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Speak Up For Your Health

A Hidden Condition Affecting 1 in 20 People—and the Shame Behind It

May 12, 2026
32:39

Episode Description

For over 20 years, Aneela Idnani hid a condition affecting 1 in 20 people—trichotillomania, a body-focused repetitive behavior (BFRB) driven by the brain, not choice. After her husband discovered her secret, she turned that moment into a mission—building a device to help others interrupt these behaviors and reclaim control. Then came a breast cancer diagnosis, and a powerful shift: learning to listen to her body instead of fighting it. Aneela talks about what it really takes to move from shame to
self-awareness.

Key Takeaways

Body-focused Repetitive Behaviors (BFRBs) are repetitive pulling, picking, biting, or scraping of the hair, skin, nails, lips, or cheeks. If this sounds familiar for you or someone you love, let them know that they can get help. One helpful resource is the TLC Foundation for Body-Focused Repetitive
Behaviors. Here's a link: bfrb.org/what-are-bfrbs" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">https://www.bfrb.org/what-are-bfrbs

BFRBs are not self-harm. BFRBs are not self-harm. They're the brain's attempt to self-soothe and return to a state of calm. That distinction matters because
the treatment is different.

A mental health professional who specializes in
BFRBs is the right first call. And for some, a wearable device can help bridge the gap between unconscious habit and conscious awareness.

Dance with your challenges. Don't fight them. Meeting a
health condition or any hard thing with curiosity rather than resistance changes what's possible.

Stress doesn't cause cancer, but it does matter. There's no
direct causal link between stress and cancer, but chronic stress affects sleep, immunity, and daily choices in ways that add up.

Shame thrives in silence. Aneela hid her condition for over
20 years. What finally shifted things was driven by awareness, then connection, then community.

Connect with Aneela and learn more about her story and BFRB

Pre-order her book, "Aneela, Where Are Your Eyebrows?"

Link to Habit Aware. A Keen bracelet might be a helpful device.

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#MentalHealth #Trichotillomania #BFRB #HealthAdvocacy #PatientAdvocacy #WomensHealth #BreastCancerAwareness
#ListenToYourBody #MindBodyConnection #SpeakUpForYourHealth

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