Sunday, April 20, 2014

How Not To Communicate With Someone Who Has Anxiety

7 Things You Shouldn't Say To Someone With Anxiety
by LINDSAY HOLMES, huffingtonpost.com
February 17th 2014 9:52 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/02/17/things-not-to-say-to-some_n_4781182.html

If you’ve ever suffered from severe anxiety, you’re probably overly familiar with the control it can have over your life. And you’re not alone -- it affects approximately 40 million adult Americans per year.

Anxiety and panic disorders can cause ceaseless feelings of fear and uncertainty -- and with that suffering often comes comments that are more hurtful than helpful. According to Scott Bea, clinical psychologist and assistant professor of medicine at the Cleveland Clinic, while it usually comes from a heartfelt place, a lack of understanding from others can make working through a panic attack incredibly challenging.

“So many of the things you might say end up having a paradoxical effect and make the anxiety worse,” Bea tells The Huffington Post. “Anxiety can be like quicksand -- the more you do to try to defuse the situation immediately, the deeper you sink. By telling people things like ‘stay calm,’ they can actually increase their sense of panic.”

Despite everything, there are ways to still be supportive without causing more distress. Here are seven comments you should avoid saying to someone who suffers from an anxiety disorder -- and how you can really help them instead.

1. “Don’t sweat the small stuff.”

The truth is, what you consider small may not be so minute in someone else’s world. While you may be trying to cast a positive, upbeat light on a tense situation, you may be diminishing something that’s a much bigger deal to another person.

“You have to enter the person’s belief system,” Bea advises. “For [someone with anxiety], everything is big stuff.” In order to help instead, try approaching them from a point of encouragement rather than implying that they “buck up” over something little. Reminding them that they overcame this panic before can help validate that their pain is real and help them push beyond those overwhelming feelings, Bea says.

2. “Calm down.”

The debilitating problem with anxiety and panic disorders is that you simply can’t calm down. Finding the ability to relax -- particularly on command -- isn’t easy for most people, and it certainly can be more difficult for someone suffering from anxiety.

In a blog post on Psychology Today, psychologist Shawn Smith wrote an open letter to a loved one from the viewpoint of someone with anxiety, stating that even though there may be good intentions behind it, telling someone to calm down will most likely have the opposite effect:

Let’s acknowledge the obvious: if I could stop my anxiety, I would have done so by now. That may be difficult to understand since it probably looks like I choose to [panic, scrub, hoard, pace, hide, ruminate, check, clean, etc]. I don’t. In my world, doing those things is only slightly less excruciating than not doing them. It’s a difficult thing to explain, but anxiety places a person in that position.
According to Keith Humphreys, a professor of psychiatry at Stanford University, your words don’t have to be your most powerful method -- offering to do something with them may be the best way to help alleviate their symptoms. Humphreys says activities like meditation, going for a walk or working out are all positive ways to help.

3. “Just do it.”
When someone with anxiety is facing their fear, a little “tough love” may not have the effect you’re hoping for. Depending on the type of phobia or disorder someone is dealing with, panic can strike at anytime -- whether it’s having to board an airplane, speaking with a group of people or even just occurring out of nowhere. “Obviously if they could overcome this they would because it would be more pleasant,” Humphreys says. “No one chooses to have anxiety. Using [these phrases] makes them feel defensive and unsupported.”

Instead of telling someone to “suck it up,” practicing empathy is key. Humphreys advises swapping pep-talk language for phrases like “that’s a terrible way to feel” or “I’m sorry you feel that way.”

“The paradox is, [an empathetic phrase] helps them calm down because they don’t feel like they have to fight for their anxiety,” Humphreys said. “It shows some understanding.”

4. “Everything is going to be fine.”
While overall supportive, Bea says that those with anxiety won’t really react to the comforting words in the way that you may hope. “Unfortunately, telling someone [who is dealing with anxiety] that ‘everything is going to be alright’ won’t do much, because nobody is going to believe it,” he explains. “Reassurance sometimes can be a bad method. It makes them feel better for 20 seconds and then doubt can creep in again.”

Bea suggests remaining encouraging, without using blanket statements that may not offer value to the situation. Sometimes, he says, even allowing them to embrace their worry -- instead of trying to banish it -- can be the only way to help. “They can always accept the condition,” Bea said. “Encouraging them that it’s okay to feel what they’re feeling -- that can be a pretty good fix as well.”

5. “I’m stressed out too.”

Similar to “calm down” and “don’t sweat the small stuff,” you may be accidentally trivializing someone’s struggle by creating a comparison. However, if you are stressed or suffering from a mild anxiety or panic disorder, Humphreys warns that camaraderie after a certain point can get dangerous. “It’s important not to obsess with each other,” Humphreys advises. “If you have two people who are anxious, they may feed off each other. If people have trouble controlling their own anxiety, try not to engage in that activity even if you think it might help.”

Research has shown that stress is a contagious emotion, and a recent study out of the University of California San Francisco found that even babies can catch those negative feelings from their mothers. In order to promote healthier thoughts, Humphreys advises attempting to refocus the narrative instead of commiserating together.

6. “Have a drink -- it’ll take your mind off of it.”

That cocktail may take the edge off, but when dealing with anxiety disorders there is a greater problem to worry about, Humphreys says. Doctors and prescribed treatments are more of the answer when it comes to dealing with the troubles that cause the panic. “Most people assume that if someone has a few drinks, that will take their anxiety away,” he said. “In the short term, yes perhaps it will, but in the long term it can be a gateway for addiction. It’s dangerous in the long term because those substances can be reinforcing the anxiety.”

7. “Did I do something wrong?”
It can be difficult when a loved one is constantly suffering and at times it can even feel like your actions are somehow setting them off. Humphreys says it’s important to remember that panic and anxiety disorders stem from something larger than just one particular or minor instance. “Accept that you cannot control another person’s emotions,” he explains. “If you try to [control their emotions], you will feel frustrated, your loved one suffering may feel rejected and you’ll resent each other. It’s important not to take their anxiety personally.”

Humphreys says it’s also crucial to let your loved ones know that there is a way to overcoming any anxiety or panic disorder -- and that you’re there to be supportive. “There are ways out to become happier and more functional,” he says. “There is absolutely a reason to have hope.”

Did we miss any? What’s one thing you shouldn’t say to someone suffering from anxiety? Share it with us in the comments below.

Posted via Blogaway


Posted via Blogaway

People Are so self Interested That They Really Don't Give a Crap About You Or What You Do

How to Stop Giving a F*ck What People Think
by Sean Kim, lifehacker.comFebruary 25th 2014 2:00 PM
http://lifehacker.com/how-to-stop-giving-a-f-ck-what-people-think-1530784365

We're all guilty. Every day from the moment we wake up, we live our lives caring what other people think of us.

This post originally appeared on Medium.

Author's note: This article was inspired by the work of Julien Smith and The Flinch.

We accept the status quo for what it is because everyone around us does. We tip toe our way through life by doing things in order to please others, not because it's what we believe in. Eventually our actions, appearances, and lives become molded by how we think other people perceive us. How are these pants going to make me look? What will my colleagues think if I spoke out? Are those people talking shit behind my back? If I take this job, what will my friends and family think of me?

Just writing that paragraph alone gave me a headache. It's exhausting. It's dreadful. It has to stop. Living a life that follows the ideal notions of what other people think is a terrible way to live. It makes you become the spineless spectator who waits for other people to take action first. It makes you become a follower. Worst of all, it makes you become someone who doesn't take a stand for anything.

Today is the last day we live a life dictated by others. Today, we're going to get to the bottom of the truth. Today is the day we stop giving a F@$%.

No One Really Cares
Believe it or not, we're not that special. We go through our days thinking about how other people might be judging us. But the truth is—those people are thinking the exact same thing. No one in today's "smartphone-crazed" society has time in their schedule to think more than a brief second about us. The fact of the matter is, when we do have time get our thoughts straight, we're too busy thinking about ourselves and our own shortcomings—not others.

A study done by the National Science Foundation claims that people have, on average, 50,000 plus thoughts a day. This means that even if someone thought about us ten times in one day, it's only 0.02% of their overall daily thoughts. It is a sad but simple truth that the average person filters their world through their ego, meaning that they think of most things relating to "me" or "my." This means that unless you have done something that directly affects another person or their life, they are not going to spend much time thinking about you at all.

I've always enjoyed watching performers trying to hustle for some change at New York City train stations. These guys simply don't give a F@$%. But the more interesting observation I made is how the spectators react. Rather than watching the actual performers, most people are looking around to see how other people are reacting. If people were laughing, they would start laughing too. But if people weren't paying attention, they would also pay no mind.

Even when provided with the blatantly obvious opportunity to judge someone, people are still thinking about how others may perceive them. Once you understand that this is how people's minds works, it's a big step towards freedom.

You Can't Please Everyone
It's impossible to live up to everyone's expectations. There will always be people—no matter what we say or how we treat them—that will judge us. Whether you're at the gym, at work, taking the train, or even online playing Call of Duty. Even now it's happening. You will never be able to stop people from judging you, but you can stop it from affecting you.

Think about the worst thing that could possibly happen when someone is judging you or what you're doing. I guarantee that chances are—nothing will happen. Absolutely nothing. No one is going to go out of their busy lives to confront us, or even react for that matter. Because as I mentioned before, no one actually cares. What will happen is that these people will actually respect you for claiming your ground. They may disagree with you, but they'll respect you.

Start standing up for what you believe in—causes, opinions, anything. You're going to have people that disagree with you anyways, so why not express how you truly feel? I've learned that it's better to be loved by a few people you care about, than to be liked by everyone. These are family, friends, your spouse—the people who love you for who you are, and the people who will be there for you during your worst times. Focus on these people. They're the only people that matter.

You Reap What You Sow
Worrying too much about what other people think can become a self-fulfilling prophecy, because the way we think starts to become the way we behave.

These individuals become people-pleasers and are overly accommodating to others, thinking it will stop them from being judged. In fact, the opposite is true. Most people don't like push-overs and are turned off by it. The behavior we use in an attempt to please others, can actually cause the opposing effect. This means that if you're a push-over, then you're going to be attracting others in your life who are also push-overs. Vice versa. This can be quite a dangerous path to go down if you don't recognize its consequences.

It's been said that we are the average of the five people we hang out with the most. When we start to attract and associate with the same people that share our weaknesses —we're stuck. We stop growing, because there's no one to challenge us to be better. We start thinking that this is the norm and we remain comfortable. This is not a place you want to be.

Now let's talk about the cure. Here are five ways to stop giving a F@$%.

Reclaiming Your Freedom

1. Know Your Values
First and foremost. You need to know what's important to you in life, what you truly value, and what you're ultimately aiming for. Once you know who you really are and what matters to you, what other people think of you becomes significantly less important. When you know your values, you'll have something to stand up for —something you believe in.

You'll stop saying yes to everything. Instead, you'll learn to say no when friends pressure you to go bar-hopping, or when a tempting business opportunity distracts you from your business. When you have your values straight, you have your shit straight.

2. Put Yourself Out There
Now that you know what your values are, it's time to put yourself out there. This can be done several ways. Here are a few suggestions:

Blogging
Wearing a polka-dot sweater
Public Speaking
Flirting/Asking someone out
Keep in mind that when you're doing any of these activities, you have to speak your mind. Be honest with yourself and what you share, because the world doesn't need another conflict-avoider who does what everyone else does.

3. Surround Yourself with Pros
Surround yourself with people who are self-assured, and live life without comprising their core values. These people will rub off on you quickly.

One of my best friends, Cody, has been a big influence on me. Having spent the summer with him, I've observed countless times where he strongly voiced his opinion on controversial topics. What I learned was that he was simply voicing opinions that people already had in their heads, but were too afraid to voice. People admired him for being so honest and direct, even when they disagreed with his views. Thanks for not giving a F@$%, Cody.

4. Create a "Growth List"
OK, now we're getting personal. I haven't told anyone this, but I have this list called the "Growth List." A Growth List is comprised of all the things in life that makes you uncomfortable. These are fears, insecurities—anything that gives you the jitters. Here's how it works.

You start by writing all the things that make you feel uncomfortable. Then one-by-one, you do them. Once you complete the task, you move on to the next. Repeat.

My first growth task was taking a cold shower (The Flinch). I turned the water as cold as it could get, and I could feel my body shake before I even entered the shower. This was the inner bullshit voice in my head talking. It was hard at first. But surprisingly, it got easier the second time. Then even easier the third time. Before I knew it, my body stopped shaking—I was no longer uncomfortable; I'd conquered my fear.

This exercise does wonders. I have yet to find a better way to get out of my comfort zone. You can read all the books in the world about being confident or getting over your fears, but if you don't take action, you're just someone who's read how to ride a bicycle without ever having ridden one.

5. Travel Alone
If you're looking for an ultimate transformation that combines all of the points above, you should travel alone. Traveling with other people can be fun, but you won't get the opportunity to truly get out of your comfort zone. You'll be exposed to different social cultures, break social norms that you didn't even know existed, and ultimately, be forced to burst out of your small bubble.

Bring as little as possible, and fit everything into one backpack. Plan nothing, except for a one-way flight ticket to your destination—figure everything else out when you're there. Trust me, you'll be just fine. It won't be easy initially, but don't get discouraged. Being comfortable with the uncomfortable will grow with time. I continue to struggle with it everyday, as do many others. But you need to get started today.

The world is already full of people who obey the status quo. But the people who don't give a F@$% are the ones that change the world. Be the latter. Start living life the way you want, be fearless like you once were as a child, and always, always stand up for the truth. Someone has to.

How to stop giving a F@$% what people think | Medium

Sean Kim is an entrepreneur, new-born writer, and striving life hacker. He loves voicing his passion on seeking freedom, personal development, and entrepreneurship. Sean loves meeting new people and you can start a conversation with him on Twitter @sseankim.

Want to see your work on Lifehacker? Email Tessa.

Want more tips and tricks for living life better? Check out other articles like this on Lifehacker.


Posted via Blogaway

What Is Success And Who Decides What That Means For You

I Hate Quotes About 'Success' (Except For This One) : Panic About Anxiety : A blog about panic attacks, panic disorder, and anxiety.
by Summer Beretsky, blogs.psychcentral.com
February 28th 2014

http://blogs.psychcentral.com/panic/2014/02/i-hate-quotes-about-success-except-for-this-one/

Generic platitudes tend to annoy me. You know the kind I’m talking about — right?
Say you’ve just been through a bad breakup. It stings monumentally, and you keep hearing crap like this:

“It’ll all work out in the end.”
“Maybe it’s for the best.”
“There are plenty of fish in the sea.”
Blah. These phrases are so scripted into our culture, and I’m sure the people who use these phrases mean well — but I can’t help rolling my eyes a bit at these saccharine one-liners.

That’s precisely the reason why I also tend to strongly dislike the words “succeed” and “success”. They’re scripted into our modern culture as these super-essential buzzwords that better damn well wave hello from the “objectives” section of your résumé — lest your application be tossed into the circular filing cabinet.

DOUBLE THE ‘C’, DOUBLE THE ‘S’, AND YOU’LL ALWAYS HAVE SUCCESS?

But the definition of “success” varies for everyone, right?

I mean, success for you might mean reaching a certain income or job title. Success for someone else might mean finishing the work week without a migraine or without the kids coloring on the living room wall.

Success for me, these days, is all about how far this agoraphobic gal can push herself away from home.

So, when it comes to generic platitudes about success, that’s where I start to get really annoyed. My high school trigonometry teacher (in whose class I recall failing the midterm exam abysmally) would begin each day by writing out success-related quotations on the blackboard.

Stuff that went something like this:

“Success comes in a can, not a can’t!”
“If you can dream it, you can do it!”
“Success is counted sweetest by those who never succeed!”
“You always pass failure on the way to success.”
“If at first you don’t succeed, try try again!”
Gag.

SUCCESS IS FINDING THE BLACKBOARD ERASER

I mean, I can see the guy’s good intentions — he obviously wanted to motivate a classroom full of dopey 11th-grade students whose eyes tended to glaze over after staring at triangles and cosines and formulas on the blackboard.

But it never worked on me. (One day, angry at my failing grades in that class, I even got up and erased the quote when the teacher left the classroom briefly. It felt like a gigantic act of rebellion in the tiny context of high school.)

But today, I actually found a success-related quote that I don’t mind.

And why?

Two reasons: first, it’s sort of an anti-success quote about success.

Second, I was introduced to it via this most excellent animated image posted to /r/funny:

The quote (which I can’t find reliable attribution for, sadly) is this:

“If at first you don’t succeed, redefine success.”

Now there’s something I can agree with. Create your own definition for success, and you’ll never be following anyone else’s script — only yours.

(Also, um, the bunny! He is chubby and cute and makes me giggle.)

And so, I hope you all find a way to make this weekend successful — by your definition alone.

Photo: SalFalko (Flickr)

Reddit hat tip: /u/PaperkutRob

________________________________

Like this blog? Join Panic About Anxiety on Facebook for regular updates!


Posted via Blogaway

Sometimes It Feels Like Your Body Is Working Against You

Low Blood Sugar And Panic Attacks: How Are They Related?
by Summer Beretsky, blogs.psychcentral.com
February 23rd 2014 http://blogs.psychcentral.com/panic/2014/02/low-blood-sugar-and-panic-attacks-how-are-they-related/

Suddenly, you feel sort of woozy in an nebulous way. Something feels “off”, but you can’t put your finger on it.
Then, your heart starts beating faster, and you feel the need to sit down.

Or sleep.

Or vomit.

You know your body is pleading for something — but what does it want? What does it need?

You continue to wonder as your body begins to sweat. These symptoms worry you, of course.

“Is this a panic attack?” you ask yourself. After all, you’ve experience severe anxiety before. You know these uncomfortable sensations. You know that a racing heart and a woozy head usually signify an intense head-on collision with panic is just around the corner.

Or is something else amiss?

HYPOGLYCEMIA: IMITATING PANIC ATTACKS SINCE…WELL, ALWAYS

The word “hypoglycemia” is just a fancypants way of saying “low blood sugar” or “low blood glucose”. And according to Edmund Bourne’s The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook, hypoglycemia’s main symptoms (light-headedness, trembling, feelings of unsteadiness) overlap with the symptoms of panic.

And I can certainly vouch for that. As both a panicker and someone who sees regular dips in blood sugar, the overlap is uncanny.

Well, that spells trouble, doesn’t it? So…when you’re feeling unwell, how can you differentiate between panic and low blood sugar? How can you know that what you’re feeling is “just” a bout of low blood sugar that’ll disappear with a glass of OJ and a decent meal?

Unless you have a glucose meter, you sort of…can’t. (Although, for the record, they’re not too expensive — I bought one from CVS when it was on sale for $10. Test strips are another story, though.)

But you can calm your nerves a bit by learning about hypoglycemia, its causes, and ways to prevent it.

LOW BLOOD SUGAR: WHAT PANICKERS NEED TO KNOW

Bourne goes on for a few pages about hypoglycemia and its relationship with anxiety, but I’ve picked out the points that anyone who deals with both an anxiety disorder and hypoglycemia should keep in mind:

1. A drop in blood sugar can occur in response to stress. According to Bourne, your body “burns up sugar very rapidly” in times of stress (p. 338).

Well, isn’t that just fantastic? Not only can a high level of stress evolve into a bona fide panic attack, but it can also deplete our blood sugar to the point where the hypoglycemia’s own physiological symptoms trick us into thinking that we’re panicking.

So, not only do we need to manage our stress — but we need to make sure we’re avoiding the other causes of hypoglycemia then, too, if we don’t want it to trigger any potential panic. (More on that below.)

2. When your brain isn’t getting enough sugar, you experience an adrenaline rush. Icing on the cake, right? (Sorry for the sugar-related pun.)

But seriously, low blood sugar signals our adrenal glands to — well, I’ll just let Bourne explain it:

…your adrenal glands kick in and release adrenaline and cortisol, which causes you to feel more anxious and aroused and also has the specific purpose of causing your liver to release stored sugar in order to bring your blood sugar level back to normal.

So the subjective symptoms of hypoglycemia arise both from a deficit of blood sugar and a secondary stress response mediated by the adrenal glands.

That’s just what we need — more adrenaline in our lives, right? Hrrmph.

But, in a way, it is comforting to know that the panicky feelings caused by low blood sugar aren’t necessarily an organic panic attack — it’s our body’s way of correcting an imbalance. It’s our body working for us, not against us.

So, we’ve already learned above that stress can cause low blood sugar, and low blood sugar can cause the symptoms of panic. Dandy. Now, what the heck can we do about it?

3. You can avoid hypoglycemia by eating the right food at the right times. Eliminating simple carbs and replacing them with complex carbs are a great start, according to Bourne. His other suggestions include replacing candy with fruit, ditching foods that contain white sugar, and eating a protein or complex-carb snack between meals.

Eating food in this way can reduce hypoglycemia — and, thus, the panicky sensations that are associated with it.

(Of course, I’m not a doctor, so please don’t mistake this for medical advice. Always be sure to check with your doctor before making changes to your diet or if you are concerned about hypoglycemia.)


Posted via Blogaway

Saturday, April 19, 2014

People Who Don't Live With Anxiety Don't Know What It's Really Like

10 Things People Get Wrong About Anxiety
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/03/12/anxiety-myths_n_4899290.html?ncid=fcbklnkushpmg00000063
by Share, huffingtonpost.com
March 12th 2014 7:46 AM
Perhaps one of the most persistent struggles when dealing with anxiety is what people get wrong about the disorder.

According to Joseph Bienvenu, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins University, there are many fallacies when it comes to anxiety disorders, and that can make dealing with it more difficult. These misconceptions are a common reality for those who either have the condition, know someone who is battling it or think they may be on the brink of a diagnosis. We've debunked the 10 of the most common myths about anxiety and panic disorders.

People with anxiety are feeble.

"Many people think that having this disorder means that they're fearful or weak -- and that's certainly not the case," Bienvenu says. He explains that while many anxiety and panic disorders can stem from fear, that characteristic of the condition isn't the only component -- and it definitely shouldn't be used to define the person.

In an effort to explain what it's like to deal with fear-based anxiety, clinical psychologist Bill Knaus detailed the everyday trials of the condition in a Psychology Today blog post. He describes how anxiety can also manifest from something we're all familiar with: remorse. "Recurring anxieties and fears can feel like walls on each side of a trail painted with murals of regrets," he wrote.

Having anxiety isn't a big deal.

According to Allison Baker, a child and adolescent psychiatrist and the director of the adolescent program for Columbia University Medical Center, the disorder isn't something to be swept under the rug. Anxiety disorders can accompany or have the potential to lead to other illnesses such as depression and substance abuse problems.

When it comes to children and teens, Baker also says that many kids don't speak up about their anxiety because they don't notice that it's a big deal. "Anxious kids, at the end of the day, they're not the squeaky wheels," Baker explains. "They most often just internalize an anxious experience. They don't raise flags or cause anyone grief, so they kind of get neglected in the process."

The condition is not that common.

Anxiety disorders affect approximately 40 million American adults per year, which is about 18 percent of the country's population. According to Baker, anxiety disorders are also one of the most prevalent pediatric psych conditions.

Issues with anxiety stem from a poor childhood.

Another common misunderstanding about anxiety is that it comes from issues deeply rooted in the past. While past experiences certainly can have an influence on anxiety, Bienvenu says this idea is a misunderstanding. "It's not that having a difficult childhood is completely unrelated, but having a difficult childhood can be related to all kinds of things, not just anxiety," he says. "Some people have great childhood and still have anxiety."

According to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America, most professionals have the patient focus on the here and now during therapy-based treatment as opposed to reflecting on what has occurred in the past. Studies have also found that practicing being present through mindfulness meditation can help reduce levels of anxiety and mental stress.

People suffering from anxiety should just avoid whatever is causing their fear.

Instead of running from fear, experts suggest just the opposite. "Avoidance is not a good strategy," explains David Spiegel, Stanford University’s associate chair of psychiatry and behavioral sciences. "Avoiding [what you're fearful of] makes it like it isn't happening -- and the more you avoid it the worse it gets. For people with phobias, the only experience they have [with that particular stressor] is a horrible one but it is possible to normalize it. The more you deal with things that stress you out, the more master you have over them."

In an essay for the New York Times, New York University neural science professor Joseph LeDoux explained that while some avoidance might be helpful in certain cases, general avoidance behavior may only exacerbate the condition. "People with social anxiety problems, for example, can easily circumvent anxiety by avoiding social situations," he wrote. "This solves one problem but creates others, since social interactions are an important part of daily life, including both professional and personal life. But if one is avoiding situations where these cues are likely to be encountered, the opportunity to extinguish fears by exposure never occurs and the anxiety continues indefinitely."

The disorder will resolve on its own.

"Many people believe that anxiety isn't something worth assessing," Baker says. "But it's important treat anxiety, especially in children and teens. If untreated, it can be associated with an increased risk with depression." There are several methods of treatment for anxiety, including psychotherapy and medication.

Unwinding with a drink can soothe an anxious person.

Despite its reputation for "taking the edge off," don't expect a beer to relax someone who is struggling with an anxiety or panic disorder. In fact, according to Keith Humphreys, a professor of psychiatry at Stanford University, it may end up only making the condition worse. "In the short term, yes perhaps it will, but in the long term it can be a gateway for addiction," he previously told HuffPost Healthy Living. "It's dangerous in the long term because those substances can be reinforcing the anxiety."

Despite the risks, a study published in the Archives of General Psychiatry found that most people suffering from some form of anxiety try to relieve it by self-medicating with substances. The study revealed that 13 percent of the people who had consumed alcohol or drugs in the previous year did so in an effort to reduce their anxiety, fear or panic about a particular situation.

Anxiety is only born from a certain fear or trauma.

10 Things People Get Wrong About Anxiety

According to Bienvenu, it's incorrect to think that anxiety mostly comes from a specific experience or fear. While a certain phobia -- like flying or great heights -- can often be at the core of the condition, there's also a genetic basis to anxiety disorders, he says.

According to Spiegel, chronic anxiety encompasses more than just one particular instance of fear and begins to make you less aware of what you're feeling in the moment. "You start to feel anxious about being anxious," he said.

There's nothing you can say to help an anxious person relax.

There are many ways you can offer to help someone dealing with the condition, Baker says. If you're looking to put someone you know with anxiety at ease, the best thing to do is to ask questions. "Inquire from the person, 'How can I be helpful?' 'What can I do or say that's going to help you in this moment?'" she says. "Take your direction from the person themselves instead of going on the assumption of what they may need from you."

You should avoid certain phrases when speaking with a loved one who may be suffering from anxiety disorder. According to Humphreys, being sensitive to the situation can also help. "The paradox is, [an empathetic phrase] helps them calm down because they don’t feel like they have to fight for their anxiety," Humphreys said. "It shows some understanding."

It's hard to relate to someone who has the condition.

We've all been caught up in a moment that brings up those pangs of nerves, Baker explains. "We all experience anxiety in some capacity," she says. "It helps us prepare for speaking in public and it motivates us to practice or rehearse; everyone can relate to what that experience is like. An anxiety disorder is when those run-of-the-mill butterflies become a chronic daily experience."

In order to assist a loved one who is suffering from the condition, Baker says it may be helpful to recall some of your own experiences. "Imagine what those would be like in progressive state," she says. "It may make you more empathetic to the situation."

Want more news, blogs, and cat videos? Click here to dive deeper into The Huffington Post.


Posted via Blogaway

I'm Always Afraid That People Will Really See Me And Know That I Don't Belong

Do You Feel Like An Imposter? A Fraud? A Phony? : Panic About Anxiety : A blog about panic attacks, panic disorder, and anxiety.
by Summer Beretsky, blogs.psychcentral.com
March 19

Do you ever feel like you’re “faking it” — at work, at school, or at home? Like you’re not qualified to be there, but by the grace of chance or luck, you are?
And do you feel like one day someone’s going to “out” you? Reveal you as a fraud? Point a finger at you and identify you as an impostor?

I remember my very first day of teaching business students at my local community college. The class? Introduction to Marketing.

Was I qualified? Well, yeah. I’ve got a master’s degree and several years of experience working for a marketing and advertising company. I’ve also taught college classes online before.

I know how to write lesson plans. I know how to put together activities and lectures that fulfill student learning objectives. And, despite that pesky anxiety disorder I deal with, I’m pretty good at speaking in front of a crowd.

But still, on that very first late-summer day, standing in the bright classroom on the second floor of a gigantic academic center, I felt like an impostor — like they’d chosen the wrong person to teach. Surely I wasn’t smart enough or qualified enough for this. I should be sitting at a desk, not standing behind the podium.

Appropriately enough, there’s a term for this feeling: the impostor phenomenon.

I CAN’T POSSIBLY BELONG HERE, CAN I?

From Dr. Pauline Rose Clance’s website (with spacing added for clarity):

Most people who experience the Impostor Phenomenon (IP) would not say, “I feel like an impostor.” Yet, when they read or hear about the experience, they say, “How did you know exactly how I feel?”

And how do they feel? Even though they are often very successful by external standards, they feel their success has been due to some mysterious fluke or luck or great effort; they are afraid their achievements are due to “breaks” and not the result of their own ability and competence.

They are also pretty certain that, unless they go to gargantuan efforts to do so, success can not be repeated. They are afraid that next time, I will blow it.

Can you imagine the anxiety that impostor phenomenon (also called “imposter syndrome”) might cause?

I FEEL FAKE, BUT MY NERVES ARE REAL

Consider Clance’s last sentence above — have you ever felt like you succeeded at something difficult, but only by the hair on your chin?

What kind of thoughts and behaviors might follow that feeling of undeserved success? Might you feel insecure about your own abilities? Might you avoid taking chances as a result? Might you begin to over-work yourself so that you feel like less of a phony?

Might you continue to feel like a fraud who is just barely making it?

Gosh — even typing out those last few questions made me feel uneasy.

(On that note, let’s pause for a brief interlude of Summer’s Uncensored Thoughts: Wow, I have a blog? On a psychology website? Why do I deserve this? I can’t write. I don’t belong here. Everyone else here can write well, but I can’t.)

Well, I guess it’s clear why those questions made me feel so uneasy.

MEET SOME LIKE-MINDED IMPOSTORS PEOPLE

But it’s not just me who feels this way. I know at least one other blogger who understands the impostor phenomenon intimately:   my fellow PsychCentral blogger Margarita Tartakovsky, who felt like a fraud during grad school:

I felt like the program made some exception to accept me, that I really didn’t deserve to be there, that I wore my stupidity on my sleeve and that soon the professors and powers-that-be would find out and kick me out…

…[e]ven when I received high grades and positive feedback and praise, I still felt a gnawing discomfort that I just didn’t belong in such a smart place.

I also wasn’t the only one. My cohort and I talked regularly about feeling like our department had a made a mistake in admitting us. We worried about keeping up, regularly questioned our intelligence and abilities and felt insecure all-around.

In my next post, I’ll take you even further into others’ experiences with impostor phenomenon.

Until then, Clance offers a test on her website that allows users to gauge the extent and severity of their impostor phenomenon symptoms.

Where do you fall on her scale? Which situation in your life — work, school, or something else — makes you feel like you’re not quite good enough to belong?

 http://blogs.psychcentral.com/panic/2014/03/do-you-feel-like-an-impostor-a-fraud-a-phony/ 

Do You Feel Like An Impostor? You're Not Alone! : Panic About Anxiety : A blog about panic attacks, panic disorder, and anxiety.
by Summer Beretsky, blogs.psychcentral.com
March 22

In my last post, I introduced you to what Dr. Pauline Rose Clance calls the “impostor phenomenon” — that nagging feeling that, despite being perfectly qualified to do something, you just don’t belong.

That you’re just not good enough (even though you are).

That you’re just not smart enough (even though, again, you are).

Have you ever felt like this before?

I have to credit the good folks on Reddit’s /r/anxiety community for inspiring this series of blog posts about impostor phenomenon. In fact, they’re exactly who I’ll be turning my attention to now.

In my last post, I shared a few anecdotes about my own experience with impostor phenomenon at work, and my fellow blogger’s experience with it at grad school.

And now, to really prove that this is a commonly-shared experience, I’m going to share a few of the Reddit posts that opened my eyes to how common this phenomenon actually is!

DOES ANYONE ELSE FEEL LIKE A PHONY, TOO?

It all started when user Thinksincode posed the following question to the community:

Do you suffer from impostor syndrome?

I get this all the time. It’s a feeling that, despite having done well at your job, you feel like you’re a fraud and it’s only a matter of time before everyone finds out that you’re just an “impostor” and the house of cards collapses.

It can be really anxiety-provoking, and really hurts my self-confidence. Have any of you dealt with impostor syndrome?

And the response to his question was overwhelming. Several answers from fellow Redditors had to do with feeling like an impostor school or in academic settings. User Amateurpolymath wrote:

As a graduate student surrounded by genius colleagues who went to much better universities in undergrad, I feel this all the time. I don’t know know what to do about it, and it haunts me every second of every day.

User Bikemistress responded with some empathy and wise words (and I’ve bolded a very significant part of her response):

Same here. One thing that I learned after finally getting up the courage to talk to my closest friends in my department is that everyone feels like this in graduate school.

Once I opened up to one of my classmates about feeling like this, she told me she was shocked to hear that from me. Apparently since I would always leave when everyone was studying together for midterms, they assumed that I had all of my shit together and didn’t find it necessary to study.

In reality being around everyone else talking about details of the material would put me on the verge of an attack so I had to leave to avoid it.

I can guarantee that even when you’re feeling like an impostor and stressing out about if you can succeed there is someone else in your department having the exact same thoughts, and looking at you as the one that deserves to be there more than they do. Remember, your department would not invest time and resources in you if they didn’t think you were good enough.

User Teds101 related his own experience with the impostor phenomenon in the workplace:

I went through a few weeks where for no reason I felt like I was going to be in trouble, was doing inadequate and didn’t deserve my job and that my boss was going to fire me. I was doing the same thing I always did though.

And even people who are “successful” in the traditional sense of the word aren’t immune to feeling like a phony. From user Boomerangotan:

I was hired by a company in 1998. Been with them all the way. It was a small company of 5-8 employees when we were bought by a much larger company a few years ago.

I am happily a lead developer. My boss and his boss are good friends. The boss’s boss is now a VP of our division and still good friends -he still asks my advice for things and asks how other managers are performing. I still produce good stuff and occasionally blow away coworkers with some cool solutions to problems. The product my little company got bought out for went on to become a huge money-maker for the bigger company.

And yet I am still in a constant state of anxiety about my job. I feel that tightness in my chest throughout the day. I fear that my colleagues put on a facade and only put up with me for my seniority. I fear that everyone else knows what they are doing and so far I have just lucked out that I have been able to find good solutions to the problems we’ve faced.

I logically realize I couldn’t really be in a better position, yet I don’t know how to shake this constant fear.

So, how can we shake this feeling of fraudulence?

1. First, recognize what impostor phenomenon is. If you’ve read this blog post, you should have a pretty solid idea of its symptoms by now. Notice when you’re feeling it, and remind yourself that about a billion other people feel the same way. It’s not just you.

2. Avoid self-deprication. My own therapist calls this the “but” syndrome. After noticing that I tend to downplay all of my successes by following up with the word “but”, she urged me to begin noticing how often I do this in daily life. Turns out, I was doing it very often: I’m a college instructor, but only part-time. I was published in the LA Times, but only once. I went grocery shopping today, but I still couldn’t get all the way over to aisle 14 without panicking.

3. Make a list of your accomplishments.l Recognizing your triumphs doesn’t make you conceited; rather, it helps you to focus on the value of what you’ve achieved. Review the list regularly — especially when you start to feel like you’re a fake who is about to be “found out” by classmates or co-workers.

How do you manage the impostor phenomenon in your own life? Please share your own techniques in the comments!


Posted via Blogaway

Friday, April 18, 2014

I Want To Be Invisible To Protect My self But The Predictors Want To Be Invisible Too

I need to find a job that pays a little more money. I hate being part of management or having to work with people who are high up the ranks. I feel like I'm always protecting myself or trying not to be noticed out in the open.

Interesting article reminded me that the preditors have to be careful not to be noticed too.

Predators among Us
by Katherine Ramsland, psychologytoday.comApril 7

This past week, I spoke at a homicide investigators conference, on the topic of covert intelligence in smart predators. By this, I meant that the criminal IQ of some offenders defies any measurement device we currently have.
On a related note, I wrote a brief article a few years ago about how certain people can blend in and hunt invisibly among us for prey. So, I’m revisiting it.

Because of some books I’ve written, I’ve been asked if I can tell if someone is a vampire, i.e., a clandestine member of the vampire subculture. I’ve also been asked if I can spot a psychopath. But these aren’t really the right questions. Not all members of either group are dangerous or out to get me. Instead, people should be asking if I can spot and protect myself from a predator.

Both “vampires” and psychopaths include predatory types. The clever ones know that they shouldn’t be easily spotted. They're aware that they can best feed off others by moving with the crowd. If predators are conspicuous, they're less effective at getting what they want.

With access to the Psychopathy Checklist (PCL-R) in various books and on Internet sites, people think they can just go down the list of 20 traits and behaviors and identify a psychopath. In fact, TV shows are full of people who do it.

The truth is, most of these supposed assessments are superficial and inaccurate. Spotting (and deflecting) a truly clever predator is no easy task.

While we’ve seen plenty of exhibitionists who claim to be vampires, as well as nasty narcissists who strut their stuff publicly enough to invite a psychopath diagnosis, a member of either group who really wants to stay hidden can fool even the experts.

If they remain under the radar, they can extend their manipulations of others for a longer period of time – perhaps indefinitely – and tap quite a range of victims. Look at the number of psychopathic CEOs over the past two decades who've fed off people’s gullibility and resources to enrich themselves. They were most successful when no one suspected them.

“Vampires” of any stripe who wish to imbibe from others for a long time and from a wide range of people benefit from dressing normally, acting normally, and waiting for an opportunity to operate under the radar. They'll be friendly, not fiendly.

In The Science of Vampires, I devoted a chapter to what I called "psychological vampires." These are the people who con, manipulate, and deplete us without remorse, and usually with ease.

They are the seducers, the white-collar criminals, the con artists, and even the serial killers who know how to play us with devices like trust, charm, empty promises, pseudo-intimacy, and false excuses. They can only manage this if we believe they’re trustworthy, genuine, honest, and without guile.

Thus, they must seem “normal,” not different. They’ll mimic normal relationships until they’ve earned our trust before they make their move. They deplete us without remorse and then move on to someone else. That’s why the most clever and successful predators blend in.

So, the answer to the queries is, yes, you can spot the ones who want to be noticed, but they definitely don’t succeed in exploiting us as well as those who stay in the shadows and act normal. They are closer than they appear.

 http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/shadow-boxing/201404/predators-among-us 


Posted via Blogaway

Cheating feels So Good. .. At Least Now We Know lt's Normal

Why Cheating Makes You Feel So Good

by Thorin Klosowski and on Lifehacker, lifehacker.com
October 31 12:30 PM

Cheating isn't exactly the sort of behavior that's supposed to make you feel better, but sometimes it does anyway. The British Psychological Society Research Digest explains why we get that little high from cheating.

People assume that behaving unethically will make them feel bad, but it turns out we actually get a little buzz from it. Research published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology calls this the "cheaters high." BPS explains what's going on:

In one study, 179 students at a US university had the chance to earn cash rewards for solving anagrams. Forty-one per cent of them cheated by adding in solutions after they'd seen the answers. And after the test, these cheaters experienced a larger boost in positive emotions compared with the honest students...

Yet another study sought to uncover the reason why people get a kick from cheating. This time 205 people were recruited online (via Amazon's Mechanical Turk survey website) and had the chance to solve anagrams for cash. Some of the participants received a message that said "we realise we can't check your answers ... we hope you reported your answers honestly". Its purpose was to undermine any attempts cheaters may make to tell themselves they hadn't really broken the rules. In fact, those who lied about their score and received this message reported more self-satisfaction than those who cheated but didn't get the message. Ruedy and her colleagues said this suggests the buzz of cheating comes not from self-deception (the warning message would have undermined this), but rather from the thrill of getting away with it.

Both studies have pretty low stakes (participates weren't cheating and harming puppies at the same time), but it's still a pretty interesting set of studies.

The cheater's high - how being bad feels good | BPS Research Digest

This post is part of our Evil Week series at Lifehacker, where we look at the dark side of getting things done. Knowing evil means knowing how to beat it, so you can use your sinister powers for good. Want more? Check out our evil week tag page. http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/MgM50v8EiWI/why-cheating-makes-you-feel-so-good-1456118907 


Posted via Blogaway

Brain's Power Comes When You're Willing To Turn It Off

Shift Happens

Impasse is the place where creativity flourishes.
Published on October 23, 2013 by Katherine Ramsland in Shadow Boxing

One of the delights of watching the twisty plots on Breaking Bad is seeing the creative spark emerge when all seems lost. For example, Jesse, under arrest for knowing a child was poisoned, flashes on a way out: he "must have seen it on House, yo." When the team had to steal a laptop from a locked evidence room or were stranded in the desert without water or a means to get help, an aha! moment solved the problem.

Quite often on this show, they engage in a powerful creative process that I call snaps. I’ve even given a TED talk on the subject. I picked up the formula from a 19th-century engineer, Henri Poincaré, who was a mathematical savant and the father of chaos theory. He was also the first scientist to articulate how and when “aha!” insights most often occurred.

Poincaré was a mining inspector in northeastern France. After he was invited to become a lecturer at Caen University, he remained chief engineer of the Corps de Mines. This change of venue provided fertile ground for sudden insight.

His most famous brainstorm occurred when he was working on differential equations. One day, he’d reached a frustrating impasse, so he went on a geologic excursion. On the morning he was to leave, he went to the bus stop. The bus arrived, the door opened, and he lifted his foot to step inside. Out of nowhere, he had the elusive solution, fully formed.

“As I put my foot on the step,” he wrote, “the idea came to me, without anything in my former thoughts seeming to have paved the way for it.” He felt complete certainty about it, so much so that he got on the bus, sat down with a companion, and continued their conversation without taking notes. On his return, he verified the result.

Poincaré asserted that the best way to work out a complex problem is to first immerse in it until you hit an impasse. Then distract yourself.

In a lecture in 1908 to a group of psychologists, he described his ideas about the creative spark. He told them how he’d striven for two weeks to prove that “Fuchsian functions” could not exist. He'd sat at his worktable each day for an hour, maybe two. Nothing worked. Then one evening, he'd changed his regular habits and had a cup of coffee, which gave him a case of insomnia.

“Ideas rose in crowds; I felt them collide until pairs interlocked, so to speak, making a stable combination. I had only to write out the results, which took but a few hours.” He believed that the stimulant had made him more present to the material.

Comparing these subconsciously ideas to atoms, Poincaré said, “During a period of apparent rest and unconscious work, certain of them come unhooked from the wall and put in motion. They flash in every direction through the space where they are enclosed... Then their mutual impacts may produce new combinations.”

Conscious work was needed, he said, in order to unhook them from the wall, but it could go only so far. Then the rest of the brain had to get involved. For the psychologists, Poincaré listed five distinct points:

Creativity that produces insight begins with a period of deeply immersed conscious work, followed by unconscious work. Then the unconscious work must be verified, i.e., put on a “firm footing.” Third, one had to trust the “delicate intuition” of the unconscious, which “knows better how to divine than the conscious self, since it succeeds where that has failed.”

For the fourth point, he stated that the unconscious mind could present an unfruitful direction that was nevertheless elegant, so the conscious mind had to decide on its usefulness. Fifth, whatever the unconscious mind does present is only a “point of departure.” The rest can be worked out with the more logical conscious mind.

Thus, the best way to inspire an effective aha! insight with compelling momentum is to diligently work within the parameters of a goal-oriented problem, then relax and let the brain play with the elements to which it has already been exposed.

The impasse, as frustrating as it may feel, is an important part of the process. That's when the brain signals that it can shift to a new strategy. Relaxing the left brain's effort clears the mind and allows for the snap! of a breakthrough that has already incubated. http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/shadow-boxing/201310/shift-happens 


Posted via Blogaway

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Sign From Heaven Is There If You Look



Uncommon Eateries At Strip Malls In Metro Orlando

The Weekly Yelp
Orlando
Enjoying the strip at Boteco Brazilian Restaurant
Yelp's Trip To The Strip... Mall
Enjoying the strip at Boteco Brazilian Restaurant  Leandro G
You may think strolling the Strip[mall] is just for tourists or Saturday grocery getting, but you would be mistaken, dear friend. Amid all the hullabaloo sit a few destinations that call to even the most local of locals. So this week, we're taking a trip to the Strip!


Ceviche House
4 star rating38 reviews
12213 S Orange Blossom Trl, Orlando, FL 
Latin American, Peruvian
Michael R.
“Located in a strip mall on OBT, Ceviche House has what many other establishments in this area do not — character... If you are looking for a taste of Peruvian cuisine, be sure to stop there.” 
Michael R., Orlando, FL



NaraDeva Thai Restaurant
4 star rating66 reviews
4696 Millenia Plz Way, Orlando, FL 
Thai, Vegetarian
Alyssa K.
“When you walk in, the decorations are the first thing you notice; they are so fun, you totally forget that you are sharing a shopping center with Ross, Target, and Home Depot, and more like you are transported to Thailand.” 
Alyssa K., Orlando, FL



Nile Ethiopian Restaurant
4 star rating134 reviews
7048 International Dr, Orlando, FL 
Ethiopian, Vegetarian
Danielle M.
“Nile itself is located in a strip mall off of International Drive — a highly unlikely location for this restaurant, but don't let that deter you... I'd give Nile an A, the food was delicious, server was very helpful.” 
Danielle M., Orlando, FL



Popular Events This Week


Seed Starting and Soil Blocks Class at East End Market

Saturday, April 12, 9:00 am – 11:00 am
East End Market
3201 Corrine Dr, Orlando, FL

There is a science and art to starting seeds. This course will cover seed selection, transpla… Read more

5 are interested!



An Afternoon with Paul Sorvino, featuring Goodfellas

Saturday, April 12, 11:00 am – 2:45 pm
Florida Film Festival
1300 S Orlando Ave, Maitland, FL

The Florida Film Festival will be screening a terrific 35mm print of the movie Goodfellas, wit… Read more

7 are interested!



1 Million Cups Orlando

Wednesday, April 16, 9:00 am
East End Market
3201 Corrine Dr, Orlando, FL

Weekly experiential learning for startups over delicious coffee with brilliant entrepreneurs i… Read more