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PHOBIAS AND
PANIC ATTACKS
A phobia is an anxiety
disorder in which you feel intense fear of a particular
object or situation, but know all the time that there is
no real danger.
The dictionary definition
of the word "Phobia" is "Fear" but, a better word could
be "Avoidance", as most phobia sufferers avoid the situations
or objects which they fear.
A phobia is an excessive
or unreasonable fear of an object, place or situation. Simple
phobias are fears of specific things such as insects, infections,
flying. Agoraphobia is a fear of being in places where one
feels "trapped" or unable to get help, such as in crowds,
on a bus, or standing in a queue. A social phobia is a marked
fear of social or performance situations.
Phobias are extremely
common. Sometimes they start in childhood for no apparent
reason; sometimes they emerge after a traumatic event; and
sometimes they develop from an attempt to make sense of
an unexpected and intense anxiety or panic (e.g. "I feel
fearful, therefore I must be afraid of something").
When the phobic person
actually encounters, or even anticipates being in the presence
of the feared object or situation, he/she experiences immediate
anxiety. The physical symptoms of anxiety may include a
racing heart, shortness of breath, sweating, chest or abdominal
discomfort, trembling, etc. and the emotional component
involves an intense fear - of losing control, embarrassing
oneself, or passing out.
Commonly, people try
to escape, and then to avoid the feared situation wherever
possible. This may be fairly easy if the feared object is
rarely encountered (e.g. fear of snakes) and avoidance will
not therefore restrict the person's life very much. At other
times (e.g. agoraphobia, social phobia) avoiding the feared
situation limits their life severely. Escape and avoidance
also make the feared object/situation more frightening.
With some phobias the
person may have specific thoughts which attribute some threat
to the feared situation. This is particularly true for social
phobia where there is often a fear of being negatively evaluated
by others, and for agoraphobia when there may be a fear
of collapsing and dying with no one around to help, or of
having a panic attack and making a fool of oneself in front
of other people.
With some phobias, there
may be accompanying frightening thoughts (this plane might
crash; I'm trapped; I must get out). However, with other
phobias it is more difficult to identify any specific thoughts
which could be associated with the anxiety (e.g. it is unlikely
that a spider phobic is afraid of making a fool of themselves
in front of the spider). With these phobias the cause seems
to be explained more as a conditioned (learned) anxiety
response which has become associated with the feared object.
Some phobias are more
reasonably common: flying, heights, dogs; cats; birds; insects;
lifts; needles; agoraphobia; but there are dozens of less
usual ones such as: fear of germs or dirt contamination;
fear of choking; or fear of ordinary household items such
as buttons or lights.
Whatever the phobia,
we normally eradicate or reduce the phobia to a minimum
in just one session by utilising NLP and Advanced Hypnosis.
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