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Avoidance, Safety Behaviours, and Queer Survival cover art

Avoidance, Safety Behaviours, and Queer Survival

Avoidance, Safety Behaviours, and Queer Survival

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In Episode 6, Germain explores avoidance and safety behaviours in LGBTQI+ anxiety.

Rather than framing avoidance as weakness or failure, this episode explains how avoiding, masking, over-preparing, withdrawing, or relying on safety behaviours often begins as a meaningful survival strategy in response to minority stress, rejection, discrimination, or past harm.

The episode draws on CBT-informed ideas to show how avoidance can bring short-term relief while gradually shrinking a person’s world over time. It explores how this pattern appears in queer community, dating, intimacy, work, family, healthcare, and visibility. It also makes an important distinction between avoidance that is still wise and protective, and avoidance that has become an old rule limiting present-day freedom.

Listeners are invited to approach avoidance with curiosity rather than shame, and to experiment with small, safe-enough steps that help the nervous system gather new information.


Main Takeaways

  • Avoidance and safety behaviours are not random bad habits; they are often learned survival strategies.

  • In CBT terms:

    • Avoidance means staying away from situations that trigger anxiety or distress.

    • Safety behaviours are things we do inside those situations to feel safer or more in control.

  • For LGBTQI+ people, avoidance may show up around:

    • family gatherings

    • queer community spaces

    • dating and intimacy

    • healthcare

    • work, education, and visibility

  • Safety behaviours may include:

    • masking voice, clothing, mannerisms, or identity

    • over-preparing conversations or messages

    • using a phone as a shield

    • relying on alcohol, vaping, or substances to cope socially

    • letting others set the pace to avoid rejection or conflict

  • Avoidance often works in the short term because it reduces anxiety quickly.

  • The long-term cost is that it can shrink life, increase isolation, reduce intimacy, and prevent new experiences that could challenge old fears.

  • Not all avoidance is unhealthy. Sometimes it is wise, protective, and necessary, especially in genuinely unsafe environments.

  • The goal is not to force yourself into danger, but to notice where avoidance is still protecting you and where it may now be limiting you.

  • Small, safe-enough experiments are more helpful than heroic leaps.

  • Growth does not require self-bullying. Compassion is essential when working with avoidance.

Resources

  • Book: Beyond Survival: A Practical Guide to LGBTQI+ Anxiety The companion guidebook to the podcast, offering a fuller framework for understanding LGBTQI+ anxiety, minority stress, self-compassion, CBT-informed tools, and nervous-system regulation. Explore the book

  • Course: Beyond Survival online course — launching this summer A structured programme designed to help you apply the ideas from the podcast and guidebook in a more guided, practical way. Join or view the course waitlist

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