Anxiety Attack Cure - New Habits Can Be Your Answer

February 5, 2009 by Alex · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Anxiety & Panic Resources, Panic Attack Help 

When you’re looking for an anxiety attack cure, one of the best things you can do is learn how to start and keep new habits. The only way to improve your quality of life in any area, anxiety and panic included, is to make changes to the way you live, and making and keeping new habits is vital in achieving that.

But starting habits is very hard, and sticking to them for the long haul is even harder. The good news is, though, there are some simple things you can do to give yourself a much better chance of sticking to the new habits you create for yourself.

Here’s a quick 3 step plan for you to follow, to guarantee yourself the best chance of not slipping up with your new habits.

1. First, make a list of all the things you know you could change about your life that could play an important part in your own anxiety attack cure. Now pick the one from that list that you think could make the biggest difference. It’s much easier to stick to one new habit at a time, so this is why you’ll focus on just one for now.

2. Next, get yourself a calendar or a journal, and mark the next 21 days with something that will remind you of your new habit that you’d like to stick to.

3. Now, each day for the next 3 weeks, use every bit of your will power to stick to your chosen habit each day. Each day that you do, check that day off in your calendar or journal.

When you begin doing something new in your life, you will naturally start off by resisting it, as most people do with all forms of change. This resistance increases every day for about a week or a week and a half.

But then the resistance begins to fade, and by the end of the third week you’ll be in a place where the habit will become a part of your daily routine. That’s why it’s so important to use a journal or calendar, to countdown those 21 days. Once you reach that point the habit will be far more likely to stick, and far more likely to become an important piece of your very own anxiety attack cure.

An Anxiety and Panic Attack Strategy To Try

February 5, 2009 by Alex · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Articles, Panic Attack Help, Random Thoughts 

When you’re looking for an effective way to combat anxiety and panic attack related problems, you will often not know where to turn, or what to try next. And that’s why I’d like to share an idea with you that I used myself a couple of years back.

This idea helped me to kick-start my recovery by allowing me to always have a clear, sharp mind, leaving me able to spot the early signs of anxiety, which put me in a much better position to fight off attacks before they got out of control.

It’s all about clearing off your desk, mentally!

Imagine you work at a desk, and your desk is a mess. You won’t function well. You won’t be able to find anything. Your stress levels will increase. You’ll get nothing done.

Well, it’s the same with your mind. If your head is filled with “mental clutter,” you won’t function right. Your thoughts won’t be sharp or clear, your stress levels will increase, and your anxiety and panic levels will skyrocket. Mental clutter can single-handedly cause all kinds of anxiety and panic attack problems.

So, how exactly do you de-clutter your “mental desk”?

You clean it off, just like you would a real desk. Except with your mind, you do it by venting what’s in your head. So each day, write what’s on your mind. Write it on a blog, in a journal, or even on scraps of paper. Just get it out.

And what you’ll find is that the longer you do this, the less random, meaningless, and harmful thoughts you’ll experience. Soon, what you write each day will only be half of what it was when you started out.

Getting your thoughts out, especially your negative thoughts, is an excellent way to stop those negative thoughts occurring in the first place, and when you’re desperately looking for an anxiety and panic attack approach that works, this can literally be a life-saver.

Anxiety Attack Help - A Simple Trick That Never Fails

February 3, 2009 by Alex · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Panic Attack Help 

When you’re looking for anxiety attack help it can be very easy to ignore the basic approaches in favour the of the sexy, more unusual ones. But many of the basic approaches can prove beneficial to people with panic and anxiety related problems.

And it’s one of these “basic” ideas that I’m going to talk about next.

Have you ever noticed how your body changes when you’re depressed? If you have, then you’ll know that you’ll slump forward, your chin might rest on your chest, your back may arch, you’ll spend more time looking downwards, and your arms will kind of hang beside you lifelessly.

If you’ve noticed this, then I bet you’ve also noticed how your body changes when you’re happy.

You’ll stand tall with no slumping, your head will be up and looking around, and you’ll generally have more life about you.

So one thing is pretty clear and beyond argument: how you feel has a direct impact on your body and how you carry yourself - your physiology, if you like.

But how does this offer you any anxiety attack help, I hear you ask!

Well, it just so happens that the reverse is also true. How you feel affects your physiology, but your physiology can also affect how you feel. So it’s possible for you to control your anxiety, panic, depression, and mood in general, by slightly altering your body.

How do you make use of this idea?

You move your body and carry yourself as you would if you were happy and upbeat, even at times when you’re not. There are many studies that prove you can stop negative moods and replace them with positive ones, simply by changing your physiology.

So stand up straight and tall, smile, don’t slump, and act like you’re happy and care-free even when you’re not. This one thing alone can provide fantastic anxiety attack help.

Stop Anxiety Attack In Three Steps

February 3, 2009 by Alex · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Articles, Panic Attack Help, Random Thoughts 

If you’re living with severe panic and anxiety, and you’d like to know exactly what you can do the next time you need to stop an anxiety attack, I’ve put together a quick 3 step plan that you can use.

These ideas are basic, and yet they are sadly overlooked by many people who are experiencing panic and anxiety attacks. The ideas that follow really do work, so I hope you’ll give them a shot when and if you need them.

1. When you feel an anxiety attack approaching, do something physical if your situation permits it. Take the trash out, vacuum the carpet, or even walk up and down the stairs a couple of times.

Getting active like this achieves two things - first, it distracts you from the way you’re feeling, and two, it gets your heart, lungs, muscles and your mind working slightly harder -all of which can decrease anxiety and prevent a full-blown attack.

2. If your anxiety attack happens, despite your best efforts, make use of all sensory distractions. The worst attacks are so bad because your mind becomes transfixed on the sensations and the thoughts linked to the attack. Sensory distractions deprive the attack of its fuel and will make it go away much faster.

Great sensory distractions are turning on the TV with the volume higher than normal, turning on some music (often, unfamiliar music is effective), and believe it or not, even eating something very bitter. Anything that requires your senses to process some information will help ease an attack.

3. When you have an attack, do something immediately afterwards. Anything. The important thing is, once it’s over and you’re free to do something else, do something else.

The longer you leave it to get back on your feet, the longer it will take for the effects of the attack to disappear. I’ve also found that some attacks can cause further attacks, almost like earthquake aftershocks. The chances of these happening are greatly reduced if you get busy with something else as soon as you can.

These 3 tips are powerful. They will help you stop an anxiety attack from happening, or they will make it stop much faster if it happens, and they will reduce the chances of further “aftershock” attacks occurring. Start using these tips today, anytime you need them.

Anxiety Attack Symptoms - Stop Them Quickly & Naturally

February 3, 2009 by Alex · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Anxiety & Panic Resources, Panic Attack Help 

One of the questions I get asked on a daily basis is: How do I stop my anxiety attack symptoms?

There are a hundred different answers to this question, maybe more, and which one is right will depend on a whole host of factors that are unique to each of us. But there are a few things that are universal - things that, if improved or implemented, will alleviate or even eliminate anxiety attack symptoms in all of us. And one of these things is improving the quality of sleep you’re getting.

Sleep, after all, is when our body repairs itself and re-energizes for the next day. If you’re not getting lots of high quality sleep then you’ll certainly experience many more anxiety attack symptoms than you need to, and they’ll often be far more severe than they need to be too.

So what I have for you is a very quick tip on how to start getting more quality sleep. And it’s simple too. You know those relaxation sounds you can buy on CDs? Sounds of the ocean, sounds of the forest, that kind of thing. Well, if you listen to one of those for 5 or 10 minutes each night as you lie in bed, it gets your body and mind in just the right place for a good night’s sleep.

This is one of the tricks I used to beat my own problems with anxiety and panic (and also with insomnia). If you start listening to these relaxation sounds before bed, I think you’ll begin to see and feel a difference with your sleep and with your anxiety attack symptoms in just a few days.

Cure Anxiety Attacks With A “Basic” Approach

February 1, 2009 by Alex · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Articles, Panic Attack Help 

When you’re trying to cure anxiety attacks, it can sometimes be easy to overlook some simple things you can be doing to help yourself. It’s tempting to look for some kind of “secret” method that no one knows about, some kind of magical trick you can use to suddenly stop your anxiety and panic.

But the truth is, the basic stuff works. And a lot of these things you’ll already know about. If you’re anything like I was back when I was living with anxiety on a day-to-day basis, then you’ll know the basic things you should be doing, and yet you still won’t be doing them.

So here are some of the basics that you probably already know, but aren’t doing. If you can start making use of these ideas, you’ll be far more likely to cure anxiety attacks quickly and naturally.

1. Things to avoid that can cause or increase anxiety and panic: Any kind of stimulant - cigarettes, caffeine, chocolate, sugary drinks.

2. Things to do more of: Exercise, meditation, yoga, anything relaxing, healthy eating, drinking lots of water, getting as much sleep as you can.

3. Learn to understand your mind: Read books on how your mind works, talk to other people who are also trying to cure anxiety attacks, look for patterns that you share with others, start to use anything you learn to your advantage.

Some of these things are very obvious, and that can sometimes be the reason why so many people who are trying to cure anxiety attacks fail to make use of them. They believe that something so simple can’t possibly help, but making use of these basic ides can produce incredible results.

Stop Anxiety Attacks With A Simple Morning Trick

The question I get asked more than any other is this: How do I stop anxiety attacks? And it’s a question I used to ask a lot myself until a couple of years ago, when I successfully overcame my 17 year battle with panic and anxiety.

So in response to this question, I’d like to share one of the best ideas I stumbled across, which you can start using right away, and which I believe has the power to stop anxiety attacks, if you stick with it.

It’s all to do with how you get up in the morning.

I firmly believe that your first few minutes after you wake up set the tone for your entire day. If you start the day right you can have a far better day than if you start the day wrong.

The number one rule I set for myself a few years ago, when I started looking for ways to “start my day right,” was to get up the moment I woke up.

No lying in bed worrying, dreading the day ahead, reliving yesterday’s mistakes. I made a rule that within 60 seconds of waking up or my alarm clock ringing, I had to be up out of bed.

So that was rule #1.

Rule #2 was this: I would always have something that needed my attention, or something that I needed to do, within the first few minutes of getting up. This could be something as simple as not ironing the clothes I would be wearing that day. In that example, I would immediately get up when my alarm rang, and I would immediately go and iron my clothes.

The important thing was, I gave myself something to do right after I got up. This is like an extension to the “not lying in bed” rule. It starts your day off right by not allowing your mind time to wander anywhere bad.

So give yourself something to do: maybe you need to take the trash out, so stop doing it the night before and let it be what you do as soon as you get up. Maybe you have a pet you have to let out, and you normally make it wait until you’ve been up long enough for your head to clear.

Well, from now on, make letting your pet out a priority that you do the moment you’ve got some clothes on. It can be anything - just make it something that you really have to do as soon as you get up.

These 2 rules are a fantastic way to get your mind functioning healthily from the moment you wake up, and it’s a great way to stop anxiety attacks that might have struck you later in the day.

Anxiety Attack Treatment The Albert Einstein Way

January 31, 2009 by Alex · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Articles, Panic Attack Help 

If you’re trying to find a good anxiety attack treatment - one that’s effective enough to make a real difference to your current situation - then you should immediately start to use the power of your imagination.

That might sound like a strange thing to say, but I’m about to explain why your imagination could be your most powerful and effective tool in overcoming your panic and anxiety.

Let’s talk about Albert Einstein for a moment.

He was a pretty smart guy, right? Albert Einstein once said that imagination was more important than intelligence. He believed that without the ability to imagine an outcome, no amount of intelligence would be enough to achieve major breakthroughs.

And he believed this to be true in all areas of life, not just his own areas of expertise.

Recently I realised that this idea of imagination being more important than intelligence was also true for panic and anxiety attack treatment. I realised that if we didn’t use our power of imagination to its full potential that we were short-changing ourselves and decreasing our chances of ever achieving our goals.

Don’t underestimate what our imaginations can help us to achieve.

We have the power to imagine something that doesn’t exist yet. We have the power to imagine a better version of ourselves that isn’t here yet. Aren’t those incredible abilities? And yet we take them for granted.

Think about this: Every single person who has dramatically improved the quality of their life imagined that better quality of life before they achieved it. Only things that we imagine can we achieve.

Once you grasp this concept you’ll be a hundred steps on from where right now.

Start using the power of your imagination today, and every day. Imagine your life how you want it to be. Imagine a life free from panic and anxiety. Imagine a life full of calm and joy, a life filled with everything you dream of.

Nothing happens that hasn’t been imagined first. That one concept is perhaps the best anxiety attack treatment I can share with you.

Panic Attack Causes - How to Uncover Them

January 31, 2009 by Alex · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Articles, Panic Attack Help 

I spent years and years searching for my number one panic attack cause. Actually, it was 17 years that I suffered with panic attacks, and a whole host of panic disorders too. And during that time, the one thing I wanted to know, more than anything else, was what was causing my attacks, and how to stop them.

For a long time, I found nothing concrete. I looked at emotions, and fear, and diet, and exercise. Pretty much everything. I certainly discovered some useful things on my search, and I’m sure a lot of those discoveries played a part in my recovery, but one of my biggest breakthroughs came when I read a book called “Blink.”

It’s written by a man called Malcolm Gladwell.

This book is all about the subconscious mind, and the role it plays in our day-to-day lives. It takes a long and interesting look at the way we think (even those thoughts we are never aware we are having), the way these thoughts affect us, and perhaps most importantly, how we can learn to control them.

I also learned a lot from the author’s look at our snap judgements, out first impressions, and our responses to negative things such as depression, anxiety, violence, worry, and so on. He goes into detail about how our minds work when we react to things in those first 2 or 3 seconds. I realised a lot of my panic attacks started with these 2 and 3 second snap judgements/first impressions.

I may even go as far as saying these initial reactions I was having turned out to be my number one panic attack cause, so this really is an area that is worth your time. So check out the book “Blink” when you get a chance. I think it’ll help.

How To Deal With Panic Attacks

January 29, 2009 by Alex · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Articles, Panic Attack Help 

If you’d like to know how to deal with panic attacks, then I’d highly recommend you start focusing on your emotions. This was an area I overlooked when I was trying to solve my own panic and anxiety related problems for more than 17 years.

I did what most people do: I saw my doctor (more times than I could count), I saw psychiatrists and psychologists, I took anxiety medications. And I even spent time learning about my mind and how it works (learning how your mind works is definitely worth your time. It helped me a lot). But when it came to the specific subject of emotions, I was completely ignorant.

It wasn’t even something I realised you could learn about. I always thought of emotions as these uncontrollable things that just happened to you.

But then I was lucky enough to stumble across a book called Emotional Intelligence, written by Daniel Goleman. It’s a really interesting book, and I’d recommend it to you if you’re trying to find out how to deal with panic attacks.

In the book, Daniel Goleman explains why he thinks emotional intelligence is much more important than what we traditionally think of as “intelligence.” He goes on to talk about how improving your emotional intelligence can lead to greater happiness and joy in life, and decreased depression and anxiety, amongst other benefits.

The great thing is, this is a book written for “normal” people like you and me, not some psychology student who wants to understand the complex inner-workings of the brain.

I think we all neglect our emotions to some degree, and most of us (myself included until a year or two ago) aren’t aware that we can learn to take control and manipulate them.

So start paying more attention to your emotions, and maybe pick up a copy of Emotional Intelligence. It will definitely help you when you need to know how to deal with panic attacks.

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