Read Microsoft Word - At Last A Life Final Copy 16-03-09 Online
Authors: Maureen
without reverting back to me, without feeling as though I had to
place each word in a sentence. I said to my mother “I just know this
is it, full recovery”. She asked how I knew and I said “well, you know
when people say they think they may be in love, but they are not
sure, but others say if you’re in love you just know’ -that is what it is
like.”
I thought I had recovered before as I had so many good days, but
now I knew, it went to another level - total freedom. I never thought
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about anxiety any more unless I worked with it and then it was just
like any other subject. It no longer bothered me and because I had
stopped worrying or caring how I felt, so many other things filled my
day, I had my life back. My mind was so clear and my nerves had
healed. They were no longer sensitised and did not feel rushes of
fear for very little reason. I was not racked with feelings of
anxiousness and not constantly irritable.
My mind was no longer tired through fear and worry and the deep
thinking about my condition. It had regained its flexibility and felt so
clear. It was like the whole subject was behind me. One thing though
was that it felt odd to feel free again. It was just like being let out of
prison and it took a while to readjust to feeling normal. Anxiety had
been part of my life for so long it felt natural.
Q.9 You mention a lot about not going in search of that magic
tablet or secret cure etc and just letting recovery come to you.
However, you also recommend a few things such as exercise,
avoiding alcohol, massage etc to help with recovery. How do
you draw the line between the two and when do these things
stop being just aids in our recovery and represent us searching
for a quick fix? I’ve thought a few times about trying meditation
or something to help me relax, but then wonder if it might be a
step too far and means that I am not accepting the way I feel.
This is a very good question and as I have mentioned before, I
initially took up running because it helped with my anxiety. But the
mistake I made was that my whole run was taken up with ‘I will feel
great when I get back. This will really help my anxiety. My whole run
was built around ‘ridding myself of anxiety’ which was the wrong
attitude. If I came home not feeling great I would question why and
try and run further. I needed to feel great, but I had fallen into the
trap of doing something to ‘rid’ myself of anxiety. So although I knew
it helped me, I just started to run for me. If it helped with anxiety then
so be it. If it did not, then that was fine, it was not going to be the
reason I ran. So it does not matter what you do as long as you do it
for your sense of well being and don’t put yourself under pressure to
feel good afterwards.
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Answers to emails I have received
Hi Paul. I wondered if you could answer me about a problem
I seem to be stuck on. I can be sat in lectures and strange
images, past dreams, memories or whatever keep popping
up in my mind. I get so distressed wondering why this is
happening and thinking that, yes, I am going mad. I can’t find
this symptom anywhere and I have looked. Is this anxiety
because it is making me question my sanity again and it
does scare me to the point that I am obsessed with every
thought that enters my head.
My reply was:
Hi, you are doing everything that I have been telling you not to do.
You have given in to an off shoot of anxiety and paid it the maximum
respect. Rather than just sitting in your lecture with strange images
and dreams passing through, you have become distressed and
scared of them. You are probably sat there trying to work it all out
and scaring yourself with thoughts of going crazy, etc. etc. Is it any
wonder you feel worse? You are probably thinking about it all the
way home, going over why, what, if.
I will tell you that I had the same symptoms many times. When I was
drifting off to sleep, I felt like I was lifting off the bed. I had so many
thoughts come through, but just shrugged my shoulders. When your
mind is tired, which yours will be with all the worry and stress you
are putting it under, trying to figure things out, then it plays the odd
trick on you. Have you ever tried to stay up all night and not sleep
for more than 24 hours? If you have, you will know that you minds
starts to play tricks on you. It’s the same thing. Your mind is just very
tired. Please don’t do all the Google searching, looking for this
symptom and that symptom, it’s a complete waste of time. Just put
ALL symptoms under the umbrella of anxiety. Don’t feel the need to
investigate them all, obsess and worry. You will just go around in
circles tiring your mind even more and not giving it the break it so
craves.
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As I have said before, I can give advice out but what I can’t do is
make people follow it and trust in what I say. Only you can do that.
Allow yourself to feel anything, it’s fine.
Hope that helps
Paul
Her reply was:
Hi Paul
Thanks so much. I have followed your advice and most, if not
all of my anxiety symptoms have gone, just like you say they
will. This is my last remaining symptom and thanks for giving
me a much needed kick up the bum for giving it so much
importance.
So what if I get these and feel weird. It’s okay. I will now give
myself permission to feel like this, something I have not done
in the past which just created more problems.
My reply was:
We do need a kick up the bum sometimes Samantha and I spoke
quite direct to try to help you and really get my point across, no other
reason. I just don’t want you or anyone letting anxiety take control
again and bluffing you into thinking it is something else. You’re fine,
let it play its tricks. It’s honestly just a tired mind and means nothing.
The above is a classic case of being bluffed by your anxiety. It is
your reaction to it and not ‘it’ that can cause the problem. She had
decided to react to how she felt instead of just carrying on with her
day whether the feelings were there or not. She was tricked into the
whole investigation/worry cycle. She just needed a sharp reminder
from me not to go down that road.
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Hi Paul,
Thank you so much for your book. It has really helped me
to move forward and understand so much more. I am able
to face life more easily now, although there are still certain
questions I would like to ask.
At the moment I drop my 3 year old off at nursery
every day. Just before I leave, I start to sweat and by the
time I get there it’s terrible - horrible in fact. I am trying to
let the feelings go through my body and do their worst, but
it’s hard. Then I start feeling faint and the fear sets in!
This is a big achievement for me, as a year ago I never
went out of the house. I am trying, I really am, but why do
I sweat so much. I feel like I have done a massive
workout!
Sara
Hi Sara,
Learning about anxiety, having previously had no information, is like
going back to school. The more we learn and understand, the
easier things become, but you will not recover overnight. Reading
the book has taken away a little bit of fear, which is helping you to
do things you could not do before. This is the way forward. Little
steps turn into huge strides. Just doing something you could not do
in the past is an achievement. What we need to do is take the fear
away and put you back in control.
The sweating is easy to explain. When anyone gets nervous, before
a job interview, wedding day etc, they begin to sweat. Well you have
nothing to be nervous about and dropping your child off should not
bring these feelings. Well they do, because all you fear is the fear
itself. I’ll bet you try to rush your way through it and try to get it over
with, making a big deal of it before you go. Is it any wonder you
sweat? Again, the thing to do is exactly what you have been doing -
just go with it. If you sweat, you sweat. If you feel nervous, so what?
It is just a strange physical feeling. Sara, like it or not, you will feel
uncomfortable and sweat for a while because your body now
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associates this run as something to fear. It says “Sara, here we are
again” and memory takes over, hence the sweating. This is nothing
to worry about because you can now teach your body that there is
nothing to worry about, no reason for it to bring these feelings on.
You do this by going through it, passing through these feelings and
not trying to rush or push them away. The more you go through the
situation, letting these feelings come and keeping a calm attitude,
the more your body will stop seeing it as something to fear and it
desensitises. Avoid running around trying to push these feelings
away and going for the quick exit. All this is telling your body is that
there is something to fear, so it reacts accordingly by adding more
adrenalin. Do you see that unbeknown to you, you are merely doing
this to yourself?
I went through the same thing and had to go through it many times
before I began to find peace. But the very act of letting it come
brought some peace in itself. The main thing to remember is that no
matter what your body is doing, try not to be influenced. Also it is all
about distrusting what your body is saying. Adrenalin comes through
habit, which makes you falsely think there is danger, so you rush
around trying to get it over with. Now is the time to tell yourself that
you will be fine and there is nothing to worry about. So many people
approach me and say "Paul, I did it, I really did. I just thought I could
not do it" They say they felt uncomfortable, but nothing happened.
They had been scared of the fear itself and once they decided to
move towards it, they took some of its power away. You will never
faint. This is just another symptom of fear. Many people say this.
Sara, it is just adrenalin going round your body through habit in a
sensitised body that can do you no harm and that always subsides.
Don't let these strange physical feelings hold you back. Say "It’s just
adrenalin, nothing can happen to me; it never does"
Don't worry for now about how you feel. It may take a little time and
practice, but you can do it and you will be fine. The only thing to fear
is fear itself. Let’s move towards it and take some of its power away.
I put myself in many situations where I felt fear rise and the
symptoms of fear came and they always reached a peak -that point
that says ‘Escape’. But I ignored this instinct and just sat on it. I let it
take me where it wanted, but it always died down and nothing
happened. I did not lose it or collapse and I thought ‘Is that what I
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have been running away from for all this time’. I had let it smack me
and then gave it a free reign to do what it wanted. I was fed up with
running away. I was almost saying ‘come on then, let’s see what you
are made of. Come and do your worst’. We can only unmask fear
when we allow ourselves to feel it and realise it does not have the
power we thought it had.
Kind Regards
Paul
Below are a couple of emails to the same person. Max is now just
about there with his own recovery and is leading a full life once
again.
Hi Paul,
I'm trying so hard to let these feelings just be, but today I find
myself pitying the situation and poor old me. Life used to be