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Panic Free Nights?


14 years ago 0 10 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Ashley, 

Thanks for your input. Those seem like great questions to start with! I was starting to feel hopeless when I was journaling. 

MC
14 years ago 0 10 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hi Davit,

Thank you for your input -- it is greatly appreciated. I will check out your blog. You have some really encouraging tools in your explanation, thank you. I'm going to use them when I can, where necessary. I'm really a beginner here, so it feels like an awkward first step in a multi-step program, but I'm looking forward to some relief   :)

You are right when you say that anxiety disorders don't happen overnight. I recently had a friend say that the anxiety didn't happen overnight -- Therefore it won't undo overnight (Boy, do I wish!)  My panic has been a long time coming.

Hope all is well on your end -- thanks again for the encouragement.

MC



14 years ago 0 6252 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hello MissChrissy

My name is Davit and yes I have panic free nights. But I didn't always. You will find me all over this site. I also have a blog.  You will have to search a long ways back to find when I was in the same boat you are but I was. 

What do you do to stop the panic at night? That is a tough one. What you have to do is simple but doing it is not. 
There are a lot of contributing factors as to why you panic at night, in fact there are a lot of reasons to panic any time but what it all boils down to is having your fight or flight reaction out of whack. Every one has a different reason (trigger) for this, and you will have to find yours but not right now. Jumping ahead will just mess you up. 

It is all about negative and positive thoughts. Negative breeds panic, positive disperses it. That's the simple part. 
Now for the hard part: Before any of what I am going to tell you can work you have to learn to relax and how to handle panic when it happens. That is where the program comes in.

Yes writing does help. It's not what you write so much as what you do with it. Anxiety orders don't happen over night even though it may seem so. 
When you write something negative, look at it and ask yourself if it is true. If it isn't then concentrate on why you are thinking it and what can you do to change it. If it is true then ask yourself why, and what can you do to change it. Try to change the negative to positive. Try to put a positive spin on every thought.

Dreams are a random replaying of thoughts. If your mind can't decide if a thought or dream is something to run from it will wake you instead of ignoring it. This is where you really want to write what is happening. It will be confusing and even hard to do. but what it does is this. You will read it after and say this was no reason to panic. Do this a few times and the next time you are having these sort of thoughts or dreams the sentinels in your mind that filter all thought will say "been there done that, no reason to panic" and you wont. Simple yes! but it does take a bit of work and there are years of negative thoughts to deal with. In the process of writing all the things that you are feeling the triggers will come to the front where you can identify them.

Tell us your stories, others will have similar and they will have ways that they deal with them.
Now I wont lie to you, You can get relief here fairly quick but a cure is going to take a long time so be prepared for the long haul. But just think how nice it will be to be panic free. Do the program, it's worth it.

Davit.
14 years ago 0 11212 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hi MissChrissy,
 
Writing can be a help, especially with identifying triggers.  Writing down what you are doing, thinking and your mood at different times of the day can be helpful.  This, in addition to some positive journalling, can help as well.  Some questions to get you started:
 
* What makes you happy?
* What are three good things that happened today?
* What do you value?
* What are some peak experiences in you life?
* If you could have a conversation with yourself 10 years from now what would this future self say to your present self?
 
Please read through the program for more ideas on journalling.

Remember to add your journalling thoughts in the support group or to your blog.
 
 

Ashley, Health Educator
14 years ago 0 10 logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo logo 0
Hi All! I'm new to the panic forum. Thanks for all of your encouraging stories -- your tough stories are also so encouraging, because It makes me feel a little bit more normal  :) I have a lot of stories too. 

Have any of you had panic free nights, and what did you do differently to cause the breakthrough? 

Does writing really help? I feel like when I get writing it is negative, and I'm not so sure how it would help. I end up ruminating on the negative stuff I just wrote.

Talk soon...



 

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