Social anxiety

Elliott, Robert and Shahar, Ben; Greenberg, Leslie S. and Goldman, Rhonda, eds. (2016) Social anxiety. In: Clinical Handbook of Emotion-Focused Therapy. American Psychological Association, Washington. (In Press)

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Abstract

In this chapter, we lay out our approach to applying Emotion-Focused Therapy to clients presenting with social anxiety (EFT-SA), a debilitating fear of other people. We present a theoretical model of the origins of society anxiety, based in experiences of social degradation, which result in primary emotional processes organized around a core sense of shame-ridden defective self. These give rise to secondary reactive anxiety that others will see the person’s defectiveness, organized around a coach/critic/ guarding aspect of self that, in the process of trying to keep the person safe from exposure, inadvertently generates the emotional dysregulation characteristic of SA. Following this we present a model and case example for working with SA via an emotional deepening process that begins with accessing secondary reactive anxiety of others in particular situations, then works backwards to accessing and activating primary maladaptive shame so that this emotion scheme can be restructured within a secure, accepting therapy relationship. We conclude with a brief summary of evidence for EFT-SA and some final thoughts about how working with this client population has changed our EFT practice.