Hi Dawuad,
I'm going to just share what popped into my head when i read your recent post - the part where you say you want instant results even though you know it takes time.
A week or so ago, I was asking on the forum here about making friends. Ashley posted and challenged me to think about becoming my own best friend. I admit, this was not something I enjoyed reading at the time. But because I really want to get better, I have committed to taking in all the advice given here and give it fair consideration before throwing any of it out, no matter what it is or how I react when I first read it.
So Ashley suggested I befriend myself and I've been thinking about that since then.And then I read your post, and the word "instant" popped out at me.
Click.
Can you become instant best friends with someone? Not really.
And what I have come to realize this week is that addressing my anxiety involves befriending myself - getting to know a part of me in the same way you get to know any person better the more time you spend with them. Does this make sense?
The "cure" is more of a befriending or re-befriending. Finding out things about yourself (things you may not want to find out but in the end , underneath anything that is pain, you will discover you are loveable, this I know is true). It takes time to become your own best friend and by this I mean, someone who fully understands what you've been through, what you need and want, and the struggles you face. The program seems designed to put someone on a path to know what they did not know about themselves in order to become their own best friend, their own comfort and person that knows them best and can help themselves (sometimes by knowing when to ask for others) during times of need.
I do not write this from a hokey or new agey perspective. This program is about addressing the root causes of the anxiety. I love thinking about pulling out a weed from its roots. It means more than just hoping to grow flowers over a weed patch. But i can tell you, my negative roots are deep and feel unmoveable at times but this program helps to root the weeds.
When I feel impatient, I will try to remind myself that there are things I need to learn about myself in the coming days and months that cannot be rushed anymore than any other relationship can be rushed.
Even parents of a newborn say it takes a bit of time to truly fall in love with the newborn. Yes you love them upon birth but you get to know them over time. Then you fall in love with them a bit more each moment you spend getting to know them. The same thing holds true for ourselves. We have to get to know ourselves better whether we are up against anxiety or not, but especially when we have anxiety.
The tools for the job are here on this site.