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- My Apologies
- Shyness
- Faking Sick
- Excuse Me
- Rainy Days
- Doing it Wrong
- I'm Not That Bad
- Family Reunion
- The Hard Way
- Mirror
- Putting the Pieces Together
- Lovely
- Psyched Up
- Think Before You Speak
- Professional Worrier
- Big Feelings
- New Year's Resolution
- Winter Wind
- Anxiety Guilt
- Sea Change
- What I'm Capable Of
- Anxious Optimist
- Awkward
- Social Anxiety Support Group
- Judgement (Every)Day
- Fake It 'til you Make It
- True Love Is...
- Cool Stuff
- Shopping
- I'm Planning To
- Confidence in My Competence
- Scrolling
- Texting and Driving
- Honest Voicemail Greeting
- Do you want to?
- The Path of Least Resistance
- Back to Normal
- Fajitas
- Are You Kidding?
- Cringe
- Anxiety Scale
- So Simple
- Excuses, Excuses
- Accidentally Scary
- Approachable
- Past the Limit
- Self-awareness
- Toons
- Sympathy Road Rage
- To Do List
- Going to the Movies
- Avoidance Cleaning
- Angry Emoji
- Google Doc(tor)
- Order Up
- Memory Lane
- Go-Sitter
Creator
Telling someone with anxiety "it could be worse" isn't helpful. They already know and are thinking about the worse things that could be happening, at the same time they're worrying about the current moment. Reminding them others have it worse invalidates their feelings, and can leave them feeling guilty for struggling.
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