking for unconditional love from someone that I don't make myself emotionally available to is actually pretty abusive.
                                                                                                  There are all of the articles, sayings, and illustrations about how to love a person with anxiety/depression, but not much material for those of us that suffer from it on how to love our friends/family that don't have it. Chelsea's article was a little harsh, but I imagine it reflects the tone of everyone who has had to hear, "I'm not feeling well tonight," "We'll catch up later," combined with unanswered calls, complaining, and excusing ourselves with our illness over and over again.
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                                                                                                  • Gwendolyn > Nope 4 months ago
                                                                                                    I see your point here, but as a person with anxiety among other things I find it really difficult to be friends with someone who keeps breaking plans with me. People with mental illness generally need consistency ourselves, so it's the least we can do to let our friends know if we're going through a rough time instead of flipping out, throwing temper tantrums, and canceling plans at the last minute.
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                                                                                                      • Nope > Gwendolyn 4 months ago
                                                                                                        I agree, we should let our friends know what's going on, my response was assuming that was the case. Chelsea's article left that part a little ambiguous, if you're not honest with your friends about what's going on, they will think you're an asshole, if you are honest, it is up to them to decide whether they'll continue being your friend but there in lies the 'burden' aspect. No one should tout mental illness as a free pass to do what they please, and anyone truly suffering would never want that to be the case. I recommend you read 'The Depressed Person' by David Foster Wallace, it's a poignant piece on this issue.
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                                                                                                        Dee 4 months ago
                                                                                                        One of the hardest things about anxiety is knowing you're a burden to those you care about at sometimes.
                                                                                                        Most truly anxious people know they suck to be around . They spend time beating themselves up because of it. Instead of knocking them for it, why not share how you were able to overcome your struggles? Give positive encouragement that you can feel better and be a better person to be around? I agree... Sometimes "tough love" helps. To get over anxiety, you often need someone to question you're behavior.
                                                                                                        I get it- anxiety doesn't make you special. It makes you weak, it brings out a horrible side of yourself. "Asshole" is a strong word for someone who is struggling to find balance and navigating a real illness.
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                                                                                                            Madeleine 4 months ago
                                                                                                            I feel this was a condescending post which could have been titled "if I got over it, so can you" and was a bit asshole like in it's delivery!
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                                                                                                              Jane 4 months ago
                                                                                                              What pisses me off is the assholes who get disability for anxiety. Or the dumbasses who become prostitutes, webcam whores, etc, because...."anxiety". Fucking parasites!
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                                                                                                              • MajorStyles 4 months ago
                                                                                                                Mental illness is caused by feminism.
                                                                                                                Throughout history, most women received their happiness from their families. However, feminism has changed these values. Most modern "womyn" now believe the following:
                                                                                                                1.) They hate men: they are the glass ceiling, wage-gap, rape culture, patriarchal oppressors.
                                                                                                                2.) They hate children: they rob them of the ability to become a dispensable item for a corporation that doesn't care about their well-being.
                                                                                                                3.) They hate society: they go through life feel perpetually victimized by a media that has photos of non-obese women on billboards.
                                                                                                                It's little wonder that so many modern women are mentally ill - nearly 30% take anti-depressants, according to recent studies.
                                                                                                                We are now witnessing the largest group of mentally-ill women in the history of the modern world. Look no further than feminism.
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