Anxiety Facts Not Myths

By Kathy Nelson

Sometimes people can feel anxious about their everyday lives and certain events. There are different kinds of anxiety disorders that people can get. Panic disorders are episodes of fear that strike often and sometimes without any warning.

Post traumatic stress disorder is probably the best known anxiety disorder, it is no longer a phenomenon that affects soldiers alone. If you have ever been involved in a car crash, a physical assault, or some sort of abuse then you would most likely be suffering from post traumatic stress.

Do you flush your toilet 10 times in a row? Or maybe you have to get up every hour to check that your windows and doors are still locked? If you recognize either of these behaviors or maybe you do something similar then there is a good chance that you suffer from Obsessive compulsive disorder.

If you have anxiety coupled with either a social phobia or a specific phobia it can feel like the world is coming to an end. Social phobias usually display as a fear of embarrassment, humiliation and anyone looking at you. Specific phobias are as they say a phobia of a specific item, person or action.

You probably don't even take any notice of most things in your daily routine, if you suffered from a generalized anxiety disorder every change in your routine would upset you. You would worry about every step of your day and that anxiety would show itself as fatigue, tension, nausea and probably headaches as well.

There are certain ways that you can treat anxiety disorders. Treatments for anxiety disorders are medications, and psychotherapy. These things may be combined together to help people with their anxiety.

There are more medications then there has ever been before to help treat anxiety disorders. Some of these medications are called antidepressants and benzodiazepines. If one medication is not effective when it is tried then others can be tried to see if they will be effective.

New medications are currently under development to help treat anxiety. Two effective forms of psychotherapy used in treating anxiety disorders are behavioral therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy. Behavioral therapy focuses on changing certain actions and uses some techniques to stop unwanted behaviors from happening.

Understanding your thinking and why you act in certain ways will help you change the way you think and act in certain situations. That is exactly what behavioral therapy does for you. - 30309

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