Read Microsoft Word - At Last A Life Final Copy 16-03-09 Online
Authors: Maureen
You just need to put Paul’s advice into practice as often as you can
in order to get off the ‘hamster wheel’ of anxiety and get on with
‘normal’ everyday living. Even when you don’t feel like it, go out, go
- 26 -
to work, down to the pub, cycling, whatever you fancy doing. Don’t
be put off by inappropriate feelings or thoughts … do it anyway. For
normal feelings to return we have to live as normal a life as possible.
I made the mistake for the first year, of sitting and waiting to get well
before I actually ‘lived’, thinking this was the way to do it. It took me
the best part of a year to find out this was totally wrong. My anxiety
levels shot up during this time also. I ended up ruminating all day
and became almost housebound.
Scarlet is right and this is something I try to get across early. Don’t
hide away indoors, don’t wait until you feel better to go out and live
your life. Don’t put off anything because of how you feel. Just live
your life regardless of how you feel. You may even feel worse when
you first do this because you are coming out of your comfort zones,
but it is the actual doing that begins to take the edge off feelings.
Normal feelings begin to override the feelings of strangeness. For
normal feelings to return, we have to live as normal a life as
possible; nothing is gained by hiding away. I always went
everywhere at will no matter how I felt. I knew that this was the only
way to move forward and I never allowed anxiety to make my
decisions for me.
Yes, sometimes I really felt like hiding away, but I never did.
Sometimes I felt uncomfortable in certain situations, but I thought ‘so
what, this is not me forever’. I knew deep down that putting myself in
situations that I had avoided in the past would help me to recover.
Avoidance just creates more problems and what was I actually
avoiding anyway? It was nothing more than a feeling, a feeling that
had once dominated my life. But I made the decision to no longer let
it, and what a difference that had on my life. I am not saying I started
running around like a headless chicken, I just started socialising
more. I went running, took the dog for a walk, went swimming and
just began to live again. Yes, at first it was strange and sometimes I
had to drag myself there, but I always went. Eventually I felt more
and more comfortable and more and more at one with the world
around me. I had stopped sitting at home brooding, hoping that a
miracle would come along and rid me of how I was feeling.
One thing I quickly learnt is that the road to recovery is not all plain
sailing. There are ups and downs. You should enjoy the good days
- 27 -
and don’t get too depressed about the bad. The most important
thing to remember is that in order to get better, you may have to live
alongside the old you for a while, including the feelings of dread and
anxiousness. This can’t be avoided, but while you are doing this a
new you will begin to emerge, ready to rise to the surface.
Below is part of an email from someone I helped. She was in a deep
hole when she first came across my site and read my book. At the
time of writing she is well on her way to recovery and in her own
words ‘1000 times better’. The statement below is so very true and
something I tried to get across to her very quickly – it is the ‘trying to
control’ the anxiety that ultimately keeps us in the cycle.
Hi Paul, I was having a think yesterday about how far I have come.
There were times when I thought I was trapped with anxiety
forever… but thinking about it, all the ‘fighting to control’ is what
trapped me and not the actual symptoms. If I had left the stress
induced symptoms alone then I would have never ended up in the
state I did! But I persevered and now I am seeing big results. I don’t
ever worry about whether or not I will recover now - it’s like it’s inbuilt
that I just know I will.
She had finally got it. It was the fighting, trying to control the anxiety
that made her sink deeper into the condition. If she had just got on
with her day accepting the anxiety induced symptoms, her life would
have been far easier. But she did the exact opposite and spent her
day trying to ‘rid’ herself of the way she felt and trying to think and
fight her way better. I told her from a very early stage “When you
wake up in a morning, don’t make it your daily aim to rid yourself of
your anxiety”. It is a fight you will lose for sure as there is no battle to
fight. Looking back to my own suffering, I don’t think there was a day
that I did not try and rid myself of how I was feeling. This was
obviously getting me nowhere, so I had to try a new approach. I
began to realise that if doing this was making me worse, maybe then
I should do the opposite.
Referring back to the stress induced symptoms she mentioned, she
also sees them for what they are. She has changed her attitude and
understands that however she feels it is just an off shoot of anxiety -
stress related symptoms as she puts it. Symptoms that used to
- 28 -
bother her and fill her with so much dread and fear no longer have
the edge anymore as she understands why she feels like she does. I
used to have many symptoms when I suffered, but once the anxiety
left so did the symptoms and none hung around. At the time I
thought I had to deal with each one separately, but this was not the
case.
I also received the following email, which I would like to share with
you. It came from someone who was going through recovery, but
could not seem to get over that final hurdle.
Hello Paul,
I just wondered if you could help me. With your help, I have been
able to banish so many of my symptoms, but what I can’t seem to do
is get over that final hurdle to recovery. I seem to have hit a brick
wall now and even though I can do so much more and feel so much
better, I still find myself being anxious in certain places and
wondered if I should just maybe not go there until my body fully
repairs itself?
Like I say, I feel much better and full recovery seems so close, but I
can’t seem to get over this last stage and don’t seem to be making
any progress. I just wondered if you could explain why?
Regards Ian
My reply was:
Hi Ian,
I also went through this and felt the same frustration of being so
close to recovery, but not being able to get over that final hurdle that
I felt was in front of me. Here is how I overcame this.
I felt so close to recovery and had come so far, that I decided I
would stay in to help reach my goal of recovery, thinking this would
take me over that final hurdle, as long as I did not put myself in the
situations that still made me feel uncomfortable. I did not stay in
because I wanted to stay in. I did it because I felt so close to
- 29 -
recovery and did not want to risk feeling bad again. Like you, I also
did not like how it made me feel, so I set up camp in my safe haven
called home thinking this would take me over that final hurdle. I soon
learned that it did not, and one day I said to myself: “Anxiety, you
still hold the power over me to influence what I do, but today its
stops. I am going to embrace you and take away that power. You
are never going to stop me doing anything anymore. If you want me
to feel bad, then so be it, but this is the last time you have any
influence over what I do”.
The next day I went to visit a friend and felt okay. I then arranged a
night out and felt fine. I also went walking my dog and popped into
my dad’s house and nothing happened. Okay, I experienced a little
bit of anxiety but I embraced it. I did not see it as an obstacle any
more, but accepted it as an opportunity to see what I could achieve.
This went on for a few weeks. I went everywhere I wanted to and felt
every twinge of anxiety at will.
Within a short space of time, I had passed that final hurdle. It was as
if my mind and body had overtaken my memory and habit and
convinced me that I could do these things. Memory and habit were
holding me back and the more I embraced anxiety, the more it died
down. Anxiety loves avoidance, so take its power away and
embrace it. Stop letting it influence what you do and stop running
away from these feelings. This is the way forward.”
This person replied saying that this is exactly what he had been
doing and once he received my reply, he was able to overcome this
and reach recovery.
I wanted to include this email as it explains that the more you avoid
the way you feel, the more it can drag you down. It may be the safe
way to do things, but it does no good long term. That's the key. I felt
like this once but then changed my attitude to thinking, I am sick of
this now and I no longer care what happens - anything is better than
having no life. So I went everywhere and did everything against my
body’s instinct and, you know what, nothing bad happened to me.
Oh yes, I felt uncomfortable at times, but I just gave into the feelings
and stopped trying to control them. Whatever happened, happened,
but nothing did. I felt awful - overwhelmed at times - but it always
- 30 -
calmed down. I stopped adding avoidance and fear and the feelings
had no fuel left to feed on. It is all about going through it and
changing habits like avoidance. It’s not easy at times, but it brought
me so many victories and this is where confidence is built. It is the
continued doing that brings so many rewards. As one lady put it ‘It’s
like re-training the brain’. The one thing I learnt is that you have to
lose the need to be in control. At one time, if I did not feel right then I
felt I had to fix it, but I eventually learned to go with the ‘craziness’
as I put it, and not fight against it.
One lady who struggled with anxiety and let it dominate her day,
recently sent me an email saying, “I feel anxious today Paul, but,
hey, it’s okay”. This is the stage she needed to reach. More than
anything else, the first step is to view anxiety in a different way and
to change your attitude towards it, so that it does not dominate your
every waking moment. It is never about how you feel - you can do
very little about that - is more to do with your attitude towards it. If
you want to fight, worry and obsess about it daily and let it get you
down, spending the whole day in a battle you cannot win, then go
ahead, but, trust me, you will feel far worse.
You need to reach the stage where it no longer matters if those
anxious feelings are there or not. They just become a nuisance in
the background. I knew I was reaching recovery well before I did, as
the symptoms no longer bothered me to the point that they affected
my day. I had also given my body the break it so craved and my
symptoms were far less severe, the good days far outweighing the
bad. I went from having no good days at all, to some good and some
bad. This proved to me that for the first time in years I was heading
in the right direction and that it was only a matter of time before I
was my old self once again.
- 31 -
PANIC ATTACKS EXPLAINED
Below I will try to give an explanation of panic attacks, so that you
fully understand what is happening to you during an attack and will
become less afraid. It will also help you to understand that they do
not just happen to you because you have been chosen; there is
always a reason behind them.
What causes panic attacks?
This can vary. During my own period of suffering I only ever had one
full blown panic attack. Some people suffering from anxiety
experience none at all and for others, they become part of their
lives. Some people’s personality can be a contributory factor. The
person prone to worry a lot throughout their life may suddenly go
from been anxious to having a panic attack for no real reason apart
from a continuous build up of worry. Sometimes they are born out of