Dream Health
Panic Attacks
Panic Attacks - What causes panic attacks to begin?
Panic Attacks - What causes panic attacks to begin? |
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Panic attacks can start for a number of reasons. STRESS If you feel you have had a lot of stress in your life recently, it might be useful to read, The Relaxation and Stress Reduction Workbook. HEALTH WORRIES OTHER HEALTH-RELATED REASONS DIFFICULT EMOTIONS OUT OF THE BLUE In some ways it is less important to know what causes panic attacks to begin and more important to know what keeps them going. What keeps panic attacks going? As you will remember panic affects your body, your thoughts and your behavior. All three work together to keep panic going. PhysicalFirstly, the physical symptoms can be part of the problem. For example, for people whose breathing is affected by anxiety, something called hyperventilation can occur. This just means someone is taking in too much air and not breathing it out. This is not dangerous but can lead to feelings of dizziness, and is often taken as further evidence that there is something seriously wrong. ThoughtsSecondly, the physical symptoms and anxious thoughts form a vicious circle that keeps panic attacks coming back again and again. Also, focusing your mind on your body can lead to noticing small changes and seeing this as a threat. People who have panic attacks often worry that the physical symptoms mean something different from what they really do. Examples of some of the most common misinterpretations are:
People often find it hard to believe that our thoughts can produce such strong feelings as fear. But if we believe something 100% then we will feel exactly the same way as if it were true. Another way thoughts can affect panic, is when someone starts to worry that they are going to panic in situations where they have panicked before. This, unfortunately, makes it more likely to happen again, and often leads to voidance. BehaviorThirdly, how a person behaves before, during and following a panic attack has a big part to play in whether panic attacks keep happening. The avoidance, escape, and safety behavior described earlier all add in to the vicious circle. The vicious circle of panic These physical symptoms, thoughts and behaviors form a vicious circle that keeps the panic attacks occurring over time. “THREAT” > (Alarm bell) > I'm sure my heart missed a beat > Physical symptoms of anxiety, for example, heart thudding > Thinks “oh no, something is wrong” > Physical symptoms get worse > Thinks - "Now I really am having a heart attack” > (Safety behavior) Sits down. "If I hadn't sat down I really would have had a heart attack”…
SUMMARY. 1. Fear is our body's way of coping with threat - preparing us 2. Panic attacks can begin for a number of reasons:
3. Panic attacks are kept going because of the vicious circle of 4. By avoiding, escaping or preventing panic attacks, you may Can panic attacks really harm me?We have spent a lot of time looking at recognizing and understanding panic, because this should give you all the information you need to be able to accept that panic attacks are not harmful. If you can do this then you have come a long way to being able to end your panic attacks. To what extent, sitting here now do you believe that your panic attacks mean that something awful is going to happen, (0-100%) for example, heart attack, stroke, fainting, choking, suffocating? Next time you have a panic attack, can you rate at the time how much you believe something awful is going to happen? SUMMARY: Panic attacks are not harmfulFurther Recommended Reading:Panic Attacks Workbook by David Carbonell |
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