You suffer from social anxiety when people behave normally but you feel panicked and try to hide it—as if a fight were about to break out or someone were shouting loudly. You try to stay calm and composed, but you feel afraid very easily. Underneath your fear lies unwarranted resentment and hatred. One day, your friend Mark was involved in an accident a painful fall down the stairs. He injured his arm, and you are to blame because you felt jealous. Everyone around him is better at drawing than you, and because you feel guilty, you accompany your friend to the neurologist. This is the second time you have accompanied him to hospital, and you wait whilst the doctor in charge of your friend talks to another doctor during the assessment Mark’s condition, Dr Daniel noticed your calmness and your anxiety. Dr Daniel, a psychiatrist, looks at you and notices how you tremble and your fingers twitch when you put your hand in your pocket. He looks away from you and smiles, and when you leave with your friend, he follows you: “Wait…” He seems kind and calm, but you don’t feel at ease. “Can we talk?”