Menu
first, we make the beast beautiful: a new story about anxiety
Building mental muscle through routine Embracing existential 'grimness'

first, we make the beast beautiful: a new story about anxiety

by Sarah Wilson

Reading Time

2m

Language

English

Rating

4.5

Significance

Non-Fiction

AI NARRATED
0:00 0:00

Listen on the Saarika App

MOBILE APP

Get the Saarika App

Full audio book summaries in 9+ Indian languages.
11:54
100%
first, we make the beast beautiful: a new story about anxiety
English
first, we make the beast beautiful: a new story about anxiety
Sarah Wilson
English Hinduism

first, we make the beast beautiful: a new story about anxiety

Sarah Wilson
★★★★★ 0.0 (0)
★ 0.0
Rating
0
Listeners
0
Plays
0
Reviews
0
Saved
Audio Summary
0:000:00
0:03
Preview · 10 parts
2:09
1x
⌁ Music off
play_arrow

Bhakti Yoga is a profound exploration of the path of devotion, presenting love, surrender, and spiritual discipline through the teachings of Swami Vivekananda.

About This Book

A personal, nomadic exploration of anxiety that reframes the condition not as a disease to be cured, but as a ‘beast’ to be understood, accepted, and potentially used as a compass for a more meaningful life.

Key Insights

The core of Wilson’s philosophy is the rejection of the ‘quick fix’ mentality. She argues that anxiety is often a symptom of an existential ‘Something Else’—a fundamental yearning for connection that modern life’s frenetic pace ignores. Rather than chasing fleeting happiness, she encourages readers to ‘do the work’ of building mental muscle through small, consistent ‘certainty anchors’—such as intentional routines, mindful walking, and limiting digital stimulation—to manage the nervous system.

A critical insight is the necessity of ‘sitting in the grimness.’ Wilson posits that fleeing from discomfort only fuels the fire, whereas staying present with one’s anxiety allows it to be integrated and transformed. She reframes anxiety as a ‘superpower,’ an evolutionary sensitivity that, when balanced, provides deep intuition and a unique capacity for empathy and innovation. Furthermore, she dismantles the myth of the ‘guidebook to life,’ reminding readers that no one has the answers, which serves to alleviate the profound loneliness and impostor syndrome that often plague the anxious mind. Ultimately, the book teaches that the goal is not to eradicate the beast, but to learn its language, establish boundaries, and curate a life that honors one’s own sensitivity as a path to grace.

Share this summary