FEARS AND PHOBIAS

 

"Every time I go into a situation where I feel 'trapped' -like an underground train - I feel anxious. I have started to avoid more and more. It's as if my world is shrinking.

 

A phobia is an intense fear of an object or situation that is out of all proportion to the situation that evokes it. An estimated one in nine people accepts mild phobias as a part of life. However, in times of great personal stress, even the mildest phobia can turn into a real and terrifying fear that can lead to hyperventilation and panic attacks. Phobias can be subdivided into three groups:

SIMPLE PHOBIAS

These may be a fear of animals, such as birds, spiders, cats, snakes, mice, or dogs; a fear of nature, for example, heights, darkness, thunder, lightning, water, wind, or death; or a fear of illness or injury, such as vomiting, blood, needles, or hospitals.

SOCIAL PHOBIAS

People suffering from social phobias display an abnormal fear of meeting new people, socializing, eating with others, speaking in public, or criticism.

AGORAPHOBIA

This is a network of fears and avoidances that is associated with a feeling of being trapped, where there is no easy escape to a place of security. People suffering from agoraphobia commonly fear crowded shops, lifts, planes, underground trains, motorways, buses, queues, lifts, cinemas, or being a long way from home.

 

GRADED EXPOSURE

A phobia is an avoidance of a situation, because you imagine your anxiety will rise to unacceptable levels. However, if you progressively confront that fear and stay in the situation, your anxiety will go down. Initially, you will feel anxious, and your anxiety will take time to reduce, but every subsequent time you confront the feared situation, your anxiety is slightly less and returns to normal more quickly. This is the principle of graded exposure or systematic desensitization.

Phobic reactions often have their origins in traumatic experiences from the past, or in childhood fears that have failed to diminish over time. However, the single main factor that perpetuates a fear or phobia is avoidance. 

AVOIDANCE

If you start to avoid certain situations because they may make you feel anxious, your anxiety will immediately go down, but only in the short term. Consciously and subconsciously you stamp in the message, "The only way I can cope with this situation is to avoid it". However, the next time you are faced with the same situation, your desire to avoid will be even greater, as you imagine that your anxiety level will go up and up to an even higher point. What you do not realize is that, if you stay in the situation, after a time, your anxiety naturally begins ­to decrease of its own accord. If you leave the situation quickly or avoid it altogether, you will never find this out.

If it is not tackled, continued avoidance of particular situations can start to interfere with your daily life. One way to control it is deliberately to confront your fear. The next time you are exposed to a situation you have been avoiding for weeks, months, or even years, try to stay in it, however unpleasant it feels. Tell yourself that although you feel a high level of anxiety now, you need to go through this before the anxiety can start to diminish. At the second exposure your anxiety will be slightly less and will continue to decrease with each successive exposure to the fear. Gradually, it will return to a normal, acceptable level. This is the principle behind the treatment known as graded exposure, or systematic desensitization.

 

CONQUER YOUR FEARS AND PHOBIAS

1.       

UNDERSTAND YOUR FEAR

Where did it come from? Did you have a bad experience? Were you exposed to people who taught or reinforced this fear and allowed you to avoid it at an early age?

2.       

WHAT ARE YOU AFRAID OF?

Write down five things that you think will happen if you face your fear.

3.       

MANAGE YOUR ANXIETIES

Learn some relaxation and distraction techniques, how to slow down your breathing, and challenge irrational thoughts.

4.       

FACE YOUR PHOBIA

Accept that the only way you will overcome your fear is by facing up to it. With time, your fear will gradually reduce.

5.       

CONSTRUCT A LADDER

List ten situations associated with your phobia that you avoid. Rate each one on a scale of 1-10, where 1 = no anxiety and 10 = high anxiety. Rank the list in order of difficulty, then work up it from the bottom and overcome each stage before moving up. Be aware of your anxiety level gradually falling.