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Often, we get anxiety for no reason, as we're stronger and more capable than we believe ourselves to be. Our capacity to cope successfully with life's challenges far
outstrips our capacity to feel nervousness. Yet in the weeks, days, and hours
leading up to an event that we believe will test our limits, we can become
nervous. While we may have previously regarded ourselves as equal to the
trials that lie ahead, we reach a point at which they near and our anxiety
begins to mount. We then become increasingly worked up, until the moment of
truth arrives and we discover that our worry was all for nothing. We are
almost always stronger and more capable than we believe ourselves to be. But
anxiety is not rational in nature, which means that in most cases we cannot
work through it using logic as our only tool. Reason can help us recognize
the relative futility of unwarranted worry but, more often than not, we will
find more comfort in patterns of thought and activity that redirect our
attention to practical or engaging matters. |
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