It was always the introduction for Georgiann Steely — the ringing of the doorbell, the approach to the man at the cash register — that made her palms sweat and knees knock.
As a grade-schooler, she avoided these moments — ducking her face into her wavy auburn hair and waiting for her mother to escort her into crowded rooms or order her food. And her mother obliged.
Instinctively protective, Amy Steely figured it was the lesser evil to keep her timid daughter safe and comfortable.
"I was definitely very protective and she will still say I am overprotective," said Amy, who lives in Rochester, Minn., with her husband, son and daughter, who is now 16. "It's true. I am."
The conflict of whether children should be protected from fears or pushed to overcome them is familiar to every parent who has pulled a frightened child back from a diving board or coaxed the kid to plunge. It's familiar to mental health professionals as well, who have long understood that avoiding fears is the hallmark of clinical anxiety.
But new Mayo Clinic research this month has yielded important insights on "avoidance" behaviors, showing they predict which children are more likely to suffer severe anxiety later on.
Anxiety builds on anxiety
Mayo researchers asked parents how their children responded to challenges. A year later, they found higher anxiety in kids whose parents said they tended to avoid things that scared them.
"Kids who avoided tended to be more anxious, even after controlling for how anxious they were to begin with," said Stephen Whiteside, director of Mayo's child and adolescent anxiety disorders program.