Anxiety disorders are very common these days. Many people experience these attacks in small ways when faced with everyday stress. For instance, when a student has not studied properly for an exam, she might feel "anxious" about taking the test. These feelings are perfectly normal and usually fade quickly. But this type of everyday anxiety becomes abnormal when we develop an aversion to normal life situations, and the problem begins limiting our life in lots of ways. This is normally what we mean when we say someone has a "problem" with anxiety panic attacks.
Anxiety-related panic attacks are unintentional, unpredictable and groundless. They can become chronic, and can occur anytime during the normal course of the day. Symptoms of anxiety vary from person to person, of course. One sufferer may get anxious going to parties; while another may be terrified to drive a car, or travel beyond their "comfort zone." But all anxiety tends to have one common factor: a persistent fear of facing otherwise normal life situations.
Emotions play a great role in anxiety. Emotional symptoms include apprehension towards certain events or places, or difficulty concentrating--even embarrassing physical symptoms such as irritable bowel syndrome are often associated with anxiety and panic attacks. Other common emotionally-based symptoms include heart palpitations, rapid heartbeat, perspiration, migraine headaches, fatigue, shortness of breath, flu-like soreness and a tingling sensation in the arms and legs.
Anxiety attacks are usually triggered by something, even if they feel like they "came out of the blue." But often, the initial cause of the attacks is not easy to discern. Anxiety and Panic Attacks can become a chronic problem that build up over time, so it may not seem obvious in the moment why you are experiencing the symptoms.
For this reason, one of the best methods of overcoming anxiety is to make small but consistent changes in your everyday life. This is a proactive approach which recognizes one little-known but critically important fact: anxiety panic attacks are NOT a "condition" or "disease," they are a symptom of an imbalance in your life.
Because of this, self-help strategies can prove very useful in overcoming anxiety problems for most sufferers. Developing a more balanced (and positive) outlook towards life is a good first step, and even small improvements in your daily "thinking habits" can lead to very noticeable results.
Medications, including drugs like benzodiazepines or anti-anxiety SSRI's (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) are often used to control anxiety--with mixed results. Medication can be helpful, especially when the individual is dealing with a severe and critical situation; but many experts feel that the use of medications is not a viable long-term treatment, and recommend less invasive options like practicing meditation, yoga therapy and mental relaxation exercises etc.
These types of treatments can be empowering for many anxiety sufferers because they encourage self-reliance and help foster a sense of confidence that the individual can cope with the inevitable stresses of life, without relying on medication or other "quick fixes," which do nothing to restore balance to life long-term, or lessen the chances that the individual will experience anxiety panic attacks in the future.
Anxiety With Panic Attacks
Based on a stress management model, the technique is different than generally associated with main stream stress management training. Let me clarify. It is often assumed that a stress management model is synonymous with body awareness techniques that utilize inward focus. The other technique is outward focus initially used by Lacy, a psychologist. It is the one most effective for all anxiety/panic attacks. It likewise is effective for all other maladies, but because it is less defined, it is generally only used in more advanced training and left out of the protocols for initial training sessions.
In this article I want to focus mainly on the why's that contribute to one developing anxiety issues as opposed to some other stress related issue such as ulcers or colitis--not that some individuals don't develop both.
Generally anxiety/panic/agoraphobia is found in those who
?Have less than healthy eating habits or
?Are taking medications that contribute to panic and anxiety as a side effect.
Most are in the first category and it's contributed to a high sugar or refined food diet. They generally drink caffeinated beverages and eat lots of snack foods. If they were to correct their eating habits in advance, they would never develop of anxiety panic attack for anxiety is simply a hormonal response to large blood sugar changes. However, once the pattern of anxiety has generalized or developed into panic and agoraphobia, then simply changing eating habits usually isn't enough because the mind has begun a conditioning process-more later.
And likewise the same conditioning process affects the second group for even once the meds causing anxiety are stopped, the symptoms continue.
But the main question is, ?Why do anxiety panic attack sufferers develop Anxiety and others who likewise are hypoglycemic develop muscle pains and aches, or hypertension, ulcers, colitis??
The answer is in one's personality. Effective treatment of an anxiety sufferer requires that the therapist understands the personality that contributes to the development of anxiety.
I first began working with anxiety clients in the late 70's under the supervision of two psychologists for the World Health Medical Dental Center in the World Trade Center, NYC. Dr. Joyce Brothers was one of the consultants. I asked my superiors for advice in how to work with anxiety sufferers. My main treatment modalities were biofeedback and hypnosis. I asked them for the protocol that they wanted used and was told something similar to, ?Anxiety patients are basically babies. They use anxiety generally for secondary rewards. We don't expect you'll have much success. Simply teach them body awareness techniques and hold their hands. They are generally an irresponsible group of patients.?
I was too young to dispute what I was told and accepted it as truth. Needless to say, I didn't have very much success hand holding and most clients came three or four sessions at most and then stopped coming-they could never get their muscles to relax with biofeedback, much less their breathing.
Two years later I opened the Biofeedback Center of NJ in Middletown, NJ and after about four years of poor results-only 30% improvement (no better than placebo)--with anxiety/panic attack clients I hired a psychotherapist to work with them. My thinking was that it must be something deep rooted causing the problem and I wasn't qualified to do therapy nor did I want to.
After another five years we evaluated her success and even though the clients came for many more sessions than they did with me-she was better at hand-holding-the results were no better. The only consolation was that I wasn't the one seeing the clients-I could focus on clients with stress related health issues that brought me much greater success rates.
One Saturday afternoon I received a phone call from our psychologist who was doing an intake with a new client-I'll call her Jane. He informed me that Jane wanted biofeedback for her panic/agoraphobia and nothing else. She was dictating her treatment. She and her husband drove some distance and they very much wanted to start immediately and refused psychotherapy as he recommended.
It was his opinion that her high motivation and expectation would be instrumental (pun intended) in biofeedback working. Reluctantly I agreed to see Jane and her husband hoping to convince them that psychotherapy was the route to go.
She made it clear she wanted nothing to do with psychotherapy and it was biofeedback or nothing. I didn't waste much time trying to convince her re psychotherapy. Instead after twenty minutes of getting to know her, I began her with basic ?close your eyes inward focus breathing exercises,? and observed her go into a panic attack within minutes. She opened her eyes. She and her husband were quite apologetic, paid their fees, and left quite abruptly.
Personality? I'll jump ahead and share with you what I leaned about personality. First it was easy for me to see Jane as the classic attention getting irresponsible secondary reward getting individual-a no brainer so to speak which was a total erroneous assumption as were all clients suffering from anxiety that I had ever seen.
Contrary to what I was told and learned to believe, anxiety sufferers are Type A perfectionist individuals. They are totally responsible (in some or many areas of their lives) and don't use symptoms for secondary reward (even though it appears that way). They need to be right. You might ask, ?Who doesn't?? Contrary to most of us who like to be right, they really need to be right. In fact it's this universal need to be right of anxiety sufferers that makes waking hypnosis work. They are the kind of person you would want to have as an employee-minus the anxiety which may totally incapacitate them. In fact it's their high sense of responsibility that works against them in contributing to development of anxiety issues whereas someone suffering from hypertension is also a type A individual, but be more of a driven, less patient person than the responsible one who develops anxiety.
Although there are many more issues such as diet, handling disappointments, the general adaptation syndrome... this is the first program of its kind that takes personality factors in consideration. A survey of the participants indicated an 80% success rate in overcoming anxiety panic attack and agoraphobia.
Both Jon Mercer & Richard Kuhns are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Jon Mercer has sinced written about articles on various topics from Public Speaking, Cure Anxiety and Web Development. Discover how to overcome Breakthrough video-based exercises to. Jon Mercer's top article generates over 27100 views. to your Favourites.
Richard Kuhns has sinced written about articles on various topics from Panic Attacks, Cure Anxiety and Guided Meditation. Richard Kuhns B.S.Ch.E., NGH certified, a specialist in Waking Hypnosis to eliminate . The new technique available to professionals. Richard Kuhns's top article generates over 14800 views. to your Favourites.
Auto Shipping Instant Quote They already have cases where the customer would complain about some delays in their shipping schedule which my uncle said normally happens