Definitely the most interesting chapter so far. It talks about locus of
control, how you can have an internal locus of control or an external
locus of control.
People with an internal locus of control
basically believe they have more control over their lives, the ability
to influence events, a positive attitude. They think they have the
skills to handle whatever comes. In the face of circumstances that can't
be controlled (such as a loved one dying), they believe they are able
to deal with the challenge or trauma and are more resilient as a result.
People
with an external locus of control are the opposite. They are more
negative and believe that what happens in their life depends on external
factors (fate, luck, gods, or other "powerful"/authority figures
controlling what happens to them) instead of what they themselves do.
They tend to be more submissive and helpless. When something beyond
their control happens, they don't believe they can handle it.
The
author claims all people with emetophobia have an external locus of
control. We also have a high desire for control, and when you combine
the two, you end up with a ton of anxiety (because you are always
feeling powerless and ill-equipped to deal with anything) and constant
attempts to control everything you can, even the most insignificant
things.
Which of course describes me perfectly. The quiz earlier
in the book was to determine if you had an internal or external locus of
control, and when I went back and reviewed my answers, I scored a 20
which apparently is an extreme external locus of control.
The
main way I try to stay in control is by avoiding anything that I think
might put me at risk - going on long trips or public transportation,
taking medication, drinking alcohol, eating foods that seem risky, etc. -
but there are other more active controlling behaviors too that I don't
think about as much. I wash my hands excessively. I ask people questions
constantly - ask them to reassure me about things I'm worried about,
confirm I'm remembering facts correctly, make my decisions for me (from
the insignificant to the huge and life-changing). I have certain numbers
I feel are lucky or unlucky. I frequently use the website random.org to
make my decisions for me.
In fact, this reminds me of a
conversation I had the other day where I was saying that I would rather
use a computer to generate an answer than flip a coin. Flipping a coin
doesn't feel random enough to me, because I am holding/tossing the coin
and thus it feels like I could somehow influence the outcome. And I want
NO responsibility for the outcome, because I feel like I would make the
wrong decision, whether consciously or subconsciously. (Of course I am
still pushing the button to generate the computer's answer, and if I
pushed the button a second earlier or later, I would get a different
answer. Thinking about this drives me crazy.)
One of the
exercises in the chapter was to go back to your quiz answers and
identify your external beliefs, then choose 5 that seem the easiest to
change, and work on changing them. For example, one of mine is that the
number 23 is unlucky, and I could work on telling myself that's not true
and making sure I don't avoid that number.
But as much as I
agree with this concept and the idea of changing external beliefs and
working on thinking in a more 'internal locus of control' way, I felt
like some of the "external beliefs" from the quiz shouldn't be changed.
So I was a little conflicted at this section. For example, one of the
external beliefs was "I believe that you cannot make someone fall in
love with you - if it is right it will happen." Do I really want to
change that belief? What's the alternative - believing that you can
convince people to fall in love with you? I suppose that may be true to
an extent, but besides it being weird and manipulative, I don't see the
point.
Still, in general it's good advice. Try to think of ways
you tell yourself you don't or can't control something. Figure out what
factors you think are controlling your life ("this day is ruined because
of the rain" or "I can't change because my parents made me this way")
and reframe your thoughts to put yourself in control again.
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