Read Microsoft Word - At Last A Life Final Copy 16-03-09 Online
Authors: Maureen
believe that if I just followed Paul’s advice when the thoughts
came, it would work. Believe me, I’m a sceptic when it
comes to ME!…It worked.
I know I am only 2 days into it but when they come, let them
in, see them bounce around in there, let them have a stretch
and roar and shout at you…that’s okay...that’s the over
production of adrenalin needing an outlet. That’s where the
thoughts come from in the first place and because you
placed so much importance on them when they first came,
your mind thinks there is seriously some danger in that
thought. There is NOT!
Let it in…pay it no attention. Give it space and time and let it
run alongside your day. I didn’t believe it would work, but it
did. The thoughts just don’t seem as scary. They are still
there but just a teeny bit less scary. Just don’t stress over it.
Take the fear out of it and what have you got? A thought and
nothing else.
I have many scary thoughts, that’s my difficult one, but if I
keep following the advice, understanding where they come
from and letting them have their space and time…they
eventually lose their edge and I find I can go an hour and
then think ‘oh I haven’t thought that in a while’. Then it comes
back and I do the same all over again: “come on in…take
your time but I am not going to pay you much attention”
It’s been working so far and I am only starting this journey. I
believe it will help me with previous scary thoughts that I had.
I now realise that they too came when I was going through
some tough times. Yes my friends, anxiety. Accept whatever
you are feeling. Don’t “try” to let it go, don’t force it away and
don’t try to make yourself feel better. Don’t try to talk yourself
down but invite every bit of it in. Live it, experience it, realise
that it’s all a part of what you are going through. Don’t fear it.
You WILL NOT collapse and die. So what if you look a bit
weird in front of people? This is you now (just for now and
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that’s okay) getting better and you will soon be back to your
old self. Remove the fear and you remove the problem. It
lives on fear, but through understanding and perseverance I
believe we all can come through, just as Paul has, and will
never have to worry about anxiety again.
Shirley
The following is a post from someone who is now fully recovered:
The problem is an anxiety/depersonalisation sufferer is so
desperate to get better he dives into the subject and wants to
know everything about it, like other sufferers, people’s stories
and experiences, side effects, medical help, cures etc.
However, the answer to anxiety does not lie on an internet
blog or forum, in a pill or expensive psychiatric help, it is
about distancing your thoughts from the initial problem of
anxiety, and then after time your thought patterns alter and
you begin to de-sensitise to TV programmes about
depression, and, in my case, the word ”crazy”, as our minds
begin to engage on other elements of life outside of anxiety.
After this, you will get better, maybe for an hour, a day or a
week, then it will come crashing down again (a setback), but
the memory of that moment of improvement (memory now
acts in your favour) keeps you moving on until the your next
break from anxiety. It’s this incremental process that will
finally take you through, and it does get easier. Just
remember, there is nothing wrong with you or your brain, it’s
just your thoughts are obsessed with your illness and
negativity that is causing your whole body to react. You have
trained your mind to worry, now it’s time to alter it’s focus,
socialise, play sports, video games, puzzles, exciting movies,
anything to re-engage your mind.
Below are a couple of posts from my blog written by me:
This was a post explaining how the anxiety loop continues in many
cases.
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Hi everyone, I was talking with someone the other day about his
anxiety and how it came about. He told me that, at the time, he was
under a lot of pressure at work and one or two things in his home life
were also a factor, although he could not really remember what. He
said “I have cut my hours down and the other problems no longer
exist, so why do I still feel like this”? I replied saying that just like me
when I first suffered, he now had a new problem and this is the
problem that was keeping his anxiety going, to which he replied:
“What new problem”?
I replied:
“Anxiety, these feelings have become your new problem and this is
the reason you stay in the cycle”.
I further explained that initially he may have worried about his job
and the problems at home, with which he agreed. “Right”, I said,
“You put your body under too much stress and worry and it sort of
broke down and you ended up with anxiety. Now what you are doing
is worrying and stressing about how you feel and this is the reason
the anxiety stays around. It has a new worry to feed on. I did exactly
the same; in fact my initial problem did not matter. This anxiety was
far bigger than what brought it on. I worried daily about it, fought it
and tried everything to make the damn thing go away. How could I
ever recover putting this much stress and worry on myself? I could
not”.
He said “I really understand what you’re saying here and I realise
that I am doing all of the above so why I am getting nowhere”
So I told him that he could not hope to banish these feelings, so why
not live with them the best he can for the time being. “If you decide
to do this then you will not add any more fuel to the fire. You will
begin to break a cycle. Anxiety is like a fire that you throw petrol on.
It won’t dampen down until you take away its fuel. It may burn for a
while, but it will begin to go out if you stop feeding it. I did the
opposite for 10 years and it got me nowhere. I now understand
completely why I got worse and not better. If my body could speak, it
would have said ‘Paul just leave me alone and I will heal myself’”
This post was entitled
“Moving forward with Anxiety”.
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A lady whom I knew from a couple of years ago got in touch with me
last week. She sent me a lovely email saying how well she was
doing and now realised what really held her back in the old days,
and this was that she realised she had wanted to get better before
she lived her life rather than go out and live it while she had anxiety.
The fact is she was right
The whole point of this post is to help you to stop seeing anxiety as
the enemy. Don’t wait or demand to feel well before doing things you
want to do.
Trey sent the following reply saying that he had just about recovered
and these are his words:
I finally “got it”. I understood what everyone has been saying and I
let everything go. I did whatever a normal person who didn’t have
anxiety would do. I travelled, hung out with friends, anything, no
matter how bad I felt. I do feel normal again after years of anxiety
and depersonalisation.
What he has done is gone towards his feelings of dread and not let
them stop him living his life. Not only that, but he kept believing that
this would work in the long run. Too many people think “Well I have
been there today and I still feel bad. I just need to get rid of these
damn feelings. That’s the only way I can get on with my life again”.
The trouble is this is why so many stay in a cycle. Anxiety will always
be the enemy if you spend your time trying to get rid of it, as it
always has your fear and respect to feed on. Let me show you how
the anxiety loop works in many cases.
Feel awful - spend all day trying to rid yourself of these symptoms-
feel awful - worry about how long this will go on - feel awful -
avoidance - feel awful - feel a failure - feel awful - get frustrated - feel
awful - fight - feel awful - again start to Google - stay bewildered.
The way to break this loop is to stop seeing anxiety as the enemy
and truly allow yourself to feel this way, so then it goes:
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Feel awful – nothing - there is no avoidance as you are going
everywhere at will. Pride that you did not let anxiety rule your life -
there is no going round in circles trying to rid yourself of the way you
feel as you have not allowed yourself to feel anything. There is no
worry as you no longer care how you feel. The anxiety loop is
beginning to break here. You have done nothing to keep your
anxiety going. You may still feel symptoms and that’s fine, but there
is a lack of worry and fear to add to the mix. If there was an anxiety
shop and someone came in and said “I have anxiety mate, not sure
why but it has been there for a few years now, how come?” I would
say
“Do you worry about it?”
“Well yes, I do, I want it to go away”
“Do you go towards or try to avoid these feelings?”
“Well, I mainly avoid them as I don’t want to feel them’
“Do you try and figure a way out of this or just get on with your day?”
“Well, I try and figure a way out. It’s tiring and I do go around in
circles, but I have to get rid of these feelings don’t I?”
“Have you ever thought about allowing yourself to feel like this, good
or bad? This will stop the worry cycle, the tuning in, the fighting
to ’rid’ yourself. In fact it will break this loop you are stuck in”.
“Actually no, I have never thought of doing that”
‘Well you should as this is why it’s been around for a few years. You
have been stuck in a loop of trying not to feel this way”.
This is the day a light went on for me. I had tried so hard to get rid of
the way I felt and worried about it and the only result was I felt
worse. Why didn’t I just give up and allow myself to feel this way. I
needed to do what someone who did not suffer from anxiety would
do. The average guy in the street is not going around worrying all
day; if he did he would feel awful and drained. No wonder I felt the
way I did and seemed to be getting worse, not better. My body was
just not having the chance to recover.
Never have the attitude “I am not going out, I feel awful. What I need
to do is get rid of these feelings then I will have my life back” The
only way to have that life back is to totally embrace how you feel and
feel every symptom at will. I felt awful for weeks during my own
recovery, but for once I had broken the loop. Don’t misunderstand
me, I had some testing days. I remember going out to a quiz each
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week and sitting there feeling dreadful and just wanting to go home.
I would feel apprehensive at times and almost give in to the
temptation, but I never did. I knew this was anxiety testing me. The
KEY point for me at these times was the point where I wanted to go
home. It was at that stage that I just bought another drink and
stayed. Anxiety had lost my respect. I had said: “Do what you want, I
no longer care; I am in charge from now on”. As time went by I
actually loved it when I was tested. It was a case of “yes we have
been here before and I always win. I am staying, so do whatever
you want”.
Prior to this, as soon as I was feeling uncomfortable I would go
home, feel sorry for myself and mentally try to find a way out of this
hell, when, ironically, I had just left the very place that would have
helped me to move forward. Instead I had given my feelings loads of
respect, run away from how I felt and anxiety had won again. I knew
that if I wanted to get through this I had to learn not to care if I felt
anxious or not and this is the point I finally reached. By not avoiding
and running away, I had unmasked it as just a feeling. My body no
longer felt apprehensive about going anywhere and my nerves had
settled as I had not bombarded them with worry and self pity. Freed
from the daily onslaught it used to receive, my mind had begun to
clear and my confidence had returned. I had proved I could do
anything and that I was in charge and not my anxiety. I was
beginning to take charge again and the old me was returning. By