Posts Tagged ‘anxiety work’

Controlling Panic Attacks So They Don’t Control You

July 28th, 2010

What happens when you have a panic attack?

You don’t have to be afraid of panic attacks! Knowing this can be an immense relief. So the next time you have a panic attack, you can take some comfort in the fact that panic attacks have never killed a single soul. There are ways of controlling panic attacks which is great news because they can be quite terrifying!

Ironically this response is there to protect you, although you may wonder how on earth it’s doing such a terrible job? It’s an in built mechanism to keep you out of real danger. It’s just that for the moment, it’s over sensitized.

Whenever we experience a dangerous situation, we need to respond immediately. When this happens our adrenaline levels will raise, respiration rate increases and our heart pumps blood around our system faster. This physiological response happens to prepare us to either fight the threat or run away in the opposite direction. We need to respond quickly and therefore our survival mechanism needs to be strong enough and intense enough to be effective.

The difference between a normal fight or flight response and a panic attack, is that the panic attack is out of proportion to the perceived danger. It is an irrational response.

Controlling panic attacks

There can be many changes and sensations you become aware of that trigger a panic attack. Focusing on these bodily changes can begin to intensify the episode. Your internal dialogue will begin to latch on to these negative thoughts and begin to catastrophize the experience. In essence, everything begins to snowball.

If you’ve already begun to notice changes which you think are leading to a panic attack, here’s what you can do:

1) Place your hand on your abdomen and begin to breathe in and out very slowly through your nose.

2) Pick up the phone and start talking to a friend or relative. This aims to distract your attention away from your current situation.

3) Do something physical, run on the spot, go for a walk (if you’re at work, walk to the toilet and back a few times)

4) Manage your negative thought processes, as these can have a tremendous impact on your experience.

One way to control your thoughts is to remind yourself that panic attacks are not dangerous. So if for example, you start saying to yourself; “I’m losing control, I’m losing control, I can’t handle myself”, latch onto the positive alternative such as, “I am confident and calm and can handle this easily”.

Discover how to be in control

There are powerful techniques you can learn immediately so you can begin controlling panic attacks. If you’d like to find out more about panic attacks and what you can do to stop them from good, click on the following link: cure panic attacks now.

Anxiety Help – Top Three Reasons Why You Should Find Help

July 25th, 2010

‘Chronic worrier’, ‘bad with nerves’, ‘stressed out’, and ‘constantly tense and nervous’ are but some of the descriptions often used for people who have problems with anxiety. If these sound familiar to you, maybe you should try seeking for anxiety help. Here are a handful of reasons why you should do it…now!

Because it isn’t normal…at all

From time to time, it is healthy to feel tense, nervous, and anxious. These are, after all, normal responses to situations that our mind recognizes as threatening. To give an example, during an examination, a major operation, or a job interview, it is very natural to feel anxious. This responses helps you to respond with the situation more appropriately.

However, there are other forms of anxiety that are not only uncomfortable, but life inhibiting as well. These are the forms that are usually evaluated as symptoms of anxiety disorder. These are frightening, to say the least, particularly to those people who are not sure whether their symptoms are true or not. To top this off, these forms of anxiety often create a vicious, endless cycle of anxiety that cripples both the mind and the body into inaction.

Because it affects many parts of your lives

It is an understatement to say that anxiety is debilitating. It is a condition that affects, if not alters, every bit of a person’s life, personality, thinking and behavior. People with anxiety disorders experience the following changes:

The way a person with anxiety feels

Irrational and often overblown feelings of anxiety, fear and fright. Chronic worrying about something even while there is no good reason to worry about it. Constant feeling that something bad is going to happen. Constantly stressed, edgy, unsettled, tensed and uptight. Derealization and depersonalization.

The way a person with anxiety thinks

Chronic worrying about little things. Fixation on the worst possible scenarios. Unable to concentrate or focus. Thoughts are constantly shifting. Inability to focus on a single object or thing.

The way the body of a person suffering from anxiety works when experiencing anxiety attack

Racing heart

Discomfort, pain or tightness in the chest

Numbing of the toes or the fingers

Butterflies in the stomach

Feeling restless, panicky or jumpy

Tensed muscles

Worse sweating

Difficulty breathing

Light headedness, dizziness and nausea

The way a person with anxiety behaves

Inability to relax or stay relaxed

Often starts a job and fails to finish it

Feeling on the go

Talks more rapidly or more than usual

Drinks and smokes more

Eats more or less than average

Avoids objects of fear or situations that are associated with previous anxiety attacks

Because it ends up as a lifelong problem if not addressed immediately

As it usually turns out, anxiety is a problem that lingers for a long time It is thus very important that you seek anxiety help as early as you have experienced its first symptoms or as early as your first attack.

For you to avoid being crippled by your anxiety problems, it is advisable that you seek anxiety help from professionals, websites, guides and organizations as early as you have experienced your first episode. Visit my website to know more how you can reach people who could help you.  

A Common Sense Approach For How To Deal With Anxiety

April 28th, 2010

In some ways  anxiety helps keep us in control, such as staying motivated or driving the speed limit. In other ways it can create serious headwinds for both adults and children. And most would agree that it almost impossible to do your best when a wave of anxiety is covering you like a wet blanket. That job interview where you were hoping to put your best foot forward, the rapidly approaching assignment deadline, or an upcoming event that you will be attending all will be put in jeopardy if anxiety is allowed to carry the day.

 So we must find realistic ways of how to deal with anxiety. Recently, I was reading some information about how to deal with anxiety and the whole focus of the article was taking a vacation to an exotic destination. Well, that sounds great but how many of us can afford to drop everything we are doing and bear the expense only to come back to our anxiety riddled life with a few more bills to pay. We must look deeper, and explore how to deal with anxiety from a more realistic and long lasting perspective. Wouldn’t you agree?

 My goal in this article covering how to deal with anxiety is to share with you a set of ideas that have worked well for me, and I do believe they can work for you as well.

 *Don’t pretend: Be realistic about your situation and where you want to go. Pretending things are better than they are will only make it worse. Set a rock bottom starting point for improvement and work your way up from there.

 *Relaxation techniques: When you are riddled with anxiety your mind is unable to rest. Give it a break by implementing yoga or a walk in the park.

 *What’s the worst that can happen: Could you lose your job, your car, or your house. Recognize that you were just fine when you didn’t have these things and you will be just fine if you lose them. In fact you may have been happier before you acquired some of the trappings of life and the financial responsibility that comes with them.

 *Talk therapy: A recent study found that women require 7000 words a day to be happy, with men it is only around 2,500. So girls your husband probably isn’t going to be comfortable giving you the words you need and one of the very best ways of how to deal with anxiety is to find a talk buddy who will. Additionally, if you can find someone who shares your anxiety, and can ramp up your words to10,000 words a day, I guarantee you will see an improvement.

 *Natural remedies for anxiety: Combing natural remedies and talk therapy is a very effective one two punch. Natural remedies for anxiety work with your body to support nervous system health helping us to better cope with the stresses of a modern faced paced anxiety laden lifestyle.

Rob

Managing Fear & Anxiety, Overcoming Fright, Panic, Worry

March 14th, 2010

HOW TO MANAGE ANXIETY, CONTROL FEAR, OVERCOME FRIGHT, PANIC, WORRY

Fear, anxiety are controllable. Panic, worry, fright can be rid of. Knowing what are, how work, fear, anxiety, helps solve problems, control fear and anxiety.

Anxiety and fear causes crisis. One must understand fear and anxiety, how fear and anxiety work, to control anxiety, manage fear. Can be overcome anxiety and fear.

Managing fear, overcoming anxiety can be without expensive books, courses. Overcoming children’s fears, anxieties, controlling, managing adult fear and anxiety is possible. Here is, whether in child or adult, how to control, manage, overcome fear and anxiety.

Fear and anxiety, being afraid and anxious, begin when we are, or feel, vulnerable. We experience uneasiness and concern which frightens, makes fearful. This causes timidity, and timidity gives rise to a state of alarm which sometimes involves such hesitation that shrinks us from dealing with a matter or situation that needs to be resolved. The pain and emotion, the tension and stress of fear and anxiety is accompanied by a feeling of helplessness which is negative thought which so affects the functioning of the nervous system in dealing with fear and anxiety.

Fright, fear, anxiety, can cause crises, neurosis; the dread, terror, horror of phobia is fear. Worrying, most worries, are fear; but, often, we can’t cope with worry. Positive thinking helps but is not coping with fear, controlling fear, dealing with worry; to control fear, anxiety, we must know how fear and anxiety work.

Fear and anxiety effect automatically. Our autonomic nervous system regulates how body organs work. Chiefly a part of the autonomic nervous system, called ‘sympathetic’, automatically interacts with our mind when we worry, experience anxiety, fear.

When fear is felt the mind signals a threat, danger, or emergency physically (e.g. a hand raised in anger) or psychologically (e.g. distrust); the sympathetic nervous system immediately comes into action to help protect or defend ourselves to our best possible advantage. Suddenly automatically we breath more oxygen which, with cyclic biochemical reactions, energises our ‘electron transport chain’ and synthesises with other substances in our body, upon that fear signal. This synthesising upon that fear signal urgently turns on electrical impulses which fire from cell to cell at very high speeds communicating that fear to the control centre in the brain.

In our fear and anxiety, the brain instantly issues commands to the organs to take action. Our organs immediately divert and concentrate energies from other organs to those relevant to our fear and anxiety. The pupils of our eyes grow bigger to see better, the blood vessels expand to more and faster supply, to enable our muscles to react. In aid of that the body produces adrenaline to enhance alertness and our actions for ‘flight’ or ‘fight’, as our values dictate, and as we feel directed by our fear, anxiety.

Anxiety and fear are not cured by medication. Drugs only help coping with worry; only help cope with fear or anxiety. It is generally agreed by expert that if we know how to, we can better control fear, manage anxiety. Panic confuses and causes worry; but, except for phobias (when one must consult a doctor), it isn’t complicated to manage fear, control anxiety.

Adult fear and anxiety is mostly due to problems; e.g., worry over debt, disapproval, separation, failure.

Children have no adult problems; child fear or anxiety is feeling inadequate about the frightening unknown.

Adults cope with both, whether it is fear or anxiety arising from adult problems or child fear and anxiety over inability to protect or defend as adults can.

In child fear control, managing child fear and anxiety it often suffices to ensure an “I am protected” feeling for the child. A child’s fear, e.g., of the dark is over anxiety that something may go wrong or be hurtful; e.g. a dim light helps ease that fear, anxiety, but the child needs assurance that you are nearby and can protect from or defend against what is causing the child’s fear and anxiety. If fear of the unknown is, e.g., anxiety over a new environment, accompany the child until it is realised that there is nothing to fear.

In adults fear and anxiety does not go away because of their being fear and anxiety with good reason. Adult fear and anxiety involve not unreasonable worry but possible significant consequences. But an adult can control worry, even overcome fear, anxiety.

Coping with, overcoming fear and anxiety begins with realising that problems are solvable, consequences avoidable. This enables to cope with fear and anxiety.

Adults suffer fear and anxiety for two reasons. They do not know how to solve the problem; and, it never occurs to most to find out because panic causes confusion. Panic prevents rational thinking, they can not think how to, e.g., reason arguments, acceptably put a hurt right; they, e.g., forget or never find out that an offer to pay by instalments may not be lawfully refused. The problem seems unsolvable, panic becomes fear, anxiety; worry makes fear worse.

Anxiety and fear often result from failure to clearly identify the problem. That is the cause of panic, a problem’s becoming worse, of the fear and anxiety.

Problem solving involves rational though, and that necessitates calmness. If angry, do ‘count to ten’.

Avoiding panic is avoiding fear and anxiety. If feeling panicky, take a deep breath: inhale, hold it to the count of three, exhale slowly; this is regarded as regulating oxygen intake and avoiding the above-mentioned body functions and chemical reactions which substitute to normal body and mind functions the limited, concentrated, emergency, urgent functioning. You will feel less urgency, less rushed, less panicky and less likely to suffer fear and anxiety.

Similarly easy it becomes then to replace the reduced likelihood of fear, anxiety with rational thought. One only needs to know how to do so.

One cannot apply rational thought to a problem if one is confused. The panic was due to not knowing what to do, confusion. One needs to clear one’s head in order to think and substitute to avoided panic, and reduced fear and anxiety, rational thought.

One’s bodily functions and mental functions interact. Adrenaline enhances what the brain signals. If it signals an emergency, it enhances urgency; if it signals calm though, then it enhances that. This is the basis of ‘positive thinking’. Such automatic biological, electrochemical, functioning of the nervous system enhances mental functions, confusion is rid of. Then can be clearly seen the problem and properly explored the ways of solving it without panic worsening it, causing fear and anxiety.

Then you can identify your fear. What is it that you fear, why? What part or parts of the problem is it that is causing you the worry, the anxiety, the fear? Think of what exactly it is you fear, are afraid of. ‘Know your enemy’ to easier mange anxiety, overcome fear.

One can learn to control one’s fear and, in the verses of Orhan Seyfi Ari in his Mystic Man (translated), one can enjoy the feeling that…

“Neither anxiety has he, nor fear,

The World’s like a rubber ball under his feet rather,

The Sun in one hand, and the Moon in the other.”

Calmness helps solution, managing fear and anxiety.

The author’s favourite site is: Teacher of Teachers