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11 years ago 0 4 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hello Vinchenza,

Thank you for the welcome. Yes, it's very good to see a community of people trying to help each other through experience, that aspect was definitely one of the things that attracted me to this program. It's good to not be alone, I mean I knew I wasn't, but it's good to actually be able to read what other people who are going through similar things say, their take on issues.

Yes, that part of it, the fact that the "subconscious" can affect every day life, I agree with. That's why it's important to stop negative self talk, and also to make sure you catch behaviours and thought patterns (even the ones that you are only peripherally aware of doing/acting upon) that are unhealthy for you. Those thoughts patterns however are something you should be able to notice of affect in some way, maybe I misunderstood, but it seemed like the way Davit explained it these would be un-noticeable things and that I don't trust to be true. It has been my experience that at some point you can catch a memory or thought patterns and  thus can change them.
It's something I noticed a difference with quite a bit when I went through a course focused on OCD, they did something that later seemed to me to be related to "Dialectical behaviour therapy" (which is meant to be used in tandem with CBT - I've picked up a book DBT recently to review) which when it is in reference to OCD has a lot to do with 'mindfulness' (awareness of self-talk and thoughts).
But I don't think that's the issue with my 'chemical/body panic attacks'. Because actively doing positive self-talks helps when I have anxiety caused by not being mindful enough, but it doesn't seem to have an effect on the frequency or intensity of these panic attacks. (I thought that might be what was causing them at first too, but due to non-effect of skills that help with those sorts of thing I've mostly ruled it out as a likely cause. I wasn't quick about that either, I tried for a year.)
When memories or thoughts are affecting you 

As to 'crawling in a box'... Well, I've had a lot of situational anxiety and depression these last few years (three people I loved died, my mother's codependent behaviour has spiralled out of control staying with a partner who is a substance abuser and has driven them both to living on the streets, and my significant other had a mental break down because of pressure at his work) and when I couldn't cope in other ways because the situations were over-whelming, I would remove myself from the things that were extraneous effort to maintain and caused me anxiety. Sometimes the only way to cope with the immediate is to pull back and work on expanding outwards again when you can cope with the immediate/internal.
I didn't know until I came here that my extreme anxiety about being alone was actually a form of agoraphobia, for me has been a very key thing, I have never enjoyed going out by myself but I dealt with it by having somewhere specific to go, when things started going poorly in my life pushing myself to go anywhere alone was only with a lot of difficulties, and I had only even been okay with it for limited times, and I moved into a state of never wanting to be alone with some alone situations being worse than others. I've pushed past that a bit, I can be at home alone now, and I've gone back to being able to walk to the store by myself if I have a specific list, or waiting for someone after being dropped off, but I still don't go anywhere alone at this point unless I'm either going to meet someone else or I have a specific task I am getting done.
I've never thought it was logical or okay, and wouldn't let myself stay at the worst point (and clearly I still want to work forward, since I am here reviewing so I can be ready for that push) but it has been my experience that for some things the discomfort never ceases (being alone, calling people, working on projects that I didn't decide the parameters for, showing people that work on projects or assignments, meeting new people, or going new places that someone else chose) you just learn to live with it, and at the worst point all my negative emotions were magnified and I just couldn't deal with or live with it or I had to retract for a bit.
Only at my worst points was I completely unable to act despite my emotions (which was when I was in the worst parts of the grieving process) I push myself most times. But sometimes you feel like you aren't okay and just have to crawl into box for a bit, and when you're okay just being in that box, you can start climbing out again and live outside it.

It is quite possible that these situation have had a significant effect on my panic attacks, however that would mostly mean that it would just be a time thing before they subside. As I deal with the situations and the situations improve (or I get used to them, as is the case for someone being gone, or someone behaving in a way that you find severely unhealthy and can't change for them.) they might eventually lessen, which is quite okay with me, but it's still not comfortable in the mean time. I want to know as much about what is happening to me and what I can do about it, as possible. The more I know about why something is happening, the better I am equipped to help myself.
The only other trouble is because of the timing of these events, they have comprised and compromised the vast majority of my adult life so far, so pushing into the working world is going to be a serious problem in and of itself just due to lack of experience. Which is a situation anxiety I have yet to really come to, but know is on the horizon.

Thanks for your reply, I hope my responses are clear. (It's good to be able to talk about it openly and honestly.)
11 years ago 0 6252 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Vincenza

I have come across spots on the internet where they teach people how to change thought before it becomes action to prevent it from causing panic and then conditioning through memory. I just thought people could do this on their own if they knew it was necessary. I wonder how people are doing it and if they realize that most of the time they are doing it unconsciously.

Slightly off the subject, it has been said that people who get panic attacks are of higher intelligence than average and have a better imagination. A test of your imagination, thought process and intelligence is to visualize the back side of some object that you can see only one side of. Say your house. You have seen the other side of it but can you visualize it. If you can then you have good access to your memory. This is a two edged sword. Having good access to your memory is not good if it is full of anxiety causing memories. But it is very good if you have lots of calming positive memories to counter anxious moments. And if you can imagine horrors you can imagine answers to the horrors. Still it is a matter of doing it.

Davit. (Who builds without plans because he is very good at visualizing. He also had panic attacks that lasted for hours before CBT.)

PS. I can hold things like strings of numbers, phone numbers, every plant in my garden and plans of most anything in my head which sometimes leads to information overload and panic.
11 years ago 0 4 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Yo Davit,

Hm... Thank you for telling me about those. Though to be honest, I don't think I buy it (at least as you've explained it), and it doesn't make sense to me either.

Some elements of it (at least have you have explained it) are not possible: Thoughts are a mixture of electrical and chemical, and we can see it on things like CT scans, and even if we don't know everything we have a pretty good idea of what ideas are ridiculous and not possible. Thoughts don't, for instance, move faster than the speed of light; anyone saying "we can't see my version of the truth because it's happening *invisibly*" is probably selling pseudo science.
Invisible, intangible and untestable is the opposite of evidence. (That last category, untestable, makes it not capable of being part of science/known things.)

I remember most of my life, some people don't have a lot of recall for their childhoods, or they had un-dealt-with issues, where as I, have been in and out of treatment for depression and anxiety learning and refreshing my learning for coping skills since I first started having issues at 7. (Since I'm in my mid twenties, that's just under two decades. Most of my life.) So even if memory does influence my every action, I have troubles believing that there is anything to remember I wouldn't have dealt with at the time, yeah know what I mean?
I make a habit of challenging my experiences and conception of things, and when I do have a negative experience that is situational I remind myself that it is in the past and doesn't need any of my active concern, I should learn from it not relive it.
Learning these skills so young is actually what I attribute to my being even as healthy mentally as I am, sure I still have issues, but I have been preventing cycles of negative self-talk or background anxiety from running wild for years now. I stop them when I catch myself doing them, sometimes as quickly as they start to happen. It's a habit at this point, and also something I practice actively when I need to; it can still be a struggle some-days, I am ever mindful and making an effort to keep myself out of those kinds of unhelpful thought patterns and stress causing worry cycles.

The first hypothesis I don't mind really, because if there really isn't anything I can do about, that's okay, it's not fun, but at least it would mean that it's not something I'm doing or not doing.
My psychiatrist will hopefully find me a drug (or set of drugs) that can help, though so far I've had rare poor responses and allergic reactions to everything I've tried, but I'll keep trying til I run out of options and just have to cope.

Thank you for replying though Davit, the explanation is helpful.

(I'll make a separate post for replying to Vincenza, thank you both for your responses. It's good to be heard)
11 years ago 0 1853 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hi Purple-Shade, 

Welcome to the PC community.  As you can see, you joined a very supportive group of people who have had similar experiences with symptoms of anxiety and panic.  

Davit, thank you for taking the time to explain the panic triangle.  The concept of how our subconscious minds react to potential triggers in either a positive or negative way is very interesting.  It emphasizes the importance of challenging negative or illogical thoughts to break harmful thought patterns which can change our brain chemistry.  

Purple-Shade, you mentioned that you "let yourself crawl into a box in the last few years".  Can you share with us what you mean by this?  Could there be a connection with your experience in the last few years and the increase in your random panic attacks?  What are your thoughts on the Panic Triangle theory?
11 years ago 0 6252 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Purple-Shade

There are two theories on GAD. one and by far the most common is that they are random and have no reason for why they happen. (go away and accept you are crazy) (take a pill) Then there is the other theory which so far has not made it into the internet and will probably be wrong when it does. This one makes sense to me. It is the Panic Triangle and is a version of the Thought Triangle. It goes like this. We are born with nothing in memory except a few inherited skills. Very few. From day one we start storing memories for future reference. A lot of it is observation and trial and error. 
Every thing you think or do first goes through memory to find the appropriate thought or action based on previous experience. At least the voluntary ones do. Breathing and other involuntary actions are a different part.
So if you accept this theory then memory influences your every action.
The triangle works like this. First corner is intention. A thought or planned action. The second corner is stored memory related to this intention. The third corner is the action based on this stored memory of previous related actions. This second corner is also where we get imagination by replaying all possibilities from previous observations. It doesn't stop there. All three corners work together. The third corner also influences the first two by recycling the thought back to the second corner for future reference and to the first corner to stimulate the next thought or planned action. On and on every second of our life. If it was not that it is unconscious it would drive us crazy because it happens continuously and at the speed of light. Faster in fact than conscious thought. But when it starts to go round the triangle over and over mostly between point two and three then it becomes conscious. As in things like walking on slippery ground which takes more than usual concentration. 
Taking the theory one step further. If in fact it works like that and I believe it does then there is a lot of information going around our brains at any one given moment and we can hit triggers we are not aware are there that bring the thought to conscious thought for a moment because they need more action to decide what to do with them. This I believe is where these temporary short lived panics come from and I believe they are harmless. OCD attached to this subconscious trigger would be a different storey I think but then I have no information on that.
Now in panic situations you can see where storing that action for future reference would make you prone to future panic on and on. Between point two (thought) and point three (action) is where you install positive thoughts to break the cycle by storing a positive action in thought memory for future reference and influence.
So called normal people do this subconscious because they don't know how not to whereas those of us who have had panic attacks are very good at storing and using negative thoughts.

Davit.
11 years ago 0 4 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hey all,

I've joined here because I'm already familiar with using CBT and feel like I need a bit of a refresher. Especially for pushing anxiety boundaries and breaking out of the box I've let myself crawl into these last few years.
However, I am running into a few troubles unrelated to that, CBT is something I already apply in my daily life, and have for years, and it doesn't seem to help with all of my troubles. I have what I called body panic, or chemical panic, which is where I suddenly feel panicked but it's essentially only physical symptoms without any specific thoughts to accompany it, and I am often wondering and asking myself "why are you panicking? This is silly I have no reason to panic" and I have no answer.
Later upon examining the situation or thoughts I had (I have OCD thought obsessions, so I am very aware of my thoughts and practice mindfulness), I still can't think of any reason I was a panic attack (when I first started having them I would start thinking of all the things that made my anxious and could make myself worse trying to figure it out and stressing feeling like "there must be a reason", but I have since realized it's easier to just tell myself it's chemical and wait it out/try to calm down.)

Often I wake up to these, but they also happen randomly. I do also have triggers, but these no-trigger panic attacks are the most common for me, and I looked through the course but didn't see anything that covered coping with 'no trigger' panic attacks. They can be very disruptive, and sometimes if it lasts for quite some time I can start to feel very trapped or frustrated in an ambivalent sort of way combined with the panic, because I seem to have no control over how I feel, or when it ends. (Though I've developed a cycle of behaviours [non-compulsive FYI] which I can use to calm myself down, and when I wake up with one most of the time it works, but when they happen seemingly randomly when I'm awake waiting it out can take a lot longer.) If I get too frustrated I can unintentionally overwhelm myself and become incoherently panicky instead of still thoughtful, so I try not to let myself think about it and focus on calming down.

I also get anxiety in this sort of way, but much less commonly, as my anxiety mostly has triggers. (And so causes avoidance behaviours, where as my panic attacks feel unavoidable and uncontrollable)

Something worth noting, so that it's clear it is not in fact a 'hidden trigger': I don't spend much, if any, time worrying about if I'll have another panic attack and what that will be like, I've mostly accepted that I will and do my best not to worry or think about it. Dwelling on things you don't want to happen has never been helpful for me, so I try not to engage in that thought-pattern/behaviour.


What can I do? What is the next step in coping with these? Am I already doing all I can? I hope not but at least if I know that I don't have to feel like I'm not trying hard enough.

Thanks, and sorry for the length, I'm wordy...
 - Ivy


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