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Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety by Daniel B. Smith
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“Freedom is anxiety's petri dish. If routine blunts anxiety, freedom incubates it. Freedom says, "Even if you don't want to make choices, you have to, and you can never be sure you have chosen correctly." Freedom says, "Even not to choose is to choose." Freedom says, "So long as you are aware of your freedom, you are going to experience the discomfort that freedom brings." Freedom says, "You're on your own. Deal with it.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“Guilt at least has a purpose; it tells us we’ve violated some ethical code. Ditto for remorse. Those feelings are educational; they manufacture wisdom. But regret—regret is useless.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“This is why therapists go to such lengths to urge their anxious patients away from intellectualization: The first step toward peace is disarmament.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“The bargain was this: Admit the anxiety as an essential part of yourself and in exchange that anxiety will be converted into energy, unstable but manageable. Stop with the self-flagellating and become yourself, with scars and tics.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“First, contrary to popular belief, Buddhists can actually be very anxious people. That’s often why they become Buddhists in the first place. Buddhism was made for the anxious like Christianity was made for the downtrodden or AA for the addicted. Its entire purpose is to foster equanimity, to tame excesses of thought and emotion. The Buddhists have a great term for these excesses. They refer to them as the condition of “monkey mind.” A person in the throes of monkey mind suffers from a consciousness whose constituent parts will not stop bouncing from skull-side to skull-side, which keep flipping and jumping and flinging feces at the walls and swinging from loose neurons like howlers from vines. Buddhist practices are designed explicitly to collar these monkeys of the mind and bring them down to earth—to pacify them. Is it any wonder that Buddhism has had such tremendous success in the bastions of American nervousness, on the West Coast and in the New York metro area?”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“The hard work, you discover over the years, is in learning to discern between correct and incorrect anxiety, between the anxiety that’s trying to warn you about a real danger and the anxiety that’s nothing more than a lying, sadistic, unrepentant bully in your head. The hard work is in learning to step back and analyze the data dispassionately.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“I felt so skinless at times! Things hit me so hard!”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“A typical line of thought went something like this: I am anxious. The anxiety makes it impossible to concentrate. Because it is impossible to concentrate, I will make an unforgivable mistake at work. Because I will make an unforgivable mistake at work, I will be fired. Because I will be fired, I will not be able to pay my rent. Because I will not be able to pay my rent, I will be forced to have sex for money in an alley behind Fenway Park. Because I will be forced to have sex for money in an alley behind Fenway Park, I will contract HIV. Because I will contract HIV, I will develop full-blown AIDS. Because I will develop full-blown AIDS, I will die disgraced and alone.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“There is no such thing as a good decision and a bad decision. There are only decisions. Make them, fuck up, enjoy, repeat.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“If this all sounds melodramatic, well that, too, isn’t a bad metaphor for anxiety—as a kind of drama queen of the mind. If you have ever been friends with a drama queen you know how taxing it can be. To have one in your head is enough to make you comatose.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“Anxiety compels a person to think, but it is the type of thinking that gives thinking a bad name: solipsistic, self-eviscerating, unremitting, vicious.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“Singin' In the Rain might get you through an anxious week or two, but it won't get you through an anxious life. For that you need either a brain transplant (the only procedure of its kind, it has been said, in which it is better to be a donor than a recipient), a fully stocked bomb shelter, or a thorough adjustment of your perspective on existential risk and reward.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“And what nags me about this is that the source of my anxiety was exactly what Kierkegaard says the source of anxiety is, and what he praised in direct proportion to the volume any person possesses: possibility. The awareness that life is a series of choices any one of which could be either aggrandizing or disastrous. That this happens to be true I have no trouble signing on to. Any who has lived past the age of ten knows that even piddling actions can wind up having big consequences, and that even when you are super-conscious of your behaviors you can't know how things are going to turn out in the short- or the long-run. That's the drama of it all. On the one hand, your very existence means you can and will change things in your life and others. On the other hand, you aren't God, so everything is always going to be drenched in uncertainty and doubt.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“Learning to address concerns methodically, with reference to logic and empirical evidence, is one of the most useful things an anxious person can do.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“Yet I also felt, for the first time, truly and sincerely pissed. It was enough already. Enough! I’d reached that point that comes in the life of most anxiety sufferers when, fed up by the constant waking torture, dejected and buckled but not yet crushed, they at last turn to their anxiety, to themselves, and say, “Listen here: Fuck you. Fuck you! I am sick and fucking tired of this bullshit. I refuse to let you win. I am not going to take it anymore. You are ruining my fucking life and you MUST FUCKING DIE!” Unfortunately, this approach rarely solves the problem. Anxiety doesn’t bend to absolutism. You have to take a subtler, more reasoned approach. But that doesn’t mean anger is totally unhelpful. Being pissed off is a strong cocktail for the will. It stiffens the spine. It strengthens resolve. It makes a person less willing to run away from the anxiety and more willing to walk into it, which you’re going to have to do, ultimately, if you don’t want to end up a complete agoraphobic. Anger breeds defiance, and defiance is inspiriting. It’s good to refuse to give in to anxiety. You just have to know how much you can take.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“Freud was of the opinion that in fear a person is responding to a specific and immediate threat to physical safety while in anxiety a person is responding to a threat that is objectless, directionless, and located somewhere far off in the future—ruination, for example, or humiliation, or decay.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“...Anxiety and panic happen to be mundane phenomena, i.e., even when they are caused by extraordinary things like war and rape, they tend to occur when things are ordinary and predictable and relatively stable, against a backdrop of normal, everyday experience. This, of course, is one of the features of anxiety and panic that make them suck so bad.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“The hard work, you discover over the years, is in learning to discern between correct and incorrect anxiety, between the anxiety that’s trying to warn you about a real danger and the anxiety that’s nothing more than a lying, sadistic, unrepentant bully in your head.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“Like most clichés, it is fundamentally true that the anxious, the melancholy, the manic, and the obsessed are more likely to become therapists than other people.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“One of the things anxiety educates you in is how deeply physical thought can be, how concrete. In anxiety, there is no time to luxuriate in abstractions. It’s just you and your mind, which has fists and is using them. It may be dualistic and logically untenable to posit the situation as You v. Head; it may not make sense philosophically. But in the throes of anxiety? In the cognitive shit? There’s really no other way to think about what’s going on.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“He isn’t trying to transform himself into something different; he’s trying to transform someone different back into himself.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“Even the imperative to make choice after choice without clear guidance - allegedly the most nerve-wracking part of the profession - isn't exclusive to writing.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“It's like I've had a stroke. Do you think I've had a stroke?"
"I don't think you've had a stroke."
"But how do you know? How can you be sure I haven't had a stroke?"
"What are the symptoms of a stroke?"
"I don't know. Look them up. Look them up on line."
"OK. Hold on...OK. Here it is. Do you have trouble speaking?"
"I have trouble speaking intelligently.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“YOU ARE HUMAN! YOU ARE FALLIBLE! YOU WILL ENJOY LIFE MUCH MORE IF YOU ACCEPT—NO, EMBRACE —THE FACT THAT THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A GOOD DECISION AND A BAD DECISION. THERE ARE ONLY DECISIONS. MAKE THEM, FUCK UP, ENJOY, REPEAT.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“Later, before we hugged good-bye, I asked my mother if she would mind if I wrote about her. She didn't hesitate a moment. "I don't give a shit. I'm old! I'm tired! I work too much!"

The first of these claims is relative, the second hard to believe. In her late sixties, my mother has more energy than most college students I've met. She has more energy than most squirrels I've met. My brother Scott and I have a nickname for her: "Hurricane Marilyn." We use the nickname when we catch sight of her climbing out of her Prius just before a visit to one of our homes. We watch her cross the street, arms flailing, keys and receipts and gifts for the grandchildren spilling from multiple bags, a fast-moving storm front of narration and complaint and anecdote and fervent family affection--a Jewish mother of the first order-- and we shout, "Batten the hatches, everyone! Hurricane Marilyn's about to make landfall!”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“The problem of anxiety isn't that the organism responds to threats by near-instantly powering up. That's clearly a good thing, species-survival-wise. It's that sometimes the organism starts seeing threats too readily.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“This is the trouble with origin hunting. There are so many origins.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“My mother took the measure of what could be built with the material she'd been given, and she built it.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“But a child is a sensitive instrument. You can hide the factual truth from a child, but you can't blanket influence. Your agitation will out, and over time it will mod your child's temperament as surely as water wear at rock.”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety
“If you're afraid of heights, lean over a railing. If you're afraid of germs, lick a floor. But what do you do if your greatest fear is of being afraid?”
Daniel B. Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety

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