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Exposure Ladders for Avoided Tasks: How to Ease Nervous
Published 3 weeks ago
Description
In this episode we explore how tiny exposure ladders turn avoided tasks like unanswered emails into manageable steps that calm your nervous system without overwhelm. Instead of powering through dread you start with actions small enough to keep your body feeling safe. Fabian breaks down why four or five gradual rungs lower physical tension faster than logic alone and shares a personal example of finally sending a long delayed message. Research on habituation shows these brief repeated contacts update threat signals in the amygdala so the inbox stops triggering daily freeze responses. Listeners learn to rate anxiety first then build repeatable ladders that fit into ordinary mornings when nothing feels urgent.
Key Takeaways:
• Reduce daily physical tension by completing avoided tasks in tiny steps.
• Train your nervous system to register safety instead of threat during routine actions.
• Lower cortisol spikes through short exposures done when already calm.
• Interrupt avoidance patterns that spread stress to unrelated tasks.
• Build repeatable habits that make future similar tasks feel ordinary.
What You'll Discover:
• How naming one task and breaking it into four rungs keeps the prefrontal cortex engaged.
• Why starting below a four on the anxiety scale prevents the HPA axis from activating fully.
• The way repeated brief contacts flatten skin conductance responses within minutes.
• How negative reinforcement from avoidance strengthens fear links over time.
• Simple ways to adjust ladder rungs if any step still feels too activating.
Recommended Resources:
• Behaviour Research and Therapy journal article on inhibitory learning by Michelle Craske 2014
• Journal of Anxiety Disorders meta analysis on avoidance by Jonathan Abramowitz 2020
• Anxiety and Depression Association of America online guide to exposure techniques
• University of Pennsylvania health resources on graduated stress reduction methods
Coming Up Next
Next time we examine how to handle sudden anxiety spikes in public spaces using the same body first approach.
📩 Have questions or want to share your experience? Reach out at anxiety@senseofthisshit.com.
💛 Join Our Supporters Club 💛 Help keep these vital conversations alive—Click Here: https://www.spreaker.com/podca...
Key Takeaways:
• Reduce daily physical tension by completing avoided tasks in tiny steps.
• Train your nervous system to register safety instead of threat during routine actions.
• Lower cortisol spikes through short exposures done when already calm.
• Interrupt avoidance patterns that spread stress to unrelated tasks.
• Build repeatable habits that make future similar tasks feel ordinary.
What You'll Discover:
• How naming one task and breaking it into four rungs keeps the prefrontal cortex engaged.
• Why starting below a four on the anxiety scale prevents the HPA axis from activating fully.
• The way repeated brief contacts flatten skin conductance responses within minutes.
• How negative reinforcement from avoidance strengthens fear links over time.
• Simple ways to adjust ladder rungs if any step still feels too activating.
Recommended Resources:
• Behaviour Research and Therapy journal article on inhibitory learning by Michelle Craske 2014
• Journal of Anxiety Disorders meta analysis on avoidance by Jonathan Abramowitz 2020
• Anxiety and Depression Association of America online guide to exposure techniques
• University of Pennsylvania health resources on graduated stress reduction methods
Coming Up Next
Next time we examine how to handle sudden anxiety spikes in public spaces using the same body first approach.
📩 Have questions or want to share your experience? Reach out at anxiety@senseofthisshit.com.
💛 Join Our Supporters Club 💛 Help keep these vital conversations alive—Click Here: https://www.spreaker.com/podca...