Anxiety Disorder
and different types of phobias
The aim of
this site is to help people conquer their anxiety
disorders or different types
of phobias.
Many people
are fearful, anxious or phobic about something in their
everyday lives and for many learning to cope with a phobia
can become a struggle or even a prison cell that can at
times seem impossible to escape from.
This website is continually growing and will,
become the home of many new articles related to topics
like social anxiety, commitment phobia and the many forms
of panic attacks that many people suffer from.
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So what is a phobia exactly?
A phobia is an intense fear of
a situation, like flying, or an object, such as a
spider. But sometimes people who say they have a
phobia are in fact just fearful of something, and they
don’t actually have a strong panic or anxiety
response.
Their fear doesn’t actually interfere with their
lives, and with more familiarity with a situation or
object, like being taught that spiders are harmless, they
would begin to see there is no basis for their
fear.
However, people who have a phobia about spiders
(arachnophobia), who have panic attacks in response to
seeing a spider, such information will not cure them of
their fear, and they will avoid places where they might
encounter spiders.
Apart from the phobia itself, like fear
of going in lifts, phobics are often scared of the
physical sensations of panic as well as the feelings of
impending catastrophe. A person with a phobia may
feel they will go mad, lose control, faint or even die,
so strong is the phobia.
When people feel like this, it may be important
to deal with these panicky feelings first, rather than
their problem with the object of the phobia. So
people with phobias need to be able to recognise that the
response feelings they have to their phobia are only
temporary and natural and do not mean they are going to
die or go mad.
When fears get out of hand and beyond reason,
they become phobias. But any fear that stops
someone from living their life to the full may be
considered a phobia, and can be dealt with.
Many fears are entirely natural. It is
natural to fear heights, in fact it is one of the few
fears we are actually born with. But when we are afraid
to go to a higher floor in a house, it is a definite
problem and should be looked on as a
phobia.
It is encouraging to know that phobias can be
overcome as they are mostly learned fears which have
become extreme, out of proportion to the object of the
fear, and crippling to someone’s life.
There are various recommended therapies to cure
phobias. One of the most successful is cognitive
behavioural therapy which helps people with phobias face
up to their fears, control their symptoms and in time
feel accepting of whatever was causing their extreme
anxiety.
CBT helps phobics change the way they think
about what gives them the feeling of catastrophe until
after gradual exposure to whatever is the object or
situation associated with the phobia, the phobia
passes.
People feel a sense of achievement when they
have actually participated in such a programme to relieve
them of their phobia, and this can lead to increased self
esteem and confidence.
Want to boot
your phobias and anxiety into touch?
For a complete guide chock-full of helpful
information to keep at your fingertips, print out for your gym
bags, glove box, briefcase, and anywhere….grab your copy
of: The
self help book and curing anxiety guide
Anxiety Disorder and Panic Attacks
In America alone, over 20 million people undergo
stress and other symptoms associated with anxiety
disorder, phobias and panic attacks. While many
believe it’s “all in their heads,” let’s take a look at
the facts surrounding anxiety and panic
attacks.
Q: Do Doctors today recognize
the seriousness of anxiety and panic attacks? Do they
always correctly diagnose the different types
of phobias?
A: Yes, anxiety attacks have been classified
with Mental Disorders (as opposed to Medical Disorders).
And physicians realize that these can be
debilitating.
Q: What causes these
anxiety disorders/attacks?
A: The root of them is fear and stress. Three of
the leading stress generators today are the environment,
changes of the body and those of the mind. How the mind
handles stress is of major focus in these cases. Modern
day phobia
statistics can be quite revealing.
Q: Is there a cure for these
anxiety attacks or deep-rooted phobia symptoms?
A: The good news is that you can change the way
you handle and deal with stress, even social anxiety! When
people face their problems, they face their fears and
stress.
Q: What is a major symptom most
people face with their attacks? And what can help “fix”
this?
A: When people with anxiety and panic disorders
get afraid, they immediately begin breathing shallowly
which actually increases their discomfort even more. In a
nutshell, sufferers need to take charge: (1) Plant
yourself firmly, either sitting or standing, feet flat on
floor. (2) Gently push down with feet, grounding
yourself, while taking deep breaths slowly in, then
exhaling slowly out; slowly in - hold breath, then slowly
out. Repeat for about 5 minutes to calm down. There are
more exercises to help. This is a brief version, a
2-step.
Q: What happens next? How do
you “face your fears” in a healthy manner.
A: Again this has a more in-depth answer, but to
point to a major answer to help, you need to face
triggers. This is not an overnight process. But there are
good systems for facing triggers, one at a time, so that
your fears hold less to no more power over
you.
Stammering and
anxiety
Anxiety and speech disorders often go hand in
hand. The how to stop stammering center offers a
proven cure for stuttering and stuttering advice and stuttering information. We suggest you take a look at this site if you
suffer from a stammer or know someone close to you that
is a sufferer.
Beat
your anxiety disorders and overcome your phobias.
Adults have their own lives to be responsible
for and need to take charge, make decisions and be
responsible. No one will make perfect decisions all the
time. We all take risks daily.
The good news is that with a proper mindset in
place and the right tools to face life’s daily
challenges, facing our anxiety phobias and fears can get
much easier over time. Like learning to ride a bike,
there are ups and downs, but wonderful rides are ahead
for those who master the concept. Anxiey disorders and
the many various types of phobias can be
overcome.
Phobias are very debilitating and limiting
things to experience. Although most of us have at one
time or another said we are “phobic” about something, in
reality, that is not the case.
Although phobias are common, most people do not
suffer from them. A true phobia is an extreme and
debilitating fear of something that is irrational, and
that does not dissipate over time.
For instance, a person who has arachnophobia has
an extreme fear of spiders. He or she is not just a
little squeamish about squashing that spider in the
bathtub, but is extremely terrified of them.
Most of us cannot say this about our fears of
things. A person with severe agoraphobia is so fearful of
open spaces that he or she may be become completely
housebound over time.
But agoraphobia itself usually does not develop
alone. Instead, it develops as a result of an avoidance
of something else, such as being in
public.
Although it is extremely difficult to actually
“cure” a phobia, if not impossible, phobias certainly can
be controlled to the point where the person who
experiences them can have a normal life.
Two common and popular types of therapy that are
effective are medication and “immersion” therapy, in
which, the person with the phobia is confronted with the
object or situation they are fearful of, with help from a
therapist, and are slowly desensitized to their object of
fear over time.
For many people, medications such as
antidepressants can also help with panic disorders and
phobias. Although phobias cannot truly be said to be
“cured” when people have therapy and/or medication, they
can resume normal functions and get on with their
lives.
Although it is possible that some people may
simply get over their phobias without intervention, or
may confront their fears and face them by themselves, for
many people, therapy plus perhaps a combination of
medication may be the best solution.
If you or someone you love is suffering from a
phobia, the first thing to be assured of is that you
should be not embarrassed. Phobias are not a bad habit
that you simply gotten into of your own volition or
because you are “a bad person.”
Often, phobias develop in childhood, because
children don’t have the physical capacity to handle
stress that adults do, and they become coping mechanisms.
At other times, phobias develop for adults because they
have gone through a traumatic event in their
lives.
The most important thing to know is that there
is help available, including therapy and medication, and
phobias can be controlled, if not cured.
I hope that you find this site helpful and
informative.

Want to boot
your phobias and anxiety into touch?
For a complete guide chock-full of helpful
information to keep at your fingertips, print out for your gym
bags, glove box, briefcase, and anywhere….grab your copy
of: The
self help book and curing anxiety guide
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