Read Microsoft Word - At Last A Life Final Copy 16-03-09 Online
Authors: Maureen
yourself into a state thinking about all the pros and cons, just go
ahead and do it.
Diet can also help. It is not the only answer, but can certainly
enhance feelings of well-being. A good diet can be helpful and I
would suggest eating healthily, with plenty of fresh fruit and
vegetables. If you go to my website, you will see a list of foods to
avoid and foods that are good for you. I believe that a good diet is
nature’s medicine and can give you everything medication can give
you without the side effects and other problems.
When I changed my diet, I was not perfect, so you don’t have to get
too hung up about what you do and don’t eat. Don’t think one cup of
coffee will set you up for an anxious day. The more changes you
make to your lifestyle through diet and exercise, the better you will
feel; it’s as simple as that.
Alcohol
There is nothing wrong with drinking alcohol in moderation to help
you unwind, but it does not help to relieve anxiety. In the short term
it can be good, but it dehydrates the body, leaving you feeling more
anxious than ever. If you feel unable to give up altogether, then just
try to drink alcohol in moderation.
I spent a great deal of time drinking alcohol to block out my feelings
of anxiety until I realised that all I was doing was running away from
how I felt. I decided to stop running away and face my problems. It
was very difficult at the time, but the rewards gained were well worth
it.
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COMING THROUGH DEPERSONALISATION
Earlier in this book I covered the feeling of detachment from oneself,
otherwise known as
‘depersonalisation’.
This is an emotional
disorder where you lose touch with your own personal reality,
accompanied by feelings of unreality and strangeness, as well as
the sensation of ones environment looking or feeling strange and
unusual. This is one symptom that keeps cropping up, so I decided
to add an extra chapter on this annoying, yet harmless sensation.
Depersonalisation is a common and understandable offshoot of the
anxiety condition. I can also tell you that it is in no way a mental
illness. It is not serious or harmful in any way and has a totally
logical explanation. It is temporary and, with patience and
understanding, eventually passes like any other symptom.
This is really no more than a tired mind, a mind that craves a rest to
refresh itself. When your limbs tire, they begin to ache. These
feelings of unreality occur when your mind tires of all the stress and
worry, all the introspection and tuning in to how you feel. It can do
you no long term harm, but will hang around for as long as you
constantly worry and obsess about how you feel. This means your
mind gets no rest and cannot heal itself.
The key to recovering from this feeling of detachment is to surrender
to this strange feeling. Pay it no respect and realise it is just the
product of an over-tired mind, fatigued by your constant worrying
thoughts and the constant checking in on how you feel. This
symptom relies on your fear of it to keep it alive.
When people are caught up in the worry cycle, they begin to think
deeply and constantly. They study themselves from deep within,
checking in and focusing on their symptoms. They may even wake
in the morning only to continue this habit, “How do I feel this
morning? I wonder if I will be able to get through today. What’s this
new sensation I feel?” This may go on all day, exhausting their
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already tired mind further. This constant checking in and constant
assessing of their symptoms then becomes a habit, but like all other
habits this one can also be changed.
All this worry is bound to make your mind feel dull and unresponsive.
You are so concerned about how you feel that you are letting
nothing else into your day. Is it any wonder you have come to feel so
distanced from your surroundings? Is it any wonder you find it so
hard to concentrate? When people are studying for exams for hours
on end, they reach the point where they can no longer take in any
more information, so they take a break and carry on the day after.
For you, there are no breaks and no time outs.
As I have already mentioned earlier, your body has a safety
mechanism that protects it from all this worry and slows the mind
down to safeguard itself. It takes a step back from this onslaught
and shuts emotions and feelings down. This can then produce your
feelings of detachment. The world around you may become hazy or
out of focus and you feel empty, like a walking shell. Again this is
your body saying enough is enough. I am not built to take all this
worry, this constant deep thinking and questioning, so I will take my
own break. Once you understand that you are not going mad and
this symptom is being caused by an over-tired mind, exhausted
through worry and introspection, it makes sense. These feelings
cannot harm you in any way. With the fear factor taken out, it begins
to hold less power over you and does not have the same effect.
Although it is still annoying, you now know why you feel these
feelings. Once you learn to accept them and stop adding worrying
thoughts to the mix, this is another symptom that you will be able to
overcome in time. Taking a step back and giving up the worrying
thoughts, gives your mind the chance to rest, rejuvenate and refresh
itself.
When it happened to me, I recognised and understood what was
causing it. I realised that I
was
checking in and worrying about how I
felt and I did fear this sensation, so I just stopped doing it. I also
learnt to get busier and stop brooding on this and other symptoms.
Being active gives you another focus. Having too much time on your
hands can open the door to too much needless thinking. With less
worry and fear of this harmless but upsetting symptom, I was
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eventually able to overcome it. It merely became a nuisance and
because I knew the reason for its existence, it no longer held any
power over me. When a worry or fear loses its importance, it loses
its power and that is why it is essential to realise these symptoms
are neither harmful nor serious. Gradually, without all the checking in
and worrying, this symptom that so dominated my life began to
diminish and eventually disappeared completely.
This symptom is like any other. All symptoms are still being fuelled
by your fear of them. As long as the fear continues, so will the
symptoms. When we start to understand why we feel like we do, we
automatically fear them less and they start to lose their edge and
importance. We don’t pay them as much respect, we worry about
them less and we don’t feel the need to work each one of them out.
This is when symptoms gradually start to fade.
One lady emailed me recently after I had been helping her with this
symptom and said to me: “Paul, I actually did a lot better today. I
simply did not care how weird, not with it, in a dream and
disconnected I felt and it actually made the day easier”. This is
exactly what I wanted her to achieve. Because she stopped
concerning herself all day with how she felt, she was able to start
looking outwards instead of inwards and invite other things into her
day, while giving her mind the rest it needed.
A statement that came from another lady, which I believe is relevant
to all aspects of anxiety was:
“Paul, on a positive note
,
I'm fine now! I got through a lot of
depersonalisation and other aspects of my anxiety by trying to
'engage' with the real world and I stopped focusing on how weird I
felt’.
This is why I always say ‘Live your life’. Don’t worry or concern
yourself with how you feel. I used to go about my day feeling odd,
weird, anxious and not with it, but it was fine. This is the way
through. You can do the opposite and walk around questioning it all,
fighting it, trying to rid yourself of how you feel, worrying about it and
getting frustrated by it, if you wish. But which approach will give your
mind and body the break it needs? I took the second option for 9
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years and just got worse, only when I did the opposite did things
begin to improve.
To finish this chapter, I am including a post that I did a while back on
the subject, entitled
‘Recovery from Depersonalisation/
Derealisation’
, with which people really identified.
Well this post was changed from another subject to this as it seems
to be a hot topic at the moment and I am going to be very honest
about depersonalisation here and try and help people who are still
bewildered by it. I will hold nothing back and tell my whole story and
the truth behind it.
Firstly let’s just refresh ourselves about Depersonalisation and why
we have it. Let’s start by saying that D.P is not just an anxiety
symptom. I have read a great deal on the subject and discovered
that people who have been to war can suffer, people who have lost
a love one can suffer temporarily from it and people who had
something happen to them early in their life that really hurt or
shocked them, can suffer bouts of D.P. Many people who don’t
suffer from anxiety have D.P, although I would say anxiety is the
main reason.
So let’s go back to a person who went to war and saw things that
shocked him and he would rather forget. D.P is his body’s way of
shutting down these memories and feelings in order to block them
out and protect him. Have you ever seen that blank look on the face
of someone who has just lost a loved one? It’s as though they are
not really listening and are somewhere else. A few people who have
lost loved ones may have temporary D.P. It is their body’s way of
protecting them from all the hurt and worry and they may begin to
think very deeply, just like anxiety sufferers. Once the hurt and pain
weakens, they tend to become their old selves again and the D.P
leaves them as it is no longer needed to protect them. People who
have experienced shocking and hurtful events early in their lives,
may get bouts of D.P to suppress these memories and to shut out
the hurt.
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Now let’s move on to anxiety and the reason why people suffer with
D.P. Why it is only natural that you will? I had anxiety for about two
years before I had any symptoms of D.P. I showed no symptoms at
all, until I became more angry and frustrated by how I felt. I was
being moved from one doctor to another and nothing was working.
This was about the time I decided I would have to figure it out for
myself. So I worried daily about how I felt and spend all my waking
hours trying to figure a way out of this mess. I spent my whole day
feeling sorry for myself and was on the verge of tears at every
waking moment. Day after day this went on, until one day I went
home and, as I was stroking my dog, I felt as though I was not really
there. My vision seemed blurred and I had no idea what was
happening. What happened that day is my body said ‘enough is
enough. I cannot take this worry and deep thinking anymore and to
protect me, and you, I have to shut your emotions down’ and this is
exactly what it did. I could feel no emotions, no happiness, no
sensations and no joy. The whole world went grey and lifeless and I
seemed to become a walking shell.
But what happened next was I began to worry about this new
symptom. I tried to figure out not only the anxiety, but this new
sensation of feeling lost and empty. What was happening to me? I
was more bewildered than ever and I now spent my time getting
worse. I really had entered the cycle that would pull me in deeper. If