Facts
About Anxiety Disorders | Forms of Anxiety Disorders
| Principles In Treatment |
Resources
TREATMENT OF ANXIETY
Anxiety can be a fierce presence.
Perhaps a better way to state it is that anxiety is often the manifestation
of a fierce need that has been ignored, resulting in an uncomfortable
agitation that haunts your daily activities and relationships. Anxiety
is, after all, an experience of fear.
Anxiety Disorders is the medically-accepted
name for the conditions that comprise a broad range of problems; from
a discomfort that leaves a person feeling uneasy most of the time
to overwhelming disturbances of fear and panic that literally dominate
a persons thoughts and behaviors. Below
is additional information about these conditions.
FACTS ABOUT ANXIETY DISORDERS
(AD)
- Anxiety
Disorders are the most common form of mental illness
|
- More
than 19 million American adults are affected by AD
|
- Children
and adolescents are affected by AD
|
- Problems
with anxiety display the relationship between emotional and
physiological states.
|
FORMS OF ANXIETY DISORDER
-
Generalized
Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
Constant, exaggerated
worrisome thoughts and tension about everyday routine life
events and activities, lasting at least six months. Almost
always anticipating the worst even though there is little
reason to expect it; accompanied by physical symptoms, such
as fatigue, trembling, muscle tension, headache, or nausea.
|
- Phobias
(Social or Specific)
Social
phobia - an overwhelming and disabling fear of
scrutiny, embarrassment, or humiliation in social situations,
which leads to avoidance of many potentially pleasurable and
meaningful activities.
Specific phobia - extreme,
disabling, and irrational fear of something that poses little
or no actual danger; the fear leads to avoidance of objects
or situations and can cause people to limit their lives unnecessarily.
|
-
Panic
Disorder
Repeated episodes
of intense fear that strike often and without warning.
Physical symptoms include chest pain, heart palpitations,
shortness of breath, dizziness, abdominal distress, feelings
of unreality, and fear of dying.
|
- Post-Traumatic
Stress Disorder (Acute and Chronic)
Persistent symptoms that occur after experiencing
or witnessing a traumatic event such as rape or other criminal
assault, war, child abuse, natural or human-caused disasters,
or crashes. Nightmares, flashbacks, numbing of emotions, depression,
and feeling angry, irritable or distracted and being easily
startled are common. Family members of victims can also develop
this disorder.
|
- Obsessive-Compulsive
Disorder
Repeated, unwanted thoughts or compulsive behaviors
that seem impossible to stop or control.
|
GUIDING PRINCIPLES IN MY WORK WITH AD
I prefer therapeutic
approaches that minimize the use of pathological labeling. While anxiety
is clearly a diagnosable disorder that can be related to biochemical
imbalances, it can also be an indication that something else is out
of balance in a persons life. In my therapeutic work spanning
almost thirty years, I have found the interpersonal exploration of
these imbalances and diversions helpful in changing and alleviating
the experience of anxiety. I often work in conjunction with a psychiatrist
or other physician to provide pharmacological treatment.
My approach with anxiety is very
active, and typically is under the broad umbrella of "cognitive-behavioral" treatment. I have found that clients typically feel significant improvement
in comfort levels by the end of the first session. This increased
comfort allows for more thorough investigation of the issues that
have been supporting the presence and emergence of the anxiety. Below
are some beliefs that direct me in assisting clients with anxiety.
|
|
- There
must be a place in your life and the therapeutic setting for
the distress to be constructively recognized.
|
- The
therapists task is to assist the client in honoring
this distress, find its meaning and the needed change.
|
- A
therapist must have ways to stay comfortable as a client experiences
this discomfort.
|
- A
client must be provided ways to stay comfortable enough in
order to stay focused on the message.
|
Please feel free to call with specific
questions about your needs.
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I do not necessarily support
the ideas or products represented in these resource links, nor are they listed in any order of preference. |
1600 W. 38th Street, Suite 306, Austin Texas 78731 |
top of page
|