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Your Online Guide » Guide to Medical » Cure Anxiety

[A600]Anxiety And Panic Treatment
by Paul David, Pau
In the process of writing this book I covered the feeling of detachment from oneself, otherwise known as depersonalisation: an emotional disorder in which there is loss of contact with your own personal reality accompanied by feelings of unreality and strangeness, also a sensation of ones environment looking or feeling ?strange? and unusual.

This one question kept coming up more and more as I was writing this book, so I decided to add an extra chapter on this annoying, yet harmless, symptom.

D.P., as I will refer to it, is a common and understandable offshoot of the anxiety condition. I can also tell you that it is in no way a mental illness. It is not serious or harmful in any way and has a totally logical explanation. It is temporary and, with patience and understanding, eventually passes like any other symptom.

The key to recovering from this feeling of detachment is to surrender to this strange feeling, to pay it no respect and realise it is just the product of an over-tired mind, fatigued by your constant worrying thoughts and the constant checking in to how you feel. This symptom relies on your fear of it to keep it alive.

When people are caught up in the worry cycle, they begin to think deeply and constantly. They study themselves from deep within, checking in and focusing on their symptoms. They may even wake in the morning only to continue this habit, ?How do I feel this morning? ?I wonder if I will be able to get through today?. What's this new sensation I feel?? This may go on all day, exhausting their already tired mind further. This constant checking in and constant assessing of their symptoms then becomes a habit, but like all other habits this one can also be changed.

All this worry is bound to make your mind feel dull and unresponsive. Is it any wonder you have come to feel so distanced from your surroundings? Is it any wonder you find it so hard to concentrate? Some people, when studying for exams for hours on end, get to the point where they can no longer take information in, so they take a break and carry on the day after. For you, there are no breaks and no time outs.

As I have already mentioned earlier, your body has a safety mechanism that protects it from all this worry and slows the mind down to safeguard itself. It takes a step back from this onslaught, which can then produce your feelings of detachment and the world around you may become hazy or out of focus.

Once you understand this symptom as being caused by an over-tired mind, exhausted through worry, that you are not going mad and these feelings can't harm you in any way, it makes sense. With the fear factor taken out of this symptom, it can start to hold less power over you and affect you less than it did before. Although still annoying, you now know why you feel these feelings. Once you learn to accept them and stop adding worrying thoughts to the mix, this is another symptom that you will be able to overcome in time. Taking a step back and giving up the worrying thoughts, gives your mind the chance to rest, rejuvenate and refresh.

When it happened to me, I recognised and understood what was causing it. I realised that I was checking in and worrying about it and I did fear this sensation, so I just stopped doing it. I also learnt to get busier and stop brooding on this and other symptoms. Being active gives you another focus. Having too much time on your hands can open the door to too much needless thinking. With less worry and fear of this harmless but upsetting symptom, I was eventually able to overcome it. It merely became a nuisance and because I knew the reason for its existence, it no longer held any power over me. When a worry or fear loses its importance, it loses its power and that is why it is essential to realise these symptoms are neither harmful nor serious. Gradually, without all the checking in and worrying, this symptom that so dominated my life began to diminish and eventually disappeared completely.

This symptom is like any other; all symptoms are still being fuelled by your fear of them. As long as the fear continues, so will the symptoms. When we start to understand why we feel like we do, we automatically fear them less and they start to lose their edge and importance, this is when symptoms gradually start to fade.

Well, you can feel stress in many ways. You are stressed when you say the God has erred in one particular aspect. You are stressed when you say 24 hours in a day are too little to cope with your duties and responsibilities. You are stressed when you feel you have so many things to do, in so little a time!

In the day to day activities, you may first experience stress. When stress heightens up, it is anxiety and the final stage is panic attack.

Basically it is a friction of confusion over your priorities. In such situations, you take wrong decisions which further add to your stress and anxiety to ultimately lead you to panic.

Your tensions and worries attack your will power and gain the upper hand. You are in search of solutions, to find the normal position. Now, how to recoup the original poise? Anything done in stress, anxiety and panic is not going to give you permanent solution.

Not knowing what to do, and with the intention of seeking immediate solutions, you take recourse to anti-depressants and other medications. As a result the stress and tension retreat for a while but only to attack you with renewed vigor. You again turn to over the counter medications to gradually become addictive to them. But your stress and anxiety are in their original position.

Panic and stress is a personal subject, highly individualistic and therefore a general medical practitioner will not be able to solve the problem to your satisfaction. And most of these anti-depressant drugs are known to have side-effects, some of them quite serious. Thus soon the remedy becomes worst than the disease.

It is easy for your doctor to make you entirely dependent on drugs, but he should not do that and you should not fall into the drug-trap. Latest researches have proved that if drugs are used in combination with psychotherapy the results would be more beneficial. The more you go to the root cause of your stress and deal with the points of stress one by one, the more beneficial it would be for you.

You need to aim at a permanent solution and not at a temporary patchwork!

Natural methods, yoga, breathing exercises and yoga are the only permanent solutions to stress and anxiety. Panic can never attack a controlled and composed personality.

Article Source : Pg. 8

About Author
Both Paul David & Kanishkm 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.

Paul David has sinced written about articles on various topics from Cure Anxiety. Paul David has been helping people understand and recover from anxiety and panic for many years now. He wrote a book on the subject and also has is own website at
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