“…Within Tillich's (1952) framework, existential anxiety, or ultimate apprehension about the meaning of life and death, comprises three dimensions: (a) fate and death, that is, the relative apprehension about the contingency of life, our role in it, and the absolute threat of death to one's being; (b) emptiness and meaninglessness, that is, the relative fear that specific beliefs no longer have the meaning they once had and the absolute concern about the loss of the significance of life, the world, and the future; and (c) guilt and condemnation, that is, the relative anxiety that one's behavior has not lived up to one's standards and the absolute concern that one's life has not met certain universal standards concerning moral and ethical identity. Adults (including emerging adults) with high existential anxiety have been found to experience more depression, anxiety, identity distress (Weems et al, 2004), and neuroticism such as proneness to shyness, shame, embarrassment, and guilt (Shumaker et al, 2020).…”