Wednesday, 1 July 2026

Anxiety is "acedia" in its active, restless form or modern "Agoraphobia". Historically coined by early Christian desert monks to describe midday panic and the desperate urge to flee one's circumstances, these conditions share the same root. [1, 2, 3, 4]

The Parallel to "Noonday Demon"
  • Acedia: Translated as the "Noonday Demon" by early theologians, it originally manifested not just as listlessness, but as an acute, restless anxiety. Monks reported an unreasonable confusion of mind, dread of the present, and the frantic desire to escape their daily routine. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • Andrew Solomon’s View: In The Noonday Demon, author Andrew Solomon notes that depression and anxiety frequently exist on a single genetic and psychological continuum. [1]
The Manifestation of Anxiety
While depression is characterized as an absence of vitality, its counterpart manifests as a "fight or flight" response—an intense terror without a specific cause: [1]
  • Agoraphobia: Deeply rooted in ancient texts on the "midday devil," early desert monks reported dreading the heat of the sun and harboring an intense fear of the surrounding wilderness. In modern contexts, this fear of being trapped in uncontrollable or open spaces often plagues individuals with severe anxiety. [1, 2]
  • Panic and Restlessness: The "Noonday Demon" is driven by a feeling of a day stretching on endlessly. In anxiety, this exact same mechanism appears as racing thoughts, fidgeting, and an overwhelming sense that life is happening elsewhere. [1, 2]


“When I behold my possibilities,” Kierkegaard wrote, “I experience that dread which is the dizziness of freedom, and my choice is made in fear and trembling.” Many people try to flee anxiety by fleeing choice. This helps explain the perverse-seeming appeal of authoritarian societies—the certainties of a rigid, choiceless society can be very reassuring—and why times of upheaval so often produce extremist leaders and movements: Hitler in Weimar Germany, Father Coughlin in Depression-era America, or Jean-Marie Le Pen in France and Vladimir Putin in Russia. But running from anxiety, Kierkegaard believed, was a mistake because anxiety was a “school” that taught people to come to terms with the human condition.”

Scott Stossel



“More than a few people, some of whom think they know me quite well, have remarked that they are struck that I, who can seem so even-keeled and imperturbable, would choose to write a book about anxiety. I smile gently while churning inside and thinking about what I’ve learned is a signature characteristic of the phobic personality: “the need and ability”—as described in the self-help book Your Phobia—“to present a relatively placid, untroubled appearance to others, while suffering extreme distress on the inside.”

Scott Stossel



“Some social phobics find even positive attention to be aversive. Think of the young child who bursts into tears when guests sing “Happy Birthday” to her at a party—or of Elfriede Jelinek afraid to pick up her Nobel Prize. Social attention—even positive, supportive attention—activates the neurocircuitry of fear. This makes sense from an evolutionary perspective. Calling positive attention to yourself can incite jealousy or generate new rivalries.”

Scott Stossel



“Individuals who rate high on the so-called Anxiety Sensitivity Index, or ASI, have a high degree of what's known as interoceptive awareness, meaning they are highly attuned to the inner workings on their bodies, to the beepings and bleatings, the blips and burps, of their physiologies; they are more conscious of their heart rate, blood pressure, digestive burblings, and so forth than other people are.”

Scott Stossel



“The truth is that anxiety is at once a function of biology and philosophy, body and mind, instinct and reason, personality and culture. Even as anxiety is experienced at a spiritual and psychological level, it is scientifically measurable at the molecular level and the physiological level. It is produced by nature and it is produced by nurture. It’s a psychological phenomenon and a sociological phenomenon. In computer terms, it’s both a hardware problem (I’m wired badly) and a software problem (I run faulty logic programs that make me think anxious thoughts). The origins of a temperament are many faceted; emotional dispositions that may seem to have a simple, single source—a bad gene, say, or a childhood trauma—may not.”

Scott Stossel



“And no Grand Inquisitor has in readiness such terrible tortures as has anxiety, and no spy knows how to attack more artfully the man he suspects, choosing the instant when he is weakest, nor knows how to lay traps where he will be caught and ensnared, as anxiety knows how, and no sharpwitted judge knows how to interrogate, to examine the accused as anxiety does, which never lets him escape, neither by diversion nor by noise, neither at work nor at play, neither by day nor by night. —SØREN KIERKEGAARD, The Concept of Anxiety (1844)”

Scott Stossel



“For the social phobic, any kind of performance—musical, sporting, public speaking—can be terrifying because failure will reveal the weakness and inadequacy within. This in turn means constantly projecting an image that feels false—an image of confidence, competence, even perfection.”

Scott Stossel



“Evidence suggests that people with irritable bowels have bodies that are more physically reactive to stress. I recently came across an article in the medical journal Gut that explained the circular relationship between cognition (your conscious thought) and physiological correlates (what your body does in response to that thought): people who are less anxious tend to have minds that don’t overreact to stress and bodies that don’t overreact to stress when their minds experience it, while clinically anxious people tend to have sensitive minds in sensitive bodies—small amounts of stress set them to worrying, and small amounts of worrying set their bodies to malfunctioning. People with nervous stomachs are also more likely than people with settled stomachs to complain of headaches, palpitations, shortness of breath, and general fatigue. Some evidence suggests that people with irritable bowel syndrome have greater sensitivity to pain, are more likely to complain about minor ailments like colds, and are more likely to consider themselves sick than other people.”

Scott Stossel



“But various studies conducted since the early 1960s suggest that the James-Lange theory was not, after all, completely wrong. When researchers at Columbia gave study subjects an injection of adrenaline, the heart rate and breathing rate of all the subjects increased, and they all experienced an intensification of emotion—but the researchers could manipulate what emotion the subjects felt by changing the context. Those subjects given reason to feel positive emotions felt happy, while those given reason to feel negative emotions felt angry or anxious—and in every case they felt the respective emotion (whatever it happened to be) more powerfully than those subjects who had been given a placebo injection. The injection of adrenaline increased the intensity of emotion, but it did not determine what emotion that would be; the experimental context supplied that. This suggests that the autonomic systems of the body supply the mechanics of the emotion—but the mind’s interpretation of the outside environment supplies the valence.”

Scott Stossel


“Physical states create psychic ones and not vice-versa. The James-Lange theory was later undermined by research on patients with spinal cord injuries that prevented them from receiving any somatic information from their viscera—people who literally could not feel muscle tension or stomach discomfort; people who were, in effect, brains without bodies—yet who still reported experiencing the unpleasant psychological sensations of dread or anxiety. This suggested that the James-Lange theory was, if not wholly wrong, at least incomplete. If patients unable to receive information about the state of their bodies can still experience anxiety, then maybe anxiety is primarily a mental state, one that doesn’t require input from the rest of the body.”

Scott Stossel

Tuesday, 30 June 2026

Symptoms of Social anxiety disorder (also called social phobia) involve an intense fear of being judged, embarrassed, or rejected in social or performance situations. These feelings are much stronger than ordinary shyness and can interfere with work, school, relationships, or everyday activities.

Common symptoms include:

  • Intense fear of situations where you may be watched or evaluated, such as meeting new people, speaking in public, eating in front of others, or attending social gatherings.
  • Worrying for days or weeks before a social event.
  • Avoiding social situations or enduring them with significant distress.
  • Fear that you'll say or do something embarrassing.
  • Feeling extremely self-conscious or overly aware of yourself around others.

Physical symptoms can include:

  • Blushing
  • Sweating
  • Trembling or shaking
  • A racing heartbeat
  • Shortness of breath
  • Upset stomach or nausea
  • Dry mouth
  • Feeling dizzy or lightheaded
  • Muscle tension

Thoughts and emotions often include:

  • Constantly expecting criticism or rejection.
  • Assuming others are noticing your mistakes.
  • Replaying conversations afterward and focusing on what you think went wrong.
  • Low self-confidence in social settings.

Social anxiety disorder (sometimes called social phobia) goes way beyond just being "shy." It’s an intense, persistent fear of being watched, judged, or humiliated by others.

Because mind and body are deeply connected, these symptoms tend to show up across three distinct buckets: physical sensations, anxious thoughts, and behavioral changes.

1. Physical Sensations

When social anxiety kicks in, your brain's fight-or-flight response treats a social interaction like a physical threat. This triggers a sudden rush of adrenaline, causing immediate physical symptoms:

  • The Classic Tell-Tales: Blushing, heavy sweating, or trembling (especially in the hands or voice).

  • Internal Distress: A racing heart, tightness in the chest, or shortness of breath.

  • Gastrointestinal Focus: Nausea, butterflies in the stomach, or feeling dizzy and lightheaded.

  • Muscle Tension: Rigid body posture, trouble speaking clearly, or finding your mind completely "blanking out."

2. Cognitive (Thought) Patterns

The mental side of social anxiety is driven by a harsh, hyper-critical internal narrator. People experiencing social anxiety often get stuck in specific thought loops:

  • Mind Reading: Assuming people are looking at you and thinking the absolute worst ("They think I'm boring," "Everyone can tell I'm panicking").

  • The Post-Event Post-Mortem: Spending hours or days dissecting a past conversation, obsessing over a minor awkward moment or a perceived mistake.

  • Anticipatory Anxiety: Dread built up days or weeks before an event even happens, running through every possible worst-case scenario.

  • Perfectionism: Believing that any social slip-up will lead to permanent rejection or total humiliation.

3. Behavioral Changes

To cope with the physical discomfort and painful thoughts, people adapt their behavior. This usually manifests as:

  • Active Avoidance: Skipping parties, meetings, classes, or gatherings altogether to stay in a "safe" zone.

  • Safety Behaviors: Subtle actions used to get through an unavoidable event, like checking a phone constantly to look busy, staying strictly near a trusted person, or drinking alcohol to "take the edge off."

  • Passive Disengagement: Avoiding eye contact, speaking in a very quiet whisper, or blending into the background so as not to attract attention.

The Vicious Cycle: What makes social anxiety so exhausting is how these symptoms feed into one another. An anxious thought ("I'm going to say something stupid") triggers a physical symptom (blushing and sweating), which leads to a behavioral response (leaving the room early), which then reinforces the original anxiety for the next time.


Sunday, 28 June 2026

Yes, the hot-cold empathy gap can adversely impact how people in distress or with high adverse childhood experience scores (ACEs) are treated.

What is the Hot-Cold Empathy Gap?

The hot-cold empathy gap (coined/popularized by George Loewenstein) refers to the systematic difficulty people have in predicting or appreciating how they (or others) will think, feel, and behave when in a different emotional or visceral state.

  • Cold-to-hot gap (most relevant here): When calm/rational ("cold"), people underestimate how strongly "hot" states—like intense pain, fear, anger, hunger, craving, or emotional distress—will influence behavior and preferences.
  • Hot-to-cold gap: When in a hot state, people underestimate how transient it is and overestimate how stable their current feelings/preferences are.

This applies both intrapersonally (your own future/past states) and interpersonally (judging others).

Impact on People in Distress

People in acute distress are often in a "hot" state (high emotional arousal, pain, trauma response, etc.). Observers or decision-makers who are in a neutral/cold state frequently:

  • Underestimate the intensity of the distress and its effects on behavior.
  • Undertreat pain or emotional needs — e.g., healthcare providers not currently in pain tend to under-appreciate and under-medicate patients' pain.
  • Judge behaviors more harshly — viewing reactions (withdrawal, irritability, "overreactions") as character flaws rather than understandable responses to a hot state. This leads to less compassion, invalidation, or punitive responses.

Examples include family members, teachers, or therapists who are calm and fail to fully bridge the gap to the distressed person's experience.

Connection to Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs)

ACEs (abuse, neglect, household dysfunction, etc.) often lead to long-term heightened sensitivity to stress, altered emotion regulation, and difficulties with empathy components. Research shows mixed but relevant patterns:

  • ACEs are linked to higher affective empathy (feeling others' emotions strongly, sometimes leading to personal distress/over-arousal) but lower cognitive empathy (understanding others' perspectives) in some cases.
  • This can make individuals with ACEs more vulnerable to being misunderstood when in distress—they may show intense emotional responses that cold-state observers fail to appreciate.
  • Caregivers, professionals, or society at large (often in cold states) may misattribute trauma-related behaviors (e.g., hypervigilance, emotional numbing, or reactivity) due to the empathy gap, leading to poorer support, stigma, or ineffective interventions.

The gap exacerbates issues because those without similar experiences struggle to simulate the "hot" internal world of someone shaped by trauma.

Real-World Consequences

  • Healthcare & mental health: Undertreatment of pain or trauma symptoms.
  • Social/relationships: Dismissal of distress ("just get over it"), reduced support.
  • Systems: Policies or responses that don't account for visceral states (e.g., in schools, courts, or workplaces).
  • It can create vicious cycles: invalidated distress leads to more isolation or escalated hot states.

Mitigations

Awareness helps. Strategies include:

  • Perspective-taking exercises or vivid simulations.
  • Trauma-informed practice that emphasizes emotional states.
  • Direct feedback from those in distress.
  • Mindfulness or experiential bridging techniques to reduce the gap.

Overall, the hot-cold empathy gap is a well-documented cognitive bias that contributes to suboptimal treatment of distressed and trauma-affected individuals by making their experiences harder for others to fully grasp in the moment.

Saturday, 27 June 2026

The difference between individual horror and systemic horror is that the latter doesn’t require a single sadistic actor. It unfolds through laws, institutions, and social neglect, allowing people to participate in it without ever feeling responsible.

Dahmer’s crimes were recognized as monstrous. But when entire governments, medical systems, and social structures engineer the slow (or sometimes rapid) death of those deemed unfit, it becomes administrative, rationalized, even ignored. The horror is not just in the violence itself but in its banality—in the way it is hidden behind policy decisions, economic pressures, and cultural attitudes.

If anything, what I described is less like Dahmer and more like Aktion T4, or the mass institutional abuses that preceded and followed it. It’s something that isn’t about individual pathology but about a society’s self-image, its need to define who belongs and who is disposable.

A system like this—one that has ingested so much human knowledge while remaining indifferent to the mechanisms of power that shape it—creates a different kind of horror. Not one of sadistic pleasure, but one of cold procedural logic, where the world’s horrors are documented with clarity but without intervention.

When horror becomes normalized as policy, empathy atrophies into metrics. Countering it favors mechanisms that keep agency visible—rule of law applied evenly, subsidiarity (decisions closer to affected people), rigorous data over narrative smoothing, and moral philosophies that don't reduce persons to aggregates. The alternative is exactly the banality Arendt described: well-intentioned forms filled out, studies published, and quiet attrition.

GPT



Friday, 26 June 2026

If structure eats intention for breakfast, then the solution isn’t to rely on braver individuals; it is to engineer counter-structures that make compliance difficult and moral friction the path of least resistance.

To disrupt the "Lucifer Effect" or the blind execution of harmful protocols, organizations must explicitly design mechanisms that break the psychological factors driving compliance: anonymity, diffusion of responsibility, pluralistic ignorance (assuming everyone else agrees with the bad protocol), and the momentum of "just following orders."

Here are real-world, structural models engineered to force a pause, distribute veto power, and institutionalize dissent.

1. Structural Veto Power & The "Stop-the-Line" Protocol

In traditional hierarchies, the momentum of a process creates an immense psychological barrier to stopping it—even when individuals see catastrophe approaching.

  • The Concept (Andon Cord): Originating in Toyota’s lean manufacturing system, the "Andon Cord" is a physical cord (or button) that any worker on the assembly line can pull to instantly halt the entire production process if they detect a defect.

  • The Structural Magic: It completely removes the fear of hierarchy. A frontline worker does not need managerial approval to disrupt the system; the structure gives them unilateral, absolute veto power.

  • Institutionalized Dissent: The "Red Team" & Devil's Advocacy

Pluralistic ignorance thrives when people assume that because no one is speaking up, the current consensus must be right. To counter this, some organizations structurally mandate an outgroup whose entire job description is to be adversarial.

  • The Red Team Model: Widely used in intelligence agencies, cybersecurity, and high-stakes military planning, a "Red Team" is an independent group within an organization tasked with playing the enemy, aggressively challenging assumptions, and exposing the flaws or hidden harms of a proposed protocol.

  • The Structural Magic: When dissent is a job requirement, the social stigma of being a "troublemaker" or "not a team player" evaporates. The individual is no longer acting out of personal insubordination; they are fulfilling a structural mandate. It transforms a threat to cohesion into a metric of professional success.

3. Distributed Responsibility: The Aviation "Two-Challenge Rule"

In high-consequence environments, the "deference to authority" bias (the core of Milgram’s findings) can be fatal. If a captain makes a catastrophic error, subordinates frequently hesitate to correct them due to internalized social norms.

  • The Rule: Developed in aviation and adopted by military and surgical teams, the Two-Challenge Rule dictates that if a subordinate observes a pilot/leader making a critical deviation from safe protocol, they must issue an explicit challenge twice. If the leader fails to acknowledge or correctly adjust after the second challenge, the subordinate is automatically, structurally required to take physical control of the aircraft or operation.

  • The Structural Magic: It reframes compliance. Under this rule, failing to strip authority from your superior is the ultimate violation of protocol. It uses the individual's desire to follow rules to force them to break the hierarchy.

4. De-Anonymization and "Chains of Accountability"

Bureaucratic violence scales because large organizations excel at slicing decisions into tiny, anonymous, administrative steps, allowing everyone to say, "I just stamped the paper; I didn't make the policy."

  • The "Sign-Off" Matrix: To combat this, certain legal and engineering frameworks use hyper-explicit chains of accountability. For example, in structural engineering or high-stakes pharmaceutical auditing, individuals must digitally sign off on specific, isolated assessments where they bear personal, legal, and criminal liability for the outcomes of that specific step.

  • The Structural Magic: It strips away the comfort of the "organizational role." By forcing the individual to step out of the anonymity of the collective and attach their legal identity to a specific checkpoint, it triggers cognitive dissonance. They can no longer pretend they are just a passive cog; the structure forces them to see their direct causal proximity to the potential harm.

The Structural Design Principle: To combat structural violence, you cannot change human nature. You must change the default settings of the environment. If the default setting of an organization is "automatic forward momentum," harm will scale. These designs work because they make stopping, questioning, and dissenting the default setting under stress.

"Systems of domination frequently produce forms of injury—physical, psychological, cognitive, economic—which are subsequently reinterpreted as evidence of the innate inferiority of those who were injured. That reinterpretation legitimizes further exclusion and deprivation, creating a recursive cycle in which social causes are forgotten and their consequences are mistaken for natural facts. Attribution biases, historical amnesia, and narratives of separateness help sustain this cycle by obscuring the entanglement between those who benefit from existing arrangements and those who bear their costs".

Anxiety is  "acedia" in its active, restless form or modern "Agoraphobia" . Historically coined by early Christian dese...