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    1. Brain scans identify the neural network that traps anxious people in cycles of self-blame

      New research published in Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry suggests that people with higher levels of everyday anxiety tend to experience more intense self-blaming emotions, along with specific changes in how their brain networks communicate. The findings provide evidence that this heightened self-blame is accompanied by unhelpful behaviors like hiding or self-attacking. These patterns could help explain the social difficulties often faced by anxious individuals in their daily lives.

      The researchers conducted this study to better understand how self-blaming emotions operate in people who experience anxiety, even if they do not have a formal psychiatric diagnosis. Emotions like guilt and shame can be adaptive when they prompt someone to make amends for a mistake. They tend to become harmful when they lead to social withdrawal and constant self-criticism.

      https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0278584626000758

    2. So much behavioral neuroscience is just doing brain scans and saying “depressed people feel more sad emotions than others”

      I went into the wrong field, science could be as easy as getting your hands on some volunteers and an fmri or whatever.

    3. negative self talk and schizophrenia are very correllated. i wouldnt be surprised if schizophrenia gets defined as a broad spectrum disorder of the internal monologue.

    4. hahayeahimfinehaha on

      I wonder which direction it goes. Does anxiety cause you to have more self-blsming thoughts, or does having a lot of self-blaming thoughts cause anxiety? Maybe it’s a self-reinforcing loop.

      It also makes me think … there are some people I know who feel negative emotions easily but they externalize those feelings as anger outwards. Rather than self blaming, they blame others. I wonder if anxiety is just the reverse of that, where we have those same negative feelings but internalize them instead.

    5. ScrapMetalX on

      Rsd is very common with intense anxiety. Intense anxiety is very common in adhd. Adhd has been genetically getting worse over time. A part of me thinks it’s intentionally being bred, another part of me thinks this could be natures way of ending monetary consumerism over time. Ahhh, deep thoughts…

    6. TruthInAnecdotes on

      See it’s hard to believe in yourself if the doubts are too well ingrained.

      Gotta get rid of all that first to lose the anxiety.

    7. monkey_trumpets on

      This is especially bad for me during my period. I get stuck in these traps of self-doubt, negative thinking, suicidal thoughts, heightened emotions and reactivity. It honestly kinda sucks. The rest of the month I’m just really jumpy and have PTSD related issues but the worst of it is always around my period.

    8. I was abused at home and bullied at school all throughout my childhood. I always thought I was just an anxious person who was hard on themselves because of anxiety. Turns out I have complex PTSD from all the abuse, so it wasn’t just anxiety that contributed to the self blame

    9. Ive been diagnosed with pretty severe anxiety and depression (70% VA Rating for those curious) and the self-blaming and hiding are very present in my head. My therapist finally framed it in a way that helped when she asked if I would be as hard on my daughter as I am on myself and it really threw me for a loop. Still working on not running away from everything, though…

    10. „Unhelpful behaviors“ is a bit harsh though. They might not be helpful to get „better“ longterm but they often can avoid a direct confrontation which is a (temporary) help in the moment of anxiety.

    11. Hill_Orc_Warrior on

      sounds like we need more anxiety in the world then! The worst sort of people are the ones who have never known shame.

    12. Weworkedharder on

      I didn’t realize until like, 5 years ago that there are people with no anxiety or depression, and don’t have an active pessimistic, cruel deep voice of shame along with it.
      What do you mean you’ve never been su*c*dal???
      I’ve been fighting the fight my entire life.

    13. I feel seen.

      My anxiety and self medicating with alcohol was a vicious cycle. Then I broke it.

      Anxiety is less than it was and my self talk is not nearly as harmful as it was.

    14. I always thought of anxiety as an autoimmune response of the mind. Just like how the body can overcompensate and kill you while trying to heal you, the same thing happens with a mind trying to keep you safe. That’s why things that aren’t dangerous can feel very dangerous at times. It’s because of this overcompensation.

      My personal take anyway.

    15. Who needs self attacking when this headline is attacking me enough as it is

    16. > Also, the behavioral task was translated into Spanish, and the Spanish word for guilt can also mean self-blame, which limits the ability to separate those two specific concepts lexically.

      I’m confused. I’m bilingual, primarily English, and I’m not sure I understand what they’re getting at. The Spanish word is Culpa, which can be conjugated for Culpable, so I’m confused what they’re getting at. If it’s a potential flaw in the study, why weren’t they excluded or separated?

    17. MetalRobotBerry on

      I have Salt Wasting Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia. My adrenal glands don’t function normally and I can’t produce cortisol so i’m in a constant state of fight or flight. I’m on a lot of anxiety meds but they don’t really work. The self blaming, verbal abuse thing is very real. I’ve worked very hard to be less harsh to myself. I was diagnosed at birth, I’m 33 now and I’m exhausted.

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