Anxiety Disorder
Anxiety disorder is capable of destroying your life if not treated
immediately.
Have you ever
felt anxious about something for any reason? Or, feeling anxious or
worried in the times of stressful situations? It is ok to feel what
you feel as long as you have rational reasons to validate your
feelings. Anxiety is a normal response to any stressful event and it
helps you deal with that situation. But, when anxiety becomes too
much that it can affect your day to day activities and peace of
mind, it becomes an anxiety disorder.
Anxiety disorder
is excessive anxiety and worry about events or activities, which
occurs most often than not in most days for at least six months. A
person who has anxiety disorder finds it difficult to control the
feelings of worry and fear. The anxiety, worry, or the physical
symptoms of anxiety disorder can cause considerable suffering or
harm on the important areas of daily life activities. Some of the
common types of anxiety disorders include separation anxiety, social
anxiety or phobia, selective mutism, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD),
posttraumatic stress disorder (PSTD), panic disorder, agoraphobia,
generalized anxiety disorder, and specific phobia. Each of these
anxiety disorders has different symptoms, but the entire symptoms
revolve around excessive, unreasonable fear and dread.
Separation
anxiety is defined as developmentally improper and excessive anxiety
relating to separation from home or to someone you are so attached
with. Social anxiety or phobia is generally understood as extreme
fear in the face of social interaction. Selective mutism is the
consistent failure to speak in specific social situations where you
are expected to render speech. OCD is an illness wherein you have
recurrent and unwanted urge to do something to relieve your
discomfort. PST is an incapacitating condition that follows a
terrifying event (persistent terrifying thoughts). Panic disorder is
categorized as recurrent brief episodes of intense fear that are
accompanied by many physical symptoms, like heart palpitations and
dizziness, even without external threat. Agoraphobia is defined as
an incapacitating fear of open spaces, resulting to avoidance of
crowds, and open public places. General anxiety disorder is
described by diffuse feelings of apprehensions with physiological
symptoms. Specific phobia is a feeling of intense, irrational fears
towards certain things, like closed-in places, heights, water, etc.
If you think you
have an anxiety disorder, the first person you should see is your
family doctor. A physician can determine whether the symptoms that
bother you are due either to anxiety disorder or other medical
condition, or both. If indeed you are diagnosed to have anxiety
disorder, the next step you should do is definitely see a mental
health professional whom you are comfortable talking with. Clearly,
in order for you to be treated from this condition, you and your
doctor should work together as a team and make a plan to cure you
from anxiety disorder. Don’t let this condition ruin your mood,
activities, or your life in general. Get immediate treatment the
soonest possible time once you think that you might have an
anxiety disorder. The sooner you get the treatment, the sooner you
feel better.
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