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Why do we overthink what to say, rehearse every line, or avoid certain moments altogether? In this episode of Just Be, therapist Sophia Spencer explores how the amygdala — your brain’s alarm system — doesn’t just cause anxious thoughts or physical symptoms, but also drives behaviour.
Through the lens of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), Sophia explains the concept of safety behaviours: the subtle or overt actions we take to prevent or escape what the brain perceives as threat. From avoiding meetings, over-preparing, or seeking reassurance, these behaviours make sense in the moment — they reduce anxiety briefly — but they also teach the brain the wrong lesson: “I was only safe because I avoided.”
You’ll learn:
Sophia connects these ideas back to the social brain: how safety behaviours protect belonging, maintain social rank, and manage perceived judgment. They aren’t flaws — they’re protective strategies that once kept you safe. The work isn’t to eliminate them, but to retrain your brain to feel safe without them — so you can stop performing safety and start just being.
🧠 Referenced Concepts
By Sophia SpencerWhy do we overthink what to say, rehearse every line, or avoid certain moments altogether? In this episode of Just Be, therapist Sophia Spencer explores how the amygdala — your brain’s alarm system — doesn’t just cause anxious thoughts or physical symptoms, but also drives behaviour.
Through the lens of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), Sophia explains the concept of safety behaviours: the subtle or overt actions we take to prevent or escape what the brain perceives as threat. From avoiding meetings, over-preparing, or seeking reassurance, these behaviours make sense in the moment — they reduce anxiety briefly — but they also teach the brain the wrong lesson: “I was only safe because I avoided.”
You’ll learn:
Sophia connects these ideas back to the social brain: how safety behaviours protect belonging, maintain social rank, and manage perceived judgment. They aren’t flaws — they’re protective strategies that once kept you safe. The work isn’t to eliminate them, but to retrain your brain to feel safe without them — so you can stop performing safety and start just being.
🧠 Referenced Concepts