The Fear of Being Seen: Overcoming Shame, Invisibility, and Social Anxiety
5/8/202635 min
In this episode, Joe and Brett unpack the fear of being seen. They examine why this pattern is so often rooted in shame, how it quietly erodes intimacy and careers, and what to actually do when you find yourself frozen, hiding, or performing.
Together, they explore:
- The two flavors of fear of being seen: acute avoidance and the universal existential version
- How childhood and culture teach us that being seen isn't safe
- Why this pattern is devastating in romantic relationships
- The "golden algorithm" — how hiding creates the very rejection you fear
- How fear of being seen shows up in the head, heart, and nervous system
- The internal "eye of Sauron" and why self-criticism amplifies the freeze
- Soul dysmorphia: why we can't see ourselves clearly
- Asking "what do I need?" as an antidote to worrying what others think
- Why opening your heart to the other person dissolves the fear of their judgment
- Shifting from outcome-focus to "how do I want to show up?"
- Exposure, sharing shame, and the cure for loneliness
- What to do in the moment when you feel yourself freezing or disappearing
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Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsJoe Hudson· Host0:00
You go into a meeting and you're just, "Oh, there's the person who hadn't said anything," and somehow or another they're like right there at the table, but nobody can even remember they were in the meeting. It's like this amazing magic trick almost, right? There is a fear that is, "If I get seen, I'm going to s- be seen as inherently bad." All of the fear of being seen is a belief that there's something inherently wrong with you. "If they see me, they will find out that I am broken," right? And so one of the ways to work on it is to actually open your heart to yourself and say, "What is it that I need?" Because that flies exactly in the face of me worried about what you think.
Brett Kistler· Host0:38
We've been getting a lot of questions from people about the fear of being seen, why they want it so much, but they're also so scared of it, and right when they're about to be seen, about to be known, they, they turn away and run from it.
Joe Hudson· Host0:52
[laughs] Yeah.
Brett Kistler· Host0:53
So let's do an episode where we dive into that and then talk about what people can do about it.
Joe Hudson· Host0:57
Great. Perfect. Yeah.
Brett Kistler· Host0:59
Awesome. So l- let's just start with, like, what is this? There's, there's a lot of different ways that this can show up for folks.
Joe Hudson· Host1:04
Yeah. So the fear of being seen, it can be split into two categories. There's the category that people who are just, like, acute in this feel, which is, "Oh, I am scared. I have social anxiety. I can figure out how to be completely, like, invisible." You go into a meeting and you're just, "Oh, there's the person who hadn't said anything," and somehow or another they're, like, right there at the table, but nobody