Flourish Counseling
  • Home
  • Services
    • Depression
    • Anxiety
    • Bipolar Disorder
    • Psychosis
    • Addiction
    • Grief
    • Trauma
    • Individual Counseling
    • Group Counseling
    • Couples Counseling
    • Yoga and Counseling
  • Contact
    • Schedule Your Session
    • Our Location
    • Our Counselors >
      • Kambria Kennedy-Dominguez
      • Megan Kennedy-Kotalik
      • Rosanna L. Santiago
      • Dr. Yu-Fen Lin
      • Danielle Adams
      • Nancy Sperry
      • Stacy Marshall
      • Melissa Fowler
      • Ariella Rodriguez
      • Malarie Kennedy
      • Jasmine Herrera-Martinez
      • Jason Anderson
  • FAQs
    • Fees and Insurance
    • Privacy Policy
    • LPC Supervision
    • Careers
  • Blog

Anxious Minds Think Alike

4/22/2016

 
Let's give anxiety some consideration today. You've likely experienced it over and over. You may have heard about certain types of anxiety like phobias and panic attacks, or diagnoses like Generalized Anxiety Disorder or Panic Disorder. There are lots of levels and experiences of anxiety, and sometimes even different definitions of anxiety from person to person. Anxiety is essentially worrying, feeling afraid, overthinking, and sometime panicking.

The common thread is that anxiety exists and is real for all of us, because it stems from an innate human emotion...Fear.
The DSM 5 (the manual we look at to classify symptoms and diagnose) draws a distinction between fear and anxiety like this:
Fear is the emotional response to real or perceived imminent threat, whereas anxiety is anticipation of future threat....fear is often more associated with surges of autonomic arousal necessary for fight or flight, and anxiety more often associated with muscle tension and vigilance...cautious or avoidant behaviors. (p.89)
Picture
 The autonomic nervous system, referenced above, pays a particularly important role in anxiety, and has two distinct parts. It revs us up (courtesy of the sympathetic system), then stabilizes us (thanks to the parasympathetic system), when there is a perceived threat in our environment. Imagine a bear chasing you...your heart rate increases, breathing rate increases, blood flows to limbs, pupils dilate, digestion slows, muscles tense. Sometimes tunnel vision and hearing loss occur, as well as relaxation of the bladder and colon. This very physical response to danger has a purpose. Muscles tense to ready themselves for action, blood flows to limbs to enable us to move quickly away from danger. Then, the nervous system slows and reverses this response once danger has passed, initiating relaxation. Our breathing and heart rate slow down, our muscles relax, our body comes back to homeostasis.

Both humans and animals alike experience this stress response cycle. Animals and humans differ, however, in the ability to reason, classify, predict, and analyze. We humans can thank our bigger brains and cerebral cortex for that. An animal might encounter that same bear, have a fight or flight response, be able to escape from danger, then quickly stabilize and move on. The cerebral nature of our human brains don't allow us to move on in the same way. We would likely have persistent fear or worry after an episode like that. We may feel afraid of bears, the place it happened, what we did right before it happened, that we may not protect ourselves from it happening again, or that it will happen to someone else. You can see how the human mind's ability to analyze gets us in a pickle here. 

We can get stuck with our fear in the "on" position, even in response to more innocuous stimuli like work or school demands, relationships, financial issues, health concerns, parenting, and other aspects of daily life. Our reasoning and predicting minds create future scenarios to worry about, and sometimes with good reason. If you lost a job in the past because you were late, you may be well served to worry about being late in the future. So in this way, anxiety is a helpful and useful tool that reminds us to pay attention to something specific like not being late to work. However, as we know, anxiety can become problematic when it immobilizes us in everyday life, keeps us from making decisions, disengages us in things we'd like to do, or impedes relationships.

Here's how I describe the anxiety continuum. Remember, fear and anxiety are related to paying attention to our environments and paying attention is a good thing.
Picture
​It may be helpful to outline the different types of anxiety disorders listed in the DSM 5.
  • ​Generalized Anxiety Disorder. This is a general worry that underlies experience and gets in the way of daily functioning. It may be hard to pinpoint exactly what you are worried about, or it may seem like you're worried about everything. You may feel tense quite a lot and find your mind racing, jumping to conclusions, and thinking of the worst case scenarios. 
    • ​Fear is is generalized to everything.
  • Social Anxiety Disorder. This is anxiety specific to social situations. You may worry about what others are thinking of you, that you'll embarrass yourself, that others will reject you, and avoid social situations in which you are likely to have to interact. 
    • ​Fear is about social interaction.
  • Specific phobia. This is anxiety specific to a particular object, activity, or situation. Common phobias are of heights, flying, insects, blood, animals. You may feel intense immediate anxiety when seeing or thinking about your phobia, and actively avoid it.
    • Fear is related to something very specific.
  • Panic Disorder. This occurs when panic attacks perpetuate themselves through anticipation of another attack. Panic attacks can occur with other anxiety disorders, depression, post traumatic stress disorder, and many other mental health conditions. Panic attacks are episodes of terror that occur for no apparent reason, in which one may feel shaky, sweaty, racing or irregular heartbeat, difficulty breathing, the sensation of choking, chills or hot flushes, and/or nausea. (Remember the fear response to the bear described above...a panic attack is almost just like that, minus the actual danger). Most panic attacks involve a fear of passing out, fear of going crazy, and/or fear of dying. Merely having a panic attack doesn't warrant a Panic Disorder diagnosis, however.  Panic Disorder emerges when the anticipation of more attacks and the avoidance of places or situations that may cause another attack interferes with everyday life. 
    • Fear is of having another panic attack. 
  • Agoraphobia. This occurs when there is a persistent fear of public places or situations, including using public transportation, being in either open or enclosed spaces, standing in line or being in a crowd, or being outside of home alone.  Usually thoughts accompanying this fear are "I can't get out of here" or "no one will help me."
    • Fear of a particular situation, usually in public. 
  • Substance or Medication Induced Anxiety Disorder. This occurs when anxiety is attributable to the effects of a specific drug, legal or illegal. 
    • Fear occurs as a side effect of a drug.
The body's natural ability to balance itself in response to stress is powerful. Just knowing that the nervous system is able to balance chronic anxiety is the first step. Then, learning and practicing tools that enhance our body's natural ability to balance, will help us move beyond fear and anxiety that might be crippling us. 

In counseling, there are many approaches to working with anxiety. I've found three approaches most helpful:
  1. awareness of the breath
  2. mindful meditation
  3. awareness of habitual, unrealistic or unhelpful thought patterns.

For more information on how we incorporate these approaches into therapy, please contact us! We are happy to help you learn more about how counseling can work to manage fear and anxiety.
Picture

Mental Health is Worth Your Investment

4/8/2016

 
Picture
Mental health is worth spending time on, just like going to the doctor when you're feeling under the weather. If you're feeling overwhelmed, anxious, sad, angry, hopeless, sleepless, distracted, panicked, these are symptoms, just like a runny nose or a cough, that deserve attention from a professional. This month of April is about spreading the word that mental health support is readily available, and can be easily accessed. Check out Megan and Kambria's bios here to get to know us and see if we may be a good fit for you, and read all about the counseling process here. 

Also, here's a great article about how to make the most of your counseling experience. 

Be well. Breathe easy. Make use of a counselor.

    Authors

    Kambria Kennedy-Dominguez, Counselor and yoga teacher specializing in mental health, substance abuse and wellness.

    Megan Kennedy, Counselor specializing in adolescents and families.

    Archives

    January 2019
    October 2018
    July 2018
    April 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    August 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    August 2016
    June 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014

    Categories

    All
    Addiction
    Anxiety
    Art Therapy
    Bipolar
    Busy
    Depression
    Grief
    Health
    Healthcare
    Hospice
    Illness
    Marriage
    Meditation
    Positive Change
    Psychosis
    PTSD
    Relationships
    Relaxation
    Schizophrenia
    Self Compassion
    Self-Compassion
    Stages Of Change
    Substance Use
    Trauma
    Work Life
    Yoga

    RSS Feed

    View my profile on LinkedIn
Schedule Your Session
Phone: 972.755.9120 | Fax: 214.723.5345
office@wecanflourish.com
​533 W. 12th Street​
Dallas, TX 75208
​
Photos used under Creative Commons from mat_walker, Kool Cats Photography over 5 Million Views, Maria Eklind, ForbesOste, professor.jruiz, thedailyenglishshow, justbeaphotographycompany, ToGa Wanderings, andropic257, bochalla, Dean Hochman, Kitty Terwolbeck, Alyssa L. Miller, MarcieLew, anokarina, Giorgio Galeotti, Randy Heinitz, quinn.anya, U.S. Naval Forces Central Command/U.S. Fifth Fleet, Hoshi_sae, TheGufotography, WeGotKidz, stallio, Julien.Belli, gagilas, astrologyphotographywesildssharon, atomicShed, Marlton Trainer, Pai Shih
  • Home
  • Services
    • Depression
    • Anxiety
    • Bipolar Disorder
    • Psychosis
    • Addiction
    • Grief
    • Trauma
    • Individual Counseling
    • Group Counseling
    • Couples Counseling
    • Yoga and Counseling
  • Contact
    • Schedule Your Session
    • Our Location
    • Our Counselors >
      • Kambria Kennedy-Dominguez
      • Megan Kennedy-Kotalik
      • Rosanna L. Santiago
      • Dr. Yu-Fen Lin
      • Danielle Adams
      • Nancy Sperry
      • Stacy Marshall
      • Melissa Fowler
      • Ariella Rodriguez
      • Malarie Kennedy
      • Jasmine Herrera-Martinez
      • Jason Anderson
  • FAQs
    • Fees and Insurance
    • Privacy Policy
    • LPC Supervision
    • Careers
  • Blog