Social Anxiety Disorder
People with social anxiety disorder know about what they are
feeling, but find it hard to overcome them.
Anxiety disorder
is described as excessive anxiety and worry about several events or
activities. Unlike the rather mild and brief anxiety caused by a
stressful event, anxiety disorders last at least six months and may
worsen if they are not getting immediate treatment. Anxiety
disorders usually occur along with other mental or physical
illnesses, such as drug abuse and alcohol abuse, which may perhaps
mask the anxiety symptoms or make them worse. There are several
types of anxiety disorders and one of them is social anxiety
disorder or social phobia.
Social anxiety
disorder is diagnosed if you become tremendously anxious and
extremely uncomfortable in everyday social situations. It is
understood as extreme fear in the aspect of social interaction. They
can worry for days or weeks even before the dreaded situation. This
anxiety may become so severe that it may affect daily activities.
Social anxiety is a medically recognized disorder that harshly
hinders the value of life. People with social phobia have an
intense, persistent, and constant fear of being watched and judged
by others. Various causes are suspected, especially in the
combination of genetic composition, early growth and development,
and later life experience. These causes are categorized into the
following:
Genetic
disposition: it is possible that child of
one or both shy parents may inherit genetic code that amplifies
shyness into social anxiety disorder.
Ethology: averting the gaze is very usual
with social anxiety disorder.
Development: social anxiety emerges at
different developmental stages. Solitude becomes more important as
anxiety about physical looks and performance in school increases. We
also know that traumatic stressful events in life occurring at an
early developmental stage may increase the risk of social anxiety
disorder.
Chemical disorder in the brain: people
with anxiety disorder may have abnormalities in the functioning of
some parts of their anxiety response system. The anxiety system is
influenced by four areas of the human brain namely; the brain system
(cardiovascular and respiratory functions), limbic system (mood and
anxiety), prefrontal cortex (appraisals of risk and danger), and
motor cortex (control of muscles).
There are people
with social phobia who realize that their fears about being with
people are overwhelming and irrational, but they find it difficult
to overcome them. If they are able to confront their fears and be
around with others, they are usually very worried ahead of time, and
extremely uncomfortable throughout the whole encounter, and worry
about how they were judged the whole time afterwards. But, this
illness is curable with certain kinds of psychotherapy or
medications.
The physical
symptoms that usually accompany social anxiety disorder include,
blushing, too much sweating, trembling, nausea, and difficulty
talking. When these symptoms occur, people with social anxiety
disorder usually fell as though all eyes are focused only to them.
The next time we
see someone from a party or any social functions and we someone
looking uncomfortable, we should not pay more attention to them like
we usually do. For all we know, that person might be struggling deep
inside trying to overcome his or her fear.
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