It’s Emotional and Not Mental

Anxiety is one of those things in life that is difficult to describe. When you’re anxious all the time it can actually make you feel as if you’re losing control emotionally and mentally. That really frightens some people and prevents them from seeking help. But anxiety is not a mental illness. When you are anxious about life in general, or have a phobia about something in particular, you have an emotional disorder.

Fortunately, emotional disorders such as anxiety are very open to treatment. You can even help yourself in many cases through proven self-help methods. There are lots of programs, tapes, books and so on that show you how to stop needless worrying and start enjoying living. You can absolutely recover from anxiety. Of course, there are subdivisions of general anxiety. They include classifications like panic disorder and agoraphobia. All forms of anxiety disorders are treatable.

There’s No Reason For My Anxiety

 

Most of the time, you probably think of anxiety as being related to something specific like a particular fear or event. But anxiety can be generalized too. In other words, there may not be a panic attack at the thought of leaving the house. But there might be anxiety that persists through everything no matter what you do. That’s what the doctors call generalized anxiety disorder.

Diagnosing generalized anxiety can be difficult to diagnose. You can’t point to some act or thought in particular and say it makes you anxious. You probably can’t claim panic attacks or phobias either. That’s because there’s no one thing making you worry. You worry about the finances and your kids and your health, but you worry about them all the same and at the same time. The result is you worry a lot and it drags you down mentally and physically. You want to identify generalized anxiety disorder as early as possible because it can lead to depression.

 

How Do I Know I Have An Anxiety Disorder?

Anxiety is a part of life for everyone. But how is anxiety disorder different from normal anxiety? That’s the question I had. I had to learn three important facts about anxiety. First, it’s only a disorder if the attacks last a long time – well past any event that could have triggered anxiety. Second, a disorder can lead to a phobia such as agoraphobia, which is an abnormal fear of being in open or public places. Third, a disorder involves having intense attacks of anxiety. [Read more...]