Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s definitely the zeitgeist
I’d be interested to know if Dr’s have noticed a significant uptick.
The pandemic was really stressful, but not just because of fear of illness. We all witnessed the curtain drawn back and nobody running the show.
It felt like being on a runway train heading off a cliff with no conductor. It felt like that for a year.
It might feel like that from now on.
Doctors definitely have. My psychiatrist said she has never been this busy in 30 years of practice. I’m also a lifelong anxiety sufferer who has had the worst year of my life as far as it goes. Worse than when my parents died. And just so awful and I feel like I can’t get away from it.
Anonymous wrote:It’s definitely the zeitgeist
I’d be interested to know if Dr’s have noticed a significant uptick.
The pandemic was really stressful, but not just because of fear of illness. We all witnessed the curtain drawn back and nobody running the show.
It felt like being on a runway train heading off a cliff with no conductor. It felt like that for a year.
It might feel like that from now on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's the area. Just look at the schools and colleges forums here. Insanity.
^^This^^
But OP is describing people who are crippled by anxiety. Having actually known two people crippled by anxiety, they were not applying their kids to private schools and posting on the internet about being poor at $350 HHI. They literally could not do anything and were hospitalized.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a lot of shades of gray between being nervous about giving a speech and crippling anxiety, btw.
Lots of people have interrupted sleep, interrupted work, interrupted relationships and various dosing of anxiety meds and none of these people have "crippling anxiety"
Right? I could barely sleep for several weeks, right before Thanksgiving until after the inauguration. If you COULD sleep well with literally a 9/11 death count happening in America every day from a pandemic, AND an attack on the Capitol, AND the final cruel shots from the last administration, I wonder at your sanity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had anxiety on and off through my life. I did really well during the pandemic because I was hyper focused on “getting through it.” Ironically, now that things are improving and everyday expectations are back, my anxiety is back.
Girl, same.
Me, too. I managed the pandemic really well. Now I feel like I'm having a belated reaction - really, really bad anxiety. Barely functioning.
Anonymous wrote:I blame the 24 hour news cycle. Everything has become SO intense.
Anonymous wrote:Easy. Like attracts like. People tend to spend time with people who are similar to them.
Plus, oftentimes, anxiety has a genetic component. So it runs in your family. Anxious people are more likely to end up with other anxious people.
And certain career paths tend to attract the anxious. In some cases, it can be a positive - extreme attention to detail, for example, so I see a lot of anxious people in data.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's the area. Just look at the schools and colleges forums here. Insanity.
^^This^^
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of people have underlying anxiety that they've managed to repress by staying busy. The pandemic made it so they couldn't be busy. Add that with the constant media hype over the pandemic and it caused people to spin out of control. I have anxiety and have been a nurse working on a Covid ward since the beginning (though we haven't had any cases at my hospital in 3 weeks and have less than 15 hospitalized in my entire state!). Had I not used my coping techniques my anxiety would have spiraled and I would have been like those you describe.
Please list coping strategies![]()
Thank you for all you have done.
I do not watch the news. I had to do this early on in the pandemic (and am still very frustrated how it was handled by the media). At the end of each day I check the Covid stats for my state. If there is anything important in the news I either see it on DCUM or DH tells me. That's probably the biggest thing.
Gratitude and centering. Forcing myself to look at the good in things helps the anxiety. When I feel anxiety coming on, I center myself. The best one for me is calming breaths and once that sets in I find 5 things I see, 4 things I can touch, 3 things I can hear, 2 I can smell, 1 can taste. By the time.im done, that panic feeling has subsided
No wallowing or what ifs. If you let your brain go down that hole it sucks you in. If I start doing that, I force myself to redirect my thought process. I do something else. I think about something else
Committing to social activities. No backing out because I'm not up for it. If I go, I'll have a good time and come back in a better mood. If I bail, I'll wallow.
Anonymous wrote:PP, can you describe the nervous twitching?
about 6 months ago I started having a weird muscle twitch in my calf that I can't figure out how to deal with. I wonder if its anxiety related as well...