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Searching
for a Sign of Anxiety Attack
Searching for a
sign of anxiety attack can be like looking for a needle in a
haystack only not quite as concrete. At least with the needle,
once you’ve found it you know that it’s a needle; it feels like
a needle, it looks like a needle, and it likely is a needle.
With a sign of anxiety attack, it could just as likely be a
symptom to a great misdiagnosed problem as it could be a sign
of anxiety attack. Seeking good professional help is the most
important key to solving this mystery.
Fear is your
body’s natural reaction to a lot of outside stimuli. It is
normal for the body to react in such a way as to become anxious
or fearful because this often protected our ancestors from a
lot of problems and harm. It is not normal, however, for our
bodies to be overtaken with fear to the point that physical
symptoms begin to arise because of it. When this happens, it is
usually the sign of a larger problem.
There are many
common types of anxiety: fear, panic, worry, dread, obsession,
and compulsion are just a few. Clearly, anxiety comes in a
variety of forms and is not only represented by fear. It is
also quite common. Most people experience anxiety in some form,
experiencing it before or after stressful situations like a
traumatic event or an important meeting with the boss of your
company. Other times the anxiety comes quickly and without
warning and for no reason at
all.
Anxiety Can
Affect Your Relationships
An anxiety
disorder is a more disabling feeling of anxiety that actually
is constant and consuming. Anxiety disorder causes people to
completely withdraw emotionally and often physically from their
family and friends. It can cause people to withdraw indoors and
avoid social activities for reasons involving fear. An anxiety
attack, conversely, is an unexpected episode that usually
involves fear as oppose to an overwhelming
feeling.
A sign of
anxiety attack can be anything from irregular heartbeats to
chest pain. They also include: shaking, twitching, trembling,
hot flashes, chills, “rubber legs”, tingling in extremities,
difficulty sleeping, unpredictable sleeping patterns, body
tension, aches and pains, sweating, clamminess, and stomach
problems such as nausea or “butterflies”.
There are also
emotional signs including: fearfulness, a feeling of terror,
insecurity, incredible self-consciousness, irritability,
apprehension, dread, a desire to escape, a feeling you are
going to perish, and other frightening
emotions.
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