It’s Not Just You: The Pandemic Has Made Social Anxiety So Much Worse

Social distancing mimics avoidance, which ‘feeds and waters’ social anxiety

Lauren Corriher
Elemental

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Photo: gremlin/Getty Images

Early in the pandemic, I found myself sweating as I prepared for a Zoom happy hour (remember those?) with my college roommates. I’d lived with these women. Our husbands knew each other. Yet somehow my nerves still felt jangly. Then there was a distanced-and-masked walk with a friend one afternoon: I spent the drive home worrying that a joke I’d made had come out wrong. Deep down I knew everything was fine, but I couldn’t stop replaying my words, trying to remember what my friend’s facial expression had been like afterward.

It’s clear that my social anxiety, which I was previously managing effectively, has become decidedly more pronounced during the pandemic. It’s as if my socializing muscles have atrophied during the year at home, making way for anxiety to dominate.

Ellen Hendriksen, PhD, a clinical psychologist and author of How to Be Yourself: Quiet Your Inner Critic and Rise Above Social Anxiety, says I’m not alone. “By being housebound during the pandemic, we’ve been acting like we have severe social anxiety,” she says. “It’s for a good reason, of course, but it mimics avoidance, which feeds and waters social anxiety.”

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