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- Anxiety has changed me
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Anxiety has changed me
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Hi,
I'm new to this all but it already feels good to be able to write this all down and see that I might not be alone.
Anxiety has decreased my personality. I find that I don't talk as much is some social situations but worse is that is has made me think I'm not a good person.
I struggle with anxiety on and off and off and when it's at it's peak it turns my thoughts negative especially towards people who might have done something to upset me. I focus on the thing they have done towards me and I start to dislike them. Then once the episode is over I feel extreme guilt and like I'm not a very nice person for thinking mean thoughts about them.
Anxiety also affects the way I sleep. I can lay in bed and my mind is just racing I know it's so unhealthy and I really wish I could live my life in a more positive and happy nature.
I really want to find find a way to manage my anxiety and to feel when I'm happy and nice to people that's the real me and not an act.
I no no longer want to feel unsure as to whether the nice happy me is the real me or the person I can be when having an anxiety episode.
Can anyone relate? It can feel very lonely suffering from a mental illness
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Hi Tiny Fish and welcome to the forums
I myself have been diagnosed with general anxiety disorder (I'll call it GAD for short). When I was first diagnosed with GAD I was at my worst. I would wake up several times at night, I would have racing thoughts before sleep, had intrusive thoughts, felt an overwhelming feeling on dread, dry mouth, felt heavy like I could fall over my own weight, jumpy and I started having more anxiety attacks. It was terrible so I know how it feels. I also know what it's like to have intrusive thoughts about others and the guilt associated with it.
What I found helped was talking to someone about it. I was 22 when I was officially diagnosed, but when they took my history and I looked back at my past we believe I have had anxiety since I was a child. I went to headspace and I finally opened up about my anxiety. I was so scared to do this as I thought people would either think 'I was either making it up or not bad enough' or I would think the other extreme that I was 'crazy'. But I got so unwell I couldn't do it alone anymore. I wish I went to either headspace or to my gp about it sooner. I felt more normal knowing what was happening and that it was normal for someone with GAD to be going through what I was. Have you seen a GP about this? If not I really suggest you do. I was refered to a psychologist/mental health nurse and it really helped me out. I still go from time to time.
One thing I have found that helps my racing mind at night is meditation. I use an app on my iphone called 'calm' but I have also read other forum users liking 'headspace' and 'smiling minds'. Maybe download these and give them a try. Now when my mental health nurse suggested this to me I didn't think it was for me. But he told me to be persistant and to try it for a week. Well I found it helped reducing my racing thoughts a lot before bed and I found I would also wake up less during the night. So I suggest giving it a go for a week and see if it helps.
I want to let you know you are not a bad person for having these thoughts. You can't always choose what thoughts pop into your head (like dreams they just come, you have no control over it). I would never choose the intrusive thoughts I had. When you have these thoughts about your friends say to yourself 'this is not you, these are intrusive thoughts. I am not a bad person. I have no control over these thoughts' This may help reduce your guilt over them
Hope this helps. trust me it gets easier over time
MP
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Is so helpful to even have a name for these thoughts and know I'm not alone with them. I have tried medication before but I really don't like the medications and I've also been to a mental health worker however after two session of talk I felt frustrated at not given any coping mechanisms and found I couldn't drag myself back to keep talking about it all and leaving feeling worse.
I struggle with meditation. It makes me agitated but maybe I need to persist with it. Have you found a way to stop the intrusive thoughts? If I could chose one thing to go with out be that.
Thanks
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Hi Tiny Fish and welcome,
i can relate. I understand that feeling of thinking you're a bad person. Of focusing on the negative things people do. Of not knowing which is the real you. I too am not keen on meds and struggle with meditation. I take fish oil, b complex and look into bits in b8-it is not in your b complex.have you tried exercise ie walking, going to the gym? Perhaps you need something more vigorous as opposed to meditation, I know I do.
i hope you find some relief Tiny Fish, perhaps try a different counsellor but I know what you mean about getting nothing out of it.
Wishing you the best
cmf
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HI Tiny Fish
I found it with regular counseling, medication and being persistant (10 mins a day) meditation helped reduce my intrusive thoughts. No I am not intrusive thought free but they are not as horrible or as often as they used to be. I have also started to try think of a happy memory or thought after an intrusive thought. I usually think of something involving my dogs. It helps me not be a disturbed by the intrusive thought and it also reminds me of something good in my life. If thoughts alone aren't helping I youtube funny dog videos.
Unfortunately there is no pill that will stop the intrusive thoughts (well one that I know of without a zombie like side effect). We just have to try our best and celebrate the small victories and build on that. I have heard mindfulness is really good. There is a forum on it here, maybe search for it.
MP
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I do cope better with exercise and I know I need to find time and the passion for it again. When I used to work out a lot my anxiety wasn't a huge part of my life.
I have ave downloaded the suggested apps to give them a try to see if it helps at all. I'm willing to give anything a go even just to feel like a good person again 🙂
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