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Way to Handle Anxiety, Panic Attacks |
| Vijai P. Sharma, Ph. D In the past year, 10 to 12 % of people suffered from panic attacks, phobias, and other anxiety disorders. It is the number-one problem for women and in men it is second only to the alcohol and drug problem. Anxiety disorders became the number one mental affliction in the 1980s. Stress keeps going up and so do the anxiety and panic attacks. The number of people who suffer a single panic attack is very large. In the past year, one in three persons experienced some sort of panic attack in response to a stressful situation, such as an examination, public speaking, or a call from the boss when layoffs are being rumored about at work. Symptoms of an anxiety or panic attack are shortness of breath, smothering or choking feeling, heart palpitations, shaking and trembling, dizziness, sweating, hot flashes or cold chills, chest pains, feeling of unreality (such as being in a fog, in a cloud, detached from surroundings), and fear of dying, going crazy, or losing control. A panic attack comes on unexpectedly, escalates rapidly, and subsides within 10 to 15 minutes. A panic attack has at least four of these symptoms. On average, a panic attack has six of the symptoms you just read. An anxiety attack, on the other hand, gradually builds up, it is not sudden and unexpected, symptoms are fewer and milder. If you have any of these symptoms, you are not losing your mind and you are not different from the rest of the human race. As you just read, anxiety disorders afflict a large number of people and surely such a big chunk of population is not becoming crazy. A panic attack is really an "emergency response." Nature has provided us with a built-in emergency response to fight or run when we face a danger. The problem is that once the alarm is set off, it keeps going off even when no real danger exists. It is like the two wires accidentally touch each other and the alarm sound goes off. We have to learn to shut it off. Things to do:
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