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INSECURITY
Insecurity
happens to all of us. Starting a new job, moving to a different
town, taking examinations, speaking in front of a group of people ,
and a host of other life situations, are bound to bring forth
feelings of unsure ness about ourselves.
Insecurity happens to all of us. Starting a new job, moving to a
different town, taking examinations, speaking in front of a group of
people , and a host of other life situations, are bound to bring
forth feelings of unsure ness about ourselves. Our worries may be
exaggerated, but usually we can summon up the courage to handle the
situation, so long as there are other areas in our life which we
feel secure.
However, there are some people who are so wracked with anxiety that
they are unable to stand back and see things in perspective. Their
worries are not simply responses to isolated evens: they are far
more deep-rooted and have become almost a permanent state of mind.
They feel inadequate not just in certain situations, but in coping
with life in general. Lurching from one fear to another, they have
lost contact with reality and are unable to build up confidence
through experience as a more balanced person can.
Insecurity-regardless of whether it is a transitory phenomenon or
more deep rooted-can be controlled, provided the person can come to
terms with the situations which give rise to it and to the feeling
itself.
CAUSES
Generally,
our feelings of insecurity arise from childhood experiences.
Individual personality probably plays a large part as well. But why
one person should be basically more secure than another is not fully
understood.
From very early on in a person’s life, attitudes and behaviour
patterns are established and, if nothing is done to change them,
they will carry on into adulthood.
Security, or insecurity, is first established by the way parents
treat a baby, and since their treatment of the child is the child’s
only guide to his or her own image, that is the self-image which
will be established.
Thus, if parents are distant, unaffectionate, unencouraging and
unresponsive to demands for attention, the child will feel unwanted,
and think that he or she is not worth caring about. Because no warm
and close relationship is formed a child will be unable to see
him-or herself as loveable and, having had no experience of loving,
will either not be capable of giving love or will lack the
confidence to offer love. All their future relationships may well be
jeopardised by this lack of emotional security.
Of equal importance to providing a secure emotional base in the need
to foster enough confidence in the child to handle new situations.
Such independence cannot be gained if parents constantly shield the
child from experience, or arouse fears about carrying out tasks, or
are overly critical, which will only serve to dampen initiative in
the child, and create an even greater dependence on the parents.
Such a child will thus grow up having a timorous nature, afraid to
do things alone, and uncertain about his or her own abilities to do
anything without help. Additionally, there will be the fear of being
criticised-or rebuffed-and because the child hasn’t the confidence
to handle this, he or she will opt out rather than risk failure and
disappointment.
Without this happy balance between emotional security and
independence, a child will grow up feeling anxious, made to feel
like an outsider, and an unlovable one at that. He or she will be
fearful of new situations, confused about talents and capabilities,
particularly if the parents are over-critical and have, at the same
time, overly high expectations, the child will develop into an
insecure teenager and then into an insecure adult.
If the insecurities are few and defined, it may well be that other
aspects of personality or character will be able to provide some
compensation. And although the person may remain insecure in those
area, the general trend of his or her life will be largely
unaffected.
However, it is only when the person’s insecurity begins to
dominate his or her existence, and becomes the immediate response to
relationships, opportunities, changes in circumstances and so on,
that it will limit a full life and be a breeding ground for
neuroses.
INSECURITY
OF CHILDREN
Making
a small child feel secure requires a great deal of effort on the
part of the parents. However, such selfishness should not be at the
complete expense of the parent’s own lives.
Babies and small children recognise ‘caring’ from the age of
three months. Their feelings of security will be increased by the
amount they are smiled at and cuddled, played with and talked to. In
the first year they may become panicky if you leave them for more
than a moment; at this point you should keep them with you as much
as needed, but you have to get them sued to being with other people.
When the small child is actually learning - to walk and talk - be
patient, supportive and very encouraging.
Children are prone to a host of fears - being alone in a room at
bedtime, seeing strange animals at a zoo, starting school. Never
laugh at their fears; instead try to put the situation in
perspective, explain it in simple language, and support the child
without being overprotective. He or she will soon gain confidence so
long as he knows you are there as a safe base.
As children grow older, they will confront an increasing number of
new life situations and many of them may arouse insecure feelings.
You must stress that these feelings are totally natural, and that
the child or adolescent is not alone in having them. One of the most
worrying things for young people is the fear of failure, of
disappointing themselves and their parents, or perhaps their friends
and teachers. The emphasis here should always be on ‘doing your
best’, and as long as they try, their best is enough. At the same
time, it is important to ensure that children know that not everyone
excels at everything, and that other people’s skillfulness in a
certain area may be balanced by a lack in other areas. In this way,
some measure of self-esteem can be established, as well as
confidence. Children and adolescents need to have a sense of
identity, a feeling of worth, which will enable them to accept and
use positively all sides of their personality to cope with many
kinds of life situations.
INSECURITY
IN ADULTS
It
is rare that people reach adulthood overflowing with confidence.
Certainly they will have fair idea of their strengths and
weaknesses, although it must be said that they have probably
exaggerated those weaknesses and, in doing so, have simply
reinforced their insecurity.
Because of this, when new situations present themselves, a person’s
first response is fear which, in the grossly insecure, can often be
carried to paranoid lengths. What the insecure person should realise
is that older people feel similarly, and that such insecurity is not
abnormal. If necessary, insecure people should think about all their
achievements: everyone is good at something, and it is merely a
question of findings something which they are good at doing it. They
should try to think positively and confidently about themselves,
rather than see themselves in negative terms: from this true
confidence will follow. |