Panic Is No Laughing
Matter
by Sylvia Dickens
Journalist
Burt Reynolds revealed his vulnerable side when he realized
he was being steered into marriage. One day while browsing the furniture
department with his would-be bride, he suddenly collapsed onto a bed and
doubled into the protective fetal form. Moments later, he was sucking
oxygen through a brown paper bag, his eyes wide and darting.
His panic attack was interpreted in a humorous way for the
sake of the movie, but real panic and anxiety attack survivors know
there's nothing funny about it.
Impending divorce triggered my first major panic episode.
It stirred almost daily, waiting for any event that would bring it to the
surface in a full blown attack. Sure enough such an event did arise, but
not from any outside force.
While I contemplated taking a shower one day, anxiety swept
over me, along with an unexplained dread that something terrible was going
to happen. Suddenly, I was afraid to eat, afraid to go out, afraid to stay
home alone.
As I drove down the highway, uprooted trees and black
garbage bags along the route took on indistinguishable grotesque shapes.
Passing through overpasses was particularly alarming as I dreaded losing
control and smashing into the abutment. Elevators and stairwells triggered
a new symptom: claustrophobia.
Particularly alarming was the day I was afraid I'd lose
control and toss myself off the 6th floor balcony. That's when I knew it
was time to get help.
Two years of psychiatric treatment eventually brought an
end to those terrifying events. Until 10 years later when I decided to
switch careers and return to college. I was 37.
Then, it happened again. I was in the huge school cafeteria
walking along the self serve line. It began as I became intensely aware of
the drone of voices echoing throughout the quadrant. Quite unexpectedly,
anxiety swept over me. I thought I'd lose my mind as my heart and thoughts
raced and that old familiar dread took hold.
Struggling with the attack, I made it to a seat and tried
to eat my lunch but it soon became apparent it wasn't possible. The
initial fear was verging on panic. I rushed from the cafeteria to the
nursing station at the top of the stairs, but at that point, I felt it
might pass.
I continued aimlessly down the busy hallway. All I could
think of was getting away from the noise, the bustling students and the
insecure openness. Moments later, sitting in the peaceful, dimly lit
student lounge, I curled up in an armchair and fell asleep. When I awoke,
the attack had passed.
Years ago, my doctor had explained that my attacks were a
result of a chemical imbalance. He also pointed out that a lack of
confidence and a sense of impending loss of control were related to my
anxiety.
During my therapy, I persistently plied him with questions
and bombarded him with every sensation I had over the previous week. He
was a man of few words, always turning my questions back on me to
interpret. Through his few choice words, worries of things going wrong in
my life were soon mere flashes, rather than mounting thoughts to stoke my
simmering anxiety.
His advice echoed when I emerged from that major panic
attack at the college 10 years later. I was in a strange environment
undertaking a new career. The attack clearly was brought on by my fear of
failing, along with numerous other fears.
It all made sense. I was moving into a new frontier with
new faces, new challenges. In all likelihood, I would emerge a new person,
but as happened with my divorce, it was a time when I feared I would lose
control of my body, my mind and my life.
What saved me was something my psychiatrist said years
before when he responded quite simply to one of my 'what if…' questions.
His reply has become my 'mantra', if you will.
In an effort to make me focus directly on the issue and
think rationally about the outcome, he merely asked, 'So what?' Who could
have known that those two small words would become my rock? The moment a
terrifying thought entered my head, all I had to do was ask, "So what?
What's the worst that could happen?" and it was never as bad as I'd
imagined. And today, it always brings me back to earth. There is help for
you, too.
Recently, I came across a product that I wish I had when my
panic attacks were raging. This e-book provides an equally simple and
highly effective solution for people who have panic attacks.
Understanding how the body reacts is the first step to
knowing that panic and anxiety attacks can be cured without medication.
Joe Barry has taught thousands of people to be panic free. To learn more
about his successful formula go to Panic.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sylvia
Dickens has struggled and overcome panic and anxiety. Formerly with the
Canadian Mental Health Association, she's written, "A Guide to Teenage
Depression & Suicide" and offers a book to
cure panic quickly and
without medication. Visit her at
http://www.book-titles.ca