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pablo0977
01-04-17, 19:18
So I have been reading books by anxiety specialists, doctors, and surfing online for everything I can get my hands on regarding health anxiety. There are two major things I have come away with.

1. Anxiety is a mofo, and can cause or exacerbate (directly or indirectly) every physical sensation you can imagine and that it can last for days and even weeks after the initial panic.

2. A really cool concept: Starving Your Health Anxiety

I got this from reading Dennis Simsek (merely giving credit, not endorsing him). The idea is that you personify you anxiety as something that feeds on your fears, obsessions, and compulsions. Every time you feel the urge to check your pulse, count your twitches, google your symptoms, and etc., you are feeding the beast. So when you feel the compulsion to do these things try and visualize yourself refusing to feed it.

The beast will howl and bark, trying everything it can to get you to give in. But you mustn't, because if you do it will come back. It will always come back. The only way to get the beast to leave you alone is not to feed it. It will eventually move on. The beast will occasionally come back to see if you have changed your mind, to see if it can convince you to feed it again, but you must refuse.

The beast doesn't want to help you. It knows that you feel better feeding it. It also knows that you will be enslaved by the process. The beast doesn't care. It needs to feed. Sure, something bad will happen to you someday and the beast will be the first one to say "I told you so." But nothing you did for it prevented that from happening. Remember that the beast only wants to be fed.

There is a physiological component to this that I have inferred from basic reading on anxiety. Anxiety releases adrenaline and, if you have a significant enough episode, over a period of time your body will become dependent on that rush. I am no doctor or psychologist, but that sounds very similar to other forms of chemical dependency. We create a state that our body gets used to: that it defines as normal, and it will do its best to maintain that state.

I hope this helps. It has been helpful for me since Jackrabbit and I pledged to personify and kick our anxiety to the curb. Good luck and best wishes!

Pablo

GlassPinata
01-04-17, 19:29
Good advice.
My dad once suggested something similar.

Jackrabbit
01-04-17, 19:38
This is awesome! Every point you make here is so on point. Anxiety is an annoying leech and we have the power to cut it off. Once and for all.

pablo0977
01-04-17, 20:39
Thanks guys. I like to write both fiction and nonfiction, so when I read this concept I just kind of let my imagination run with it. Hope it helps!

ErinKC
02-04-17, 02:14
Thanks for this post!! When I was putting my daughter to bed I was brainstorming on what I could google to try and relax myself about my irrational spoiled food panic today. But then when I was walking downstairs I remembered this post and decided not to feed the monster!

pablo0977
02-04-17, 02:17
Thanks for this post!! When I was putting my daughter to bed I was brainstorming on what I could google to try and relax myself about my irrational spoiled food panic today. But then when I was walking downstairs I remembered this post and decided not to feed the monster!

Awesome, Erin! Good luck!

pablo0977
02-04-17, 18:31
My beast is barking today. It seems to get more desperate the longer I go without feeding it. I am getting to a point in my recovery where I feel very disconnected from who I was just a few days ago. I don't understand why I was so debilitated by this. But the beast thinks I've gotten complacent. It wants me to question myself. But I can tell I am getting better because it doesn't grip me as often or for as long as before.

snowghost57
02-04-17, 19:33
Bill had another word for anxiety, it's a parasite. It does suck the life out of us if we let it. Just don't feed it! Robert Handly wrote a book, (not trying to promote anything here) that adrenaline is the root of panic attacks. For example your body is like a rain barrel and we dump adrenaline into it(barrel) Eventually the barrel will get full and over flow. Hence a panic attack when we can't cope anymore. I too am working on not feeding this creature and live drug and anxiety free! I'm not going back to zombie drugs and I tell myself I am getting better every day!

GlassPinata
02-04-17, 19:53
My little boy is with his dad for the weekend, and we are under a severe thunderstorm warning, with heavy rains and flooding, hail, and tornados possible.
It is terrifying, I want to run and get him right now, I'm so afraid for him in this weather.... but as you said, I am trying not to feed the monster. Finding ways to distract myself. Just did some major housecleaning, now I'm coloring my hair, just trying to stay busy and not to let the anxiety overwhelm me.

Best wishes to all. I hope we overcome this wretched disorder someday.

Elizabeth Fry
02-04-17, 20:55
Thank you so much for your post. It's very helpful and I'm going to follow it up.

pablo0977
02-04-17, 23:47
Glad it helped!

snowghost57
03-04-17, 01:00
It is true. Our anxious thoughts are creations of our mind. Someone posted this my FB page, "Don't think to much, you'll create a problem that wasn't even there in the first place" I truly believe this is what anxiety does!

pablo0977
03-04-17, 01:08
It is true. Our anxious thoughts are creations of our mind. Someone posted this my FB page, "Don't think to much, you'll create a problem that wasn't even there in the first place" I truly believe this is what anxiety does!

I agree! Good luck!