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Originally Posted by
jessed03
Nixon's right. There really is no way to fight a panic attack. I guess you could take a benzo, but that isn't a viable long term plan, what with addiction and stuff.
The best thing you can do is just allow the fear to flow through you. Because it will if you allow it to. It'll flow right through you like water. Sometimes it feels like a panic attack won't end, or you need to do something to save yourself. That's not the case. It's a surge of adrenaline, one that's too intense for your body to deal with in one go. But like other hormones, your body will metabolize it, and that horrible feeling will go away eventually. When it does, you'll feel better. Anxiety can't kill you or make you crazy. Too many of us spend years of our lives believing or fearing it can.
I just used to lie on my bed, close my eyes, and let the whole thing happen. There are other ways to manage, but I figured I was in for 10 minutes or so of horror, so I might as well just lie there and let it happen, a bit like I would do at the dentist or something. I just reminded myself it was a surge of adrenaline, that my body was metabolizing it, that I'd soon feel better... Then before I knew it, I did feel better.
Submitting to it definetly helped. It shorted the attacks considerably and took a lot of the bite out of them.
Claire Weekes talks about not adding secondary fear to your anxiety. When you get that initial surge of adrenaline, and you can feel trouble brewing, the absolute best thing to do is let it come and pass without adding more fear and more adrenaline to it. Of course, when you worry you're dying, or you start saying OMG! OMG!, you add all these extra layers of fear to your attack and just make the whole thing worse.
That's the essence of getting better, really. Just allowing that horrible feeling of panic to come and go. Sure, it'll make a huge fuss, but it will go, and sooner than expected if you just let it.
The first few times you do this are weird. You feel vulnerable, but also empowered. You feel a little shaken up, because attacks are shocking, but you feel a little hopeful because you have a weapon. You know you can survive these things, and that's super important.