Feb 12 2025
The End of Anxiety: How I Deal with Intensity, Contempt, and Triggers Without Losing Myself
I haven’t felt anxiety in over 670 days. No panic. No self-doubt. No feeling of being overwhelmed by the world’s chaos. And it’s not because life got easier. It’s not because people stopped being difficult. It’s because I found myself.
Once anxiety disappeared, I expected smooth sailing, but that’s not how life works. When you become unshakable, the world doesn’t stop shaking—it just stops shaking you. The biggest challenge wasn’t internal anymore. It was external. It was people.
The intensity of others. Their emotions. Their judgments. Their contempt. The way they projected their own chaos onto me, expecting me to engage, react, defend, or fix. I used to feel triggered by this—by their anger, their passive-aggression, their false accusations, their attempts to drag me into their storms. But I don’t anymore.
Because just as anxiety was never about the external world, neither is being triggered by other people.
Intensity and Contempt Are Not About You
When someone attacks, dismisses, or tries to provoke you, it feels personal. But it isn’t. Their intensity is about them. Their contempt is about them. Their emotions, their stories, their fears, their unmet needs.
It took me years to realize this. Before, when someone challenged me, raised their voice, mocked, dismissed, or belittled, I felt the internal pull to engage. To correct. To prove. To justify. I thought my reaction was about standing my ground. But really, I was being pulled into a cycle of validation-seeking. I was allowing their chaos to dictate my state.
Now? I don’t. Because I know who I am. And when you know who you are, you don’t need to defend yourself to those who don’t.
The Moment You Engage, You Lose
Engaging with hostility is like stepping into quicksand. The more you fight, the deeper you sink. Because intensity thrives on reaction.
Someone attacks you? They don’t want truth. They want control. They want to pull you into their world, make you play by their rules, get you to prove, fight, and struggle. They need your reaction to validate their emotions.
But what happens when you don’t give it?
What happens when someone insults you, and you don’t flinch?What happens when someone pushes for a reaction, and you remain steady?What happens when someone’s anger collides with your stillness instead of your defensiveness?
It dissolves. It has no fuel.
When I learned this, the game changed.
What Triggers Really Reveal
Being triggered is not about the other person. It’s about what’s unresolved inside you.
Think about it. If someone calls you an idiot, and you know beyond a doubt that you’re intelligent, do you get triggered? No. You laugh. You see the absurdity of it. But if you secretly doubt your intelligence, if part of you fears they might be right, their words will hit like a blade.
Triggers are teachers. They show you where you still believe something false about yourself.
So, when I feel the pull—that split-second tension when someone is condescending or combative—I pause. Not to suppress. Not to ignore. But to ask:
What inside me is reacting?
Do I believe what they are saying?
Is this mine to carry?
And almost always, the answer is: It’s not mine.
7 Principles to Master Intensity, Contempt, and Triggers
Freedom from anxiety doesn’t mean the world stops throwing punches. It means you stop stepping into the ring. Here’s how:
1. If It’s Not Yours, Don’t Pick It Up
Other people’s emotions are not your responsibility. Their anger, disappointment, or need for control is theirs. You do not have to carry it. You do not have to fix it. You do not have to react to it.
➡ Ask: Is this mine? If not, let it pass through like wind.
2. Let Silence Do the Heavy Lifting
You don’t have to correct them. You don’t have to defend. You don’t have to engage. Silence is power.
I haven’t felt anxiety in over 670 days. No panic. No self-doubt. No feeling of being overwhelmed by the world’s chaos. And it’s not because life got easier. It’s not because people stopped being difficult. It’s because I found myself.
Once anxiety disappeared, I expected smooth sailing, but that’s not how life works. When you become unshakable, the world doesn’t stop shaking—it just stops shaking you. The biggest challenge wasn’t internal anymore. It was external. It was people.
The intensity of others. Their emotions. Their judgments. Their contempt. The way they projected their own chaos onto me, expecting me to engage, react, defend, or fix. I used to feel triggered by this—by their anger, their passive-aggression, their false accusations, their attempts to drag me into their storms. But I don’t anymore.
Because just as anxiety was never about the external world, neither is being triggered by other people.
Intensity and Contempt Are Not About You
When someone attacks, dismisses, or tries to provoke you, it feels personal. But it isn’t. Their intensity is about them. Their contempt is about them. Their emotions, their stories, their fears, their unmet needs.
It took me years to realize this. Before, when someone challenged me, raised their voice, mocked, dismissed, or belittled, I felt the internal pull to engage. To correct. To prove. To justify. I thought my reaction was about standing my ground. But really, I was being pulled into a cycle of validation-seeking. I was allowing their chaos to dictate my state.
Now? I don’t. Because I know who I am. And when you know who you are, you don’t need to defend yourself to those who don’t.
The Moment You Engage, You Lose
Engaging with hostility is like stepping into quicksand. The more you fight, the deeper you sink. Because intensity thrives on reaction.
Someone attacks you? They don’t want truth. They want control. They want to pull you into their world, make you play by their rules, get you to prove, fight, and struggle. They need your reaction to validate their emotions.
But what happens when you don’t give it?
What happens when someone insults you, and you don’t flinch?What happens when someone pushes for a reaction, and you remain steady?What happens when someone’s anger collides with your stillness instead of your defensiveness?
It dissolves. It has no fuel.
When I learned this, the game changed.
What Triggers Really Reveal
Being triggered is not about the other person. It’s about what’s unresolved inside you.
Think about it. If someone calls you an idiot, and you know beyond a doubt that you’re intelligent, do you get triggered? No. You laugh. You see the absurdity of it. But if you secretly doubt your intelligence, if part of you fears they might be right, their words will hit like a blade.
Triggers are teachers. They show you where you still believe something false about yourself.
So, when I feel the pull—that split-second tension when someone is condescending or combative—I pause. Not to suppress. Not to ignore. But to ask:
What inside me is reacting?
Do I believe what they are saying?
Is this mine to carry?
And almost always, the answer is: It’s not mine.
7 Principles to Master Intensity, Contempt, and Triggers
Freedom from anxiety doesn’t mean the world stops throwing punches. It means you stop stepping into the ring. Here’s how:
1. If It’s Not Yours, Don’t Pick It Up
Other people’s emotions are not your responsibility. Their anger, disappointment, or need for control is theirs. You do not have to carry it. You do not have to fix it. You do not have to react to it.
➡ Ask: Is this mine? If not, let it pass through like wind.
2. Let Silence Do the Heavy Lifting
You don’t have to correct them. You don’t have to defend. You don’t have to engage. Silence is power.