Out of My Shell

Overcoming Social Anxiety from Childhood to Adulthood

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Pub Date 19 Sep 2024 | Archive Date 19 Sep 2024

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Description

Look around you at all the people connecting and socializing. And you are just standing here alone, like a social reject, again. Nobody likes you. Why would they want someone like you around?

For years, social anxiety whispered its way into Natasha Daniels' mind and quietly sabotaged her life. Even while working as a therapist, helping children to cope with their own anxiety, insecurity lurked in the shadows pointing out the stares, the rejection, the vicious comments from online strangers.

In this memoir, Natasha takes on the therapist's role with her past selves to drag her social anxiety into the open. From feisty Miss 6, lonely Miss 14 reeling from a tumultuous childhood, and defiant Miss 18 pushing back against a world where she didn't fit, through to her present self, Natasha explores the way social anxiety colored her experiences and finds healing through self-acceptance.

Look around you at all the people connecting and socializing. And you are just standing here alone, like a social reject, again. Nobody likes you. Why would they want someone like you around?

For...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781805011972
PRICE £14.99 (GBP)
PAGES 256

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Average rating from 4 members


Featured Reviews

Overall, good read. Natasha toggles between her current life and past memories in a relatable way. She interacts with her past selves across pivotal moments, exploring where her social anxiety comes from, and how to find a way to both manage it and accept herself as she is now. Overall, I found this an easy read, and working with her past selves allowed me, as it may allow various readers, to understand the point at different comprehension levels. I tend to find a lot of self-help type of books dense and dry to get through. Given that this is written in a memoir style, it's much, much easier to digest.

I appreciated that though my childhood may have been different, the stories or experiences themselves had relatable content. Who didn't sit there in elementary school counting their turn to read? Who didn't have fear of where to sit during middle school lunch, even when you had a "place"? Who hasn't had an unhappy relationship? Feelings that I thought were unique to me are displayed openly as universal.

It was particularly eye opening that Natasha, as a therapist, initially struggled to apply the tools that she helps provide others, easily on herself. This helped provide vulnerability and a human element that allows the reader to trust her. That is, if my therapist needs a therapist, too, maybe I'm not wrong in that the world can be hard, and I'm not so wildly alone.

I found myself highlighting several quotes; the point seemed so obvious, yet, put in black in white, gave a clear takeaway.

I initially picked this up as an advanced copy in exchange for an unbiased review, knowing nothing of the author. It's not until I got to the end that I realized that Natasha is actually widely known on social media! (I guess it's because she specializes in children, and I have none.) She reminds me of Glennon Doyle, whos podcasts I do follow and book I have read. However, while I do love Glennon, I found Natasha more relatable. Glennon tends to cover a wide range of subjects while centering on a family focus, while Natasha kept focus on social anxiety across all ages. The book overall felt more like a friend telling me a story (as a memoir should) rather than a therapist trying to give me advice I don't realize I'm ready for.

Even if you're not socially anxious, this book is to be appreciated for the flow of writing and wit of her internal monologue.

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Out of My Shell by Natasha Daniels does a brilliant job of exploring social anxiety from both a clinical perspective and personal one. Daniels navigates her own experience as a therapist, mother, wife, and woman through returning to the past while tackling the present. This way we discover the roots of social anxiety in Daniels' life and swiftly, for any reader who has experience with anxiety, we are allowed to identify those roots within ourselves and our pasts too.

For me, as someone who has a diagnosis of mixed anxiety and depression, Out of My Shell was an enlightening read. So much of what I've put down to 'who I am' (as Daniels did) is actually because of how socially anxious I am (as Daniels realises). Through reading Daniels' work I was able to begin my own journey tackling my social anxiety (albeit in my 30s!). I appreciate Daniels' interviews with her past selves too, especially as it highlighted how many of us carry anxiety for so long without truly wishing to unpick its source.

The writing is personable and well-paced, making Out of My Shell easy to read despite coming from a therapist's perspective; perhaps because Daniels imbues this book with so much of herself as a human being, as someone with flaws and foibles, and as someone who loves deeply.

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