Hello Vinchenza,
Thank you for the welcome. Yes, it's very good to see a community of
people trying to help each other through experience, that aspect was
definitely one of the things that attracted me to this program. It's
good to not be alone, I mean I knew I wasn't, but it's good to actually
be able to read what other people who are going through similar things
say, their take on issues.
Yes, that part of it, the fact that the "subconscious" can affect every
day life, I agree with. That's why it's important to stop negative self
talk, and also to make sure you catch behaviours and thought patterns
(even the ones that you are only peripherally aware of doing/acting
upon) that are unhealthy for you. Those thoughts patterns however are
something you should be able to notice of affect in some way, maybe I
misunderstood, but it seemed like the way Davit explained it these would
be un-noticeable things and that I don't trust to be true. It has been
my experience that at some point you can catch a memory or thought
patterns and thus can change them.
It's something I noticed a difference
with quite a bit when I went through a course focused on OCD, they did
something that later seemed to me to be related to "Dialectical
behaviour therapy" (which is meant to be used in tandem with CBT - I've
picked up a book DBT recently to review) which when it is in reference
to OCD has a lot to do with 'mindfulness' (awareness of self-talk and
thoughts).
But I don't think that's the issue with my 'chemical/body panic
attacks'. Because actively doing positive self-talks helps when I have
anxiety caused by not being mindful enough, but it doesn't seem to have
an effect on the frequency or intensity of these panic attacks. (I
thought that might be what was causing them at first too, but due to
non-effect of skills that help with those sorts of thing I've mostly
ruled it out as a likely cause. I wasn't quick about that either, I
tried for a year.)
When memories or thoughts are affecting you
As to 'crawling in a box'... Well, I've had a lot of situational anxiety
and depression these last few years (three people I loved died, my
mother's codependent behaviour has spiralled out of control staying with
a partner who is a substance abuser and has driven them both to living
on the streets, and my significant other had a mental break down because
of pressure at his work) and when I couldn't cope in other ways because
the situations were over-whelming, I would remove myself from the
things that were extraneous effort to maintain and caused me anxiety.
Sometimes the only way to cope with the immediate is to pull back and
work on expanding outwards again when you can cope with the
immediate/internal.
I didn't know until I came here that my extreme anxiety about being
alone was actually a form of agoraphobia, for me has been a very key
thing, I have never enjoyed going out by myself but I dealt with it by
having somewhere specific to go, when things started going poorly in my
life pushing myself to go anywhere alone was only with a lot of
difficulties, and I had only even been okay with it for limited times,
and I moved into a state of never wanting to be alone with some alone
situations being worse than others. I've pushed past that a bit, I can
be at home alone now, and I've gone back to being able to walk to the
store by myself if I have a specific list, or waiting for someone after
being dropped off, but I still don't go anywhere alone at this point
unless I'm either going to meet someone else or I have a specific task I
am getting done.
I've never thought it was logical or okay, and wouldn't let myself stay
at the worst point (and clearly I still want to work forward, since I am
here reviewing so I can be ready for that push) but it has been my
experience that for some things the discomfort never ceases (being
alone, calling people, working on projects that I didn't decide the
parameters for, showing people that work on projects or assignments,
meeting new people, or going new places that someone else chose) you
just learn to live with it, and at the worst point all my negative
emotions were magnified and I just couldn't deal with or live with it or
I had to retract for a bit.
Only at
my worst points was I completely unable to act despite my emotions
(which was when I was in the worst parts of the
grieving process) I push myself most times. But sometimes you feel like
you aren't okay and just have to crawl into box for a bit, and when
you're okay just being in that box, you can start climbing out again and
live outside it.
It is quite possible that these situation have had a significant effect
on my panic attacks, however that would mostly mean that it would just
be a time thing before they subside. As I deal with the situations and
the situations improve (or I get used to them, as is the case for
someone being gone, or someone behaving in a way that you find severely
unhealthy and can't change for them.) they might eventually lessen,
which is quite okay with me, but it's still not comfortable in the mean
time. I want to know as much about what is happening to me and what I
can do about it, as possible. The more I know about why something is
happening, the better I am equipped to help myself.
The only other trouble is because of the timing of these events, they
have comprised and compromised the vast majority of my adult life so
far, so pushing into the working world is going to be a serious problem
in and of itself just due to lack of experience. Which is a situation
anxiety I have yet to really come to, but know is on the horizon.
Thanks for your reply, I hope my responses are clear. (It's good to be able to talk about it openly and honestly.)