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Sure-fire
Strategies to
Send
Your
Panic Packing!!!
You're seated quietly in a classroom, or eating
in the dorm cafeteria, perhaps walking across campus with friends. All
of a sudden, your heart begins to pound, you feel dizzy and faint, your
hands start to tingle and a wave of terror descends over you. You're
certain you're on the verge of fainting, having a heart attack, dying
- or at the very least, going crazy.
What just happened??? Chances are you just had
a panic attack, an event that's surprisingly common among college students.
In fact, a recent survey of college-aged females found that close to
50% had experienced at least one panic attack.
Panic often hits in reaction to separation from
loved ones and familiar places, so college is a prime time for it to
make its appearance. Many other students escape full-blown panic but
experience anxiety when faced with exams, classroom presentations, financial
worries, roommate problems or the myriad of other challenges that face
students on their own for the very first time.
There are a whole
host of resources available to help students with anxiety or panic,
beginning with the programs and
services offered through your college counseling center, and anyone
having difficulties is strongly encouraged to seek services. But in
the meantime, is there anything you can do this very minute to control
panic?
Anything you can do on your own
that can offer rapid relief from the agony of pain and anxiety? Yes, there is! |
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The "quick tips" in this brochure are based on
proven principals from the field of anxiety management and can be surprisingly
effective, offering temporary relief to "tide you over" till you can
seek out a more systematic attack on your anxiety. Use them the instant
you sense the first curling sensation that says "panic" and you may
even be able to stop your panic before it starts.
- First and foremost, be aware that a panic
attack can't hurt you. It isn't dangerous, and it doesn't mean you're
crazy, no matter how it
feels! In fact, panic attacks make biological sense
- even though they may feel completely senseless.
You might think of your body's reaction
to a minor threat as though it's a major emergency - the
result of an exquisitely sensitive nervous system, possibly
combined with early life experiences that may have taught
you to overestimate the likelihood of danger in different
situations.
During a panic attack, your body reacts
as though you're in danger, releasing adrenaline and noradrenaline
to prepare you to fight an unknown enemy - or to run for
your life. This in turn produces a host of alarming sensations
- a pounding heart, an urge to flee, difficulty thinking
straight and feelings of impending doom.
The problem, of course, is that during
a panic attack, the body's alarm system kicks in when it's
not needed - not when you're facing an attacker, or a natural
disaster, but when you're giving a talk in a course you're
taking, or sitting quietly in the classroom. And though you
may feel as though you will, you won't faint; you won't have
a heart attack; you won't do something crazy or out of control.
And you won't die. Reminding yourself of those facts can
reduce the frightening sensations of panic.
- Take a "Time out" and slow
down. Slow your rate of
breathing, slow your
racing slow thoughts, your entire body, head to toe. Then slowly
resume your previous activities.
When you panic, your body, your mind,
your emotions - literally everything - speeds up. And you
feel out of control. Deliberately reversing the process,
starting with your head and moving downward from there, not
only slows you down - the exact opposite of panic - it puts
you back in charge.
Picture a person you trust, someone
who believes in you, supports you and cares about your well-being.
Now imagine that person is with you, offering encouragement.
Panic attacks often reflect feelings of being alone, bereft
and fearful of your ability to cope on your own. Remembering,
and experiencing, the presence of another can relieve those
feelings of abandonment. So let someone you trust "Take you
by the hand" - and let your panic slip away.
- If there are places available, take a stroll.
If there are people available, talk with one of them. Better yet,
do both!
Walking can help you "burn off" some of the
excess adrenaline that is released when you become anxious. Talking
with others can lift your spirits, refocus your energies positively
and help you feel connected to the human race in a comforting,
encouraging fashion. Try it - it really works!
- Sit down and take several slow,
deep breaths.
Pretend your stomach is a balloon and inflate it to enormous dimensions.
Take at least four seconds to inhale, through your nose, and at
least four more to exhale, through your pursed lips, as though you're
whistling. Continue this for several minutes, trying, as you do
so, to consciously relax your muscles.
Anxiety leads invariably to rapid, shallow
breathing - even when you're not aware of it. And that leads
directly to many of the symptoms of anxiety - dizziness,
confusion, numbness or tingling, in your hands and feet,
trembling and muscle aches, even altered perceptions of reality
at times.
The fastest, most foolproof strategy
to eliminate the physical symptoms of intense anxiety is
to alter your breathing -
to slow it down and
deepen it. In fact, use the method several times a day to
keep anxiety low and prevent
attacks from arising in the first place!
- Occupy your mind with an absorbing task: outline
the sociology chapter you just read for class tomorrow; put on you
headphones and listen to that new CD everyone is talking about; start
researching the paper that's not due for two more weeks! Or simply
focus on the present, on concrete objects around you, making a game
of noticing details of every object you see.
During a panic attack, your mind is consumed
with catastrophic thoughts about
what's happening to your body, or about imagined disasters to
come. These catastrophic thoughts provide the fuel for further
anxiety. To "defuel" anxiety, you need to interrupt the
catastrophic thoughts. Distracting yourself by thinking about
something else is one way to do that.
Listen to music, phone a friend, invent a
delicious daydream, recall a happy time in your life in great
detail - anything to focus your mind on what's happening in the
environment rather that on your
body; on what's happening in
the present rather than in the future;
on something other than disaster. You'll interrupt the spiraling
of anxiety and can eliminate, sometimes even prevent, the
symptoms of a full-blown panic.
- Picture a relaxing scene using all of your senses.
Now put yourself into the scene.
Involving yourself in a relaxing image calms
your body, relaxes your mind - and helps put an end to the symptoms
of panic. Making the scene as vivid as possible, by using all
five senses and by putting yourself into it, simply adds power
to this panic-busting strategy.
- Take a giant yawn and stretch your body head
to toe.
A yawn and stretch is another way to interrupt
your rapid breathing and escalating symptoms. The yawn literally
forces air into the lower 25% of your lungs, and the stretch releases
the tension in you muscles. After a good yawn and stretch, you
can "start fresh".
- Bring to mind the image of a person you admire
and imagine yourself to actually be that person. Think as they might
think, act as they might act, even feel as they may feel.
This strategy will lighten your spirits,
inspire feelings of strength and comfort, and help you focus on
something more adaptive than your fear. It's a powerful combination,
far more positive than panic.
- If unfamiliar situations increase your anxiety
level, as they do for many panic sufferers, try to prepare for new
situations in advance; visit a classroom before the first day of the
semester, try out your presentation on your roommate before you face
the entire class, review how you'll handle an uncomfortable social
situation "in your head" before you actually encounter it. You'll
have an easier time of it, and you'll be far less likely to experience
panic.
Practicing difficult situations in advance
is known to reduce anxiety. In fact, formal treatment for panic
attacks often involves exposing yourself gradually and repeatedly
to selected situations, or to specific sensations of panic. While
it's beyond the scope of this brochure to describe that form of
treatment in detail, a counselor trained to treat anxiety, or
a soundly-based self-help book such as Master Your Panic and Take
Back Your Life, referenced below, can guide you through the process.
- Recall the time you handled a similar situation
well, or try to bring to mind a past success and the good feelings
you experienced at that time.
Let your own confidence emerge and help you
put panic right back where it belongs - out of your life.
- Get mad. Vow not to let panic win this time.
You deserve better.
A strong competing emotion can often drive
out panic; you simply don't have "room", or energy, for both.
In fact, there's some evidence that suppressing anger and other
strong emotions, like grief, can evoke panic; becoming more aware
of feelings, by contrast, can send
it packing.
So talk with a counselor, confide in a friend
or family member, perhaps start a journal. Find a private place
to express your reactions to your new life, and watch panic depart.
- Count backward from 20 and with every number,
picture a different image of someone you love, something that pleases
you, something that calms you. These might be images you recall from
the past, or those you only imagine.
This strategy, too, not only refocuses your
attention, it boosts upbeat, secure feelings - a wonderful antidote
to panic.
- Remind yourself
that a panic attack always subsides. Always.
No one can sustain intense levels of panic
indefinitely. Panic attacks are anguishing to experience, but
they will subside, even without any specific action on your part.
But seeking assistance, reading more about panic and using these
strategies can help you to overcome your attacks more rapidly
and with far less misery. And that's what this brochure, the book
on which it's based, and the counseling department personnel who've
made it available, all hope for you.
So pick a strategy, try it
out today and send your panic packing!
The information in this brochure is excerpted
from the paperback book, Master Your Panic and Take Back
Your Life: Twelve Treatment Sessions to Overcome High Anxiety, by
Denise Beckfield, Ph.D. (Impact Publishers, Inc., 1994, 1-800-246-7228,
quantity discounts available).
The book includes
a special section, "Everyday
Anxieties" which applies the principals of anxiety management
to more generalized anxiety and to situation-specific fears.
Denise Beckfield, Ph.D., is a clinical
psychologist who, for the past 15 years, has specialized in
the treatment of anxiety and panic disorder, designing and implementing
individual and group treatment and providing professional training
in the area.
For the past two years, Dr. Beckfield
has presented talks on overcoming panic at the national
meetings of the Anxiety Disorders Association of America,
and she writes a regular self-help column for the National
Panic/Anxiety Disorders Newsletter, NPAD News.
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