How to Deal With Anxiety Attacks & Get Rid of Your General Anxiety
Folks all over are trying to figure out how to deal with anxiety attacks and eliminate their anxiety for good. Here, we’ll look at who suffers from anxiety attacks, the symptoms, why they happen and how they are treated. And we’ll also look at a critical element in how do deal with anxiety attacks. If this is ignored, it can make a cure very difficult to achieve.
First off, anyone can have an anxiety attack, man, woman, teenager or child. But research suggests that more women than men suffer anxiety attacks. But, whoever has one, it can be the most frightening experience of their lives. The symptoms of an anxiety attack are so overwhelming, and can come on so suddenly, that the sufferer gets totally caught up in the moment. The symptoms are such that they can truly believe they are having a heart attack and even about to die.
The usual anxiety attack symptoms experienced are; pounding / racing heartbeat, palpitations, sweating, tingling or numbness in fingers or toes, tight throat, tight chest, difficulty breathing, dizziness, lightheadedness, nausea, feeling detached from reality, and, feeling that something really bad is about to happen.
An anxiety attack usually occurs because someone with an already high level — more or less continual — of anxiety is confronted with a particular high stress situation. This can be anything; being stuck in an elevator, in traffic, an interview, a bereavement, job loss, being in large crowds, unable to pay a bill, etc. Folks with normal daily anxiety levels can handle these events or issues. But someone with higher-than-normal anxiety levels, i.e. someone with general anxiety, is pushed ‘over the top’ and the result is an anxiety attack.
So how to deal with anxiety attacks? A doctor’s first line treatment is nearly always through the medicine route. They will usually prescribe anti-depressants, minor tranquilizers or beta-blockers. Sometimes two together. Although these can work well enough on the symptoms of anxiety, they have a lot of negative side effects. These vary from nausea, diarrhea, disturbed sleep, dizziness, through to dependency.
Many people are turning to therapies such as hypnotherapy, counselling, psychotherapy, and group therapy, to help them deal with anxiety attacks. And many try self-help strategies like self-hypnosis, meditation, and yoga etc. These need a lot of commitment and time, although they can work for some committed people by helping them ‘cope’ with their condition.
But none of these two treatment regimes really get to the heart of anxiety. They either treat the symptoms or provide coping mechanisms to manage general anxiety and anxiety attacks.
A critical element in how to deal with anxiety attacks and their tie-up with general anxiety, is that the real fear of having another attack can often trigger one. This fear increasingly builds on the underlying general anxiety, making it very hard to cure.
If you can just get rid of this constant fear of another attack, you can prevent further anxiety attacks, plus, you’ll be in a better state to treat and cure your general anxiety.
If you’d like to discover just how to get rid of this ‘fear factor’, prevent anxiety attacks and then cure your general anxiety, please go to http://eliminatepanicattacks.blogspot.com and get your old self back.
John Cielo
http://www.articlesbase.com/health-articles/how-to-deal-with-anxiety-attacks-get-rid-of-your-general-anxiety-1011142.html
An Anxiety Attack
There is really no difference between an anxiety attack and a panic attack in the psychology profession and the two are treated as interchangeable terms that describe one and the same thing. Nevertheless, the anxiety attack may be thought of as being a milder version of the panic attack. The main thing about an anxiety attack is that it occurs abruptly and causes the person to suffer extreme anxiety.
An anxiety attack that includes irrational feelings of panic, terror or fear may be considered a panic attack. A definition of an anxiety attack would be that it is an acute bout of anxiety of intense nature and also results in the person feeling panicky.
There are a number of possible causes of an anxiety attack and these include panic attacks, panic disorders, panic disorders accompanied by agoraphobia, panic disorders not accompanied by agoraphobia as well as anxiety disorders. There are certain risk factors that do not directly cause the attacks but are nevertheless associated in some way or the other. The presence of risk factors may make the occurrence of anxiety attacks more likely though they do not necessarily result in an anxiety attack.
Obtain a Diagnosis When you Spot Symptoms
There are certain signs as well as symptoms associated with anxiety attacks and these may be noticeable to the patient, the doctor or both. The signs and symptoms of an anxiety attack include anxiety, extreme anxiety, irrational anxiety, chest pain, difficulty in breathing and these signs and symptoms may vary from individual to individual.
It is fortuitous that there are many treatments available to effectively battle anxiety attacks and these include therapy relaxation techniques and, more importantly, the person should have a balanced and healthy lifestyle to help reduce anxiety and stay in complete control of one’s own life. Anybody who has been suffering intense anxiety or worry for at least six months or even more may be a victim of an anxiety disorder and this worry may interfere with their work, relationships as well as normal activities.
In such cases, the person ought to consult a doctor and obtain medications as well as obtain a diagnosis of the medical illness. There are certain medical conditions that closely mimic or cause anxiety and there are also medications as well as substances which may induce anxiety in a person – so one should take care to be well informed and err on the side of caution.
By: Alien (Anxiety Treatment eBook – FREE)
About the Author:
Alien writes for anxiety treatment . He also writes for stress symptoms and mental health issues












