Read Microsoft Word - At Last A Life Final Copy 16-03-09 Online
Authors: Maureen
have been told that it is anxiety. Can you see why these fears can
build up in people? A lack of understanding of their condition,
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coupled with the habit of always thinking the worst compounds their
fears. Add this to a tired mind that has lost a lot of its resilience and
you have a whole host of ‘what ifs?’
Some people worry to the extent that they believe everything they
feel is life threatening. A headache becomes a brain tumour; a
stomach ache can become cancer and so on. No matter how many
times their doctor tells them there is nothing wrong with them, they
are never quite convinced. If this is you, then realise these thoughts
of illness are just figments of your imagination, mainly created by
your anxious state. Everything becomes magnified when we are
anxious. Let these thoughts go. Don’t react to them and see them
for what they are - thoughts that carry no weight whatsoever, no
matter how loud they shout.
I truly let my mind chatter if it must. I allowed myself to think anything
and just did not react. The thoughts were not real, but just built up
through my anxious state. The more we try to push them away, the
longer they linger and the stronger their impact. When we welcome
and give room to unwanted thoughts, they lose their significance
and quickly diminish. When you attach a false sense of importance
to a thought, it will often appear more serious than it is. Remember
they are just thoughts and are of no significance. Pay them no
respect. Just say to them: “come if you wish, it’s just anxiety playing
its tricks. Just as my legs wobble when I drink alcohol, with anxiety I
may have silly irrational thoughts but they’re not real”.
The following statement came from a lady who did as I advised and
clearly explains what I’m saying:
“I really did have no control over my own mind before. The more I
tried to over control the less control I had.”
This is very true. In my case, the more I tried to stop thinking or felt
the need to take every thought seriously and unravel it, the less
control I felt I had. It was only when I took my thoughts with a pinch
of salt and just got on with my day, whatever the chatter, that I
noticed a big improvement. They no longer had the fuel of fear to
keep them going.
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The best way to alleviate these intrusive thoughts is to allow them
their space by NOT trying to force them out.
Why not try following a negative/scary thought through and ask
yourself the question “What is the worst thing that could happen?
Then ask yourself if it is really going to happen? Is this thought
rational in any way? If you do this, you may find the answer to a
thought you have been so frightened of, so that next time these
thoughts enter your head, deep down inside there will be a part of
you that can see them for what they really are and let them go.
Some people say they have thoughts about harming people close to
them. They know that they won’t, but the thought is there at times.
Again, this is just adrenalin finding a release and creating these
thoughts. That’s all it is, so don’t worry or feel guilty for thinking
them, just see them for what they are - anxiety letting off a little
steam.
If you are having trouble sleeping, then this can be caused by your
mind being too active when your head hits the pillow. If you are
caught in this trap, try not to go to bed analysing the day, trying to
unravel it all and hitting one brick wall after another. However your
day has been, just accept it. There is nothing to work out. You may
find it hard to switch off the constant thoughts that fill your mind, but
don’t try. Just let the thoughts come and let them go. Don’t grasp
them like they are important - they’re not. You may even find you will
drop off to sleep more quickly and get the rest your tired body so
craves.
What do you do then?
I found an explanation for the reason why I felt like I did and I
believed it. This in itself brought a lot of my fears to a halt. I realised
that these scary thoughts would continue to come for a while. Not
only did my anxiety bring them, it had also become my habit to think
them, but I learned that all I needed to do was to pay them no
respect. I saw them for what they were - just thoughts, brought on by
anxiety and habit. They were not important.
I know that giving little respect to a thought that seems so bad and
comes with such force is hard, but realise it is only the state you are
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in that magnifies them and makes them seem important. Accept they
are only thoughts that hold no power and can do you no harm. Just
let all negative, destructive thoughts float away. Smile at them if you
like. You have total control over how much respect you pay them.
Do not try and get rid off scary thoughts or stop them coming. By
doing this, you are telling them that they are important, which they
are not. I often get asked ‘How I do I stop thinking in a certain way’.
My reply is “DON’T try”. If it’s not important whether your thoughts
are scary or not, why try to stop them. The way to lose them is to
give them their space. Fighting thoughts and trying to rid yourself of
them is the wrong thing to do. It is a battle you will lose for sure.
Some people say they only have to hear something on the news
about a new illness and they are convinced they have it. Many can't
understand why they get such a reaction to some bad news which
may not even concern them. The answer to this is simple and sums
this chapter up. Your body is just in a sensitised state at the moment
and this is the only reason that thoughts exaggerate themselves.
This section from an email sums up what I am trying to say.
Hi Paul, I understand now about the need to
not
let thoughts
bother me or doubt and question them. Whatever goes on in
my head is fine. I realise that in my present state I SHOULD
have anxious thoughts, I am anxious after all. I have learnt to
not
accept the thought as truth and accept it as just a
thought brought on by my anxious state. Thank you for your
explanation.
I also explained that when anxiety fades, so do the anxious
thoughts, but the above is exactly what I wanted to hear. It just
needed an explanation that he could understand and relate to.
The following explanation came on my blog from a lady I had been
helping. She had recovered and decided to post how she managed
to get over this particular symptom of anxiety.
I understand now that all that we are doing is tuning into our
over active imagination, which has probably always been
there and popped various thoughts into our mind, but in the
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past we’ve always ignored them. It’s as if once you have
suffered from anxiety you listen to every negative thought
and then question why it’s there and why it won’t go away,
whereas if you just ignore it, it actually does goes away.
What I am trying to say to give some help and support to
people is try not to over analyse everything, question every
thought, or worry what’s wrong with you. There is actually
nothing wrong with any of us, we’re all human and naturally
experience thoughts, feelings, and moods, so just accept
them and try not to question then or consider them as being
weird.
I receive a lot of visits to my site from ladies who have recently been
through a pregnancy and then go on to suffer with irrational
thoughts. This lady is now fully recovered. Here is her story:
I understand now that a negative reaction to just one thought
can lead you into a downward spiral of obsessive thinking. It
did for me. I was 7 months pregnant at the time and had
never encountered anything like it before in my life/nor with
my first child who was 9 at the time.
I was on bed rest for pregnancy complications and had
‘normal’ pregnancy worries, but it was very difficult being
alone all day. Then, out of the blue, something was said
which I couldn’t get out of my mind and this lead to obsessive
thoughts about my unborn baby’s health, which then
developed into more obscure obsessive thoughts about
harming my own child.
I was in such a bad state I walked to the local hospital and
they kept me in for 3 months. At the time, I hadn’t found this
site, and had never heard of antenatal anxiety/depression
before, so didn’t know what I had. I thought it was the
deterioration of my mental health and that I was becoming
schizophrenic or going crazy. The hospital weren’t much help
to be honest, and I spent much of my day on my own in bed
obsessing, and became afraid to leave my hospital room. I
convinced myself that I was a bad mother, would never be
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able to look after my own child, and would need psychiatric
treatment for the rest of my life.
Then when my baby was born, they sent me packing with my
newborn and some ADs, which I took for 4 months…and
very little else.
During the first year I plodded along without knowing (or
believing) what was actually wrong with me really, and I
avoided ‘normal’ situations with which I felt uncomfortable. In
hindsight, this was the wrong thing to do, as it wasn’t until I
actually faced my fears that I started to recover. But, of
course I didn’t know this is what was necessary to recover. I
thought I needed to rest and one day I would wake up and be
back to normal, but it never happened. It was a very difficult
year, and I had the most terrible thoughts which I couldn’t
control and I walked around with DP for most of the day,
barely functioning really, trapped in my own little world with
my terrible thoughts.
It was after the first year that I came across very helpful
information on the internet and read stories of those who had
recovered. I joined a forum for those suffering from Post
Natal Depression and this has helped me enormously. This
is when I came across Paul as well, and the start of my
recovery began.
What you must do is NOT avoid your fears. In fact if you fear
something, DO MORE OF IT, pay no heed to the intrusive
thoughts, they are not actions.
When a thought enters your head, the moment a negative
emotion is attached to it and you are probably having that
sickly feeling in the pit of your stomach, you need to get rid of
this emotion and adopt a ‘whatever’, ‘as if’ attitude to your
thoughts. It takes time and effort, but the rewards are huge
and if you can recreate this new emotion - a ‘don’t care’
emotion - then you will be able to dismiss the thoughts as
utter rubbish and they will diminish. At the moment, the fear
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you feel for the thoughts is what is keeping them coming.
Once the fear has gone they will have no hold over you
whatsoever and you can also adopt this new attitude to
chronic worries as well.
At first, this don’t care/whatever attitude may ‘feel’ false as if
you are having to fake it, but like one doctor said in an article
I read, you need to ‘fake it to make it’. Kiss, cuddle, smile,
talk to your kids/grandkids, even if you have no feeling or
inappropriate feelings/thoughts, and it will come naturally in
time. This is so very true and I can personally vouch for it.
You must practice the behaviour you want to achieve - in
your case it means no ‘negative’ emotion attached to an
intrusive thought.
I promise you that in time, if you just follow these few
behaviour changes, you will notice less obsessive/intrusive
thoughts. It won’t happen overnight because you will have
doubts to begin with, but in the weeks and months ahead,
your mind will slowly clear and you will begin to notice a
difference.
At the height of my suffering, I was pushing my baby in his
pram to pick up my other son from school and I saw a
knitting needle on the ground. I immediately panicked and