Yes. In My Age of Anxiety and related interviews, Scott Stossel is unusually candid about the breadth of his anxiety. Some of these are clinically recognized phobias; others are persistent anxiety themes or obsessive worries rather than formal phobias.
Specific phobias he has explicitly described
- Claustrophobia — fear of enclosed spaces.
- Acrophobia — fear of heights.
- Asthenophobia — fear of fainting.
- Agoraphobic fears — especially being trapped or far from home where escape would be difficult.
- Bacillophobia (germ phobia) — fear of germs and contamination.
- Turophobia — fear of cheese (one of his most unusual and widely discussed phobias).
- Social anxiety / public speaking anxiety — fear of speaking before groups.
- Aerophobia — fear of flying.
- Emetophobia — fear of vomiting.
- Aeronausiphobia — fear of vomiting while flying, which combines two of his strongest fears.
Lifelong anxiety themes
He also describes chronic anxieties that don't fit neatly into a single phobia:
- Separation anxiety beginning in early childhood.
- Persistent worry that his parents had died or abandoned him.
- Health anxiety (about his own health).
- Anxiety about family members' health.
- Financial worries.
- Work and performance anxiety.
- Fear of aging.
- Fear of death.
- Generalized worry about everyday problems ("everything and nothing," as he puts it).
Physical manifestations
Stossel emphasizes that his anxiety is intensely physical as well as psychological. He reports episodes of:
- severe nausea
- shaking
- profuse sweating
- panic attacks
- shortness of breath
- difficulty swallowing
- difficulty walking
- dizziness and vertigo
He notes that these symptoms can themselves become the focus of obsessive fear, creating a self-reinforcing cycle.
Treatments he says he has tried
Over several decades, he reports trying:
- psychotherapy
- cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)
- rational emotive therapy (RET)
- acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT)
- exposure therapies
- EMDR
- hypnosis
- meditation
- yoga
- acupuncture
- massage
- Stoic philosophy
- prayer
- multiple medications
His conclusion is not that any one treatment is a universal cure, but that anxiety is a complex interaction of genetics, temperament, biology, psychology, and environment, often requiring a combination of approaches.
One of the striking aspects of Stossel's memoir is that despite experiencing this extensive constellation of fears from early childhood, he maintained a successful career as a magazine editor, writer, husband, and father. His book is as much an exploration of how someone can function alongside severe anxiety as it is a catalog of the anxieties themselves.