Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) is considered to be extremely effective in helping people to overcome panic disorders, and this can usually be achieved within 8 sessions. I use CBT at my practice in Hertfordshire and have found it very useful in treating agoraphobia, particularly when used in conjunction with a newer cognitive therapy, Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP). This article details some of the ways in which CBT and NLP are used during NLP Herts to help clients achieve freedom from agoraphobia.
1. Cognitive Therapy ? At NLP and CBT Herts, people are supported to identify and change the distorted thinking patterns that maintain anxiety. Behind panic attacks and anxiety are negative thoughts. These thoughts alone cannot cause anxiety, but the belief that they are true does cause anxiety. The therapist works with the client to reduce belief in such thoughts, this in turn reduces anxiety.
2. Behavioural Therapy ? This involves desensitizing your anxiety through gradual exposure to your feared situations. The therapist offers practical support and activities may be carried out in the community, during these sessions.
3. Learning cognitive techniques to beat your panic ? clients that come for NLP and CBT Herts are taught specific techniques that can be used and that must be practiced in between sessions. The challenge is using these techniques during times when you are experiencing panic and clients are supported to become competent at this. Of course, once clients are competent they become panic free!
4. Practising ? You will get out of therapy what you put in and mastering your panic will involve you carrying out practice in between sessions. Typical practice assignments include keeping a ?Beating Panic? Journal?, carrying out practice related to your ?going out and about? goal and creating a routine that involves empowering ?calm? activities. You will also be required to practice any coping techniques taught to you by the therapist, such as using your anchors (see below).
5. NLP Communication Model ? Clients are taught NLP clean language techniques. This means learning to think and communicate with your self in a way that supports being safe, confident, and relaxed.
6. NLP Change Techniques ? NLP, which is an understanding of how we code experience in our brain, has a range of techniques, which can be used to reduce or eradicate the intensity of remembered experiences. Its possible to take an unpleasant memory, examine how it is coded and then make changes so that it is no longer unpleasant and the emotion can just drain away. If you suffer from unpleasant memories or fears, an NLP therapist can help you deal with this, via submodality work. These treatments are available from my therapy practice, where I use NLP Herts. You can also learn to be aware of the impact of how you code experience yourself.
7. Anchoring For Emotional Balance - Anchors are naturally occurring associations between an external stimulus and a behavioural or emotional response. They occur because the human mind constantly seeks to make sense of the environment by looking for patterns and associations between things. People learn to make negative associations between things. In the case of agoraphobia this may be associating going for a walk to the corner shop with fear and panic. NLP deliberately makes use of anchors in order to empower people to have control over their emotional states. There are specific NLP techniques in which a stimulus is used to trigger and link an emotional state. The stimulus is usually external and may be a sound or touch. Through these techniques it is possible to for an individual to build up a resource of positive emotional states, which they can access in any situation in which they need them. It is also possible to completely collapse negative anchors so that external stimuli that cause you negative emotional states will no longer be a problem.
These are just some of the ways that NLP and CBT Herts can be effective at empowering people to overcome agoraphobia and other panic disorders.
Therapy For Panic Attacks
Stopping your panic attacks before they start is the target you should be aiming for. This may take a little bit of practice but the end result will be well worth it. Start to put the suggestions that follow into your daily routine and you will likely reduce the severity of your panic attacks over the coming weeks and months.
Panic attacks don't just simply appear. Something acts as a trigger to cause the panic attack. Oftentimes there is a long standing cause that is responsible for the majority of your panic attacks. It will pay you to work out what this long standing cause is because once you start to tackle it, you will find you are already on your way to stopping your panic attacks in their tracks.
While you are in the process of looking for this long standing cause of your panic attacks, it will pay you to learn how to relax more.
Becoming a calmer, more relaxed person is one of the best and simplest ways to reduce panic attacks. All you need to do is start to practice a simple relaxation technique daily.
One of the best ways to do this is a breathing exercise. You're already breathing, so it's not as though you don't know the principles involved. But the chances are that you're not breathing in a way that will help you to relax. Take time out to notice your breathing. Are you taking shallow breaths or is your breathing slow and deep? It's this second state that you should be aiming for.
Take a long, deep breath. Breath in as much fresh air as you can. Then hold your breath for a second or two. Once you've done that, slowly exhale until your lungs are as empty as they can be without causing you any discomfort. Repeat this process several more times. You should notice an almost immediate difference in how relaxed you feel.
Next time you find yourself in a situation where a panic attack would normally be just around the corner, follow the deep breathing technique you've just learned. Doing this should reduce the intensity of the panic attack. And once you've done that once, you can do it again!
Another thing you should do to decrease your panic attacks is to get hold of some success stories. Read how other people have stopped their panic attacks. Work out what they did. Try out their techniques for reducing panic attacks and see which works best for you. Draw on other people's experiences - you'll find it quite liberating that other people have been able to overcome their panic attacks and prevent them from re-occurring.
Think back to the times when you have recovered from a panic attack. Realize that you eventually come through your panic attacks. That they are temporary occurrences and that you already know how to end them (otherwise you'd still be experiencing your last panic attack). Then start to use this knowledge to reduce the length of time that your panic attacks last for. Whatever you did last time to end your attack, you can start to do earlier next time you start to panic.
Medical professionals, friends and family are all available to you. Make sure that you enlist the help of those around you, those who care about you deeply. Chances are they would like to see your suffering reduced. Ask them for help. Maybe even act out a scenario where you would normally experience a panic attack. Since you know it's play acting, you should be able to play along as well. Then explore ways that you could react differently the next time a panic attack happens.
Both Karenherts & Martha Brown 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.
Karenherts has sinced written about articles on various topics from Neuro Linguistic Programming. Karen Hastings is a mental-health Occupational Therapist and Master NLP practitioner. She has worked in the NHS with people experiencing chronic and acute mental-health issues. Karen practices privately in Aldbury Hertfordshire and also offers home-visi. Karenherts's top article generates over 1300 views. to your Favourites.
Martha Brown has sinced written about articles on various topics from Panic Attacks, Neuro Linguistic Programming and Panic Attacks. Learn how to without resorting to prescription drugs or other medication.. Martha Brown's top article generates over 2400 views. to your Favourites.
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