Posts tagged ‘Anxiety Attacks’

Sounds strange, but it is true that taking in of alcohol has a very opposite effect on the person. Alcohol is usually taken to drown out anxieties but on the contrary, only serves as an impetus to further sinking into grind of anxieties. Reasoning perpetuates a theory that tells us why while drinking to curb anxieties to get better of you, ends in another bout of deeper depression. The more you drink, the more you sink! Do not allow alcohol to overpower, instead overpower that urge to drink, cutting it down to its bare minimum. Alcohol has an injurious effect on human health.

To be able to comprehend why this happens, we should understand the consequences of alcohol on brain and liver. Both these vital organs are severely harmed by habitual alcoholism and these are the two organs most responsible for our mood fluctuations. Continue reading ‘Anxiety Attacks Due to Alcoholism’ »

Hans Eysenck, a Brit born in Germany in 1916, may not be one of the more widely known personality theorists; however, he was one of the finest. And his work is important to panic attack sufferers.

Eysenck believed temperament, a characteristic mode of emotional response, is the featured component of personality. And he believed it was up and running at birth. Now, that isn’t to say he didn’t believe in the influence of environment, it’s just that he reasoned nature, as opposed to nurture, merited top billing with regard to how we think, feel, and behave.

Now, in his PEN (Psychoticism, Extraversion, Neuroticism) model, Eysenck submitted there are three dimensions of temperament; what he called “superfactors.” Within the context of panic, I’d like to limit our chat to neuroticism and extraversion.

Neuroticism
People that fall into this dimension are generally fairly calm to very nervous. According to Eysenck, these folks are prone to what he called “neurotic” problems, issues of a mental or emotional nature that result in stress. Interestingly enough, Uncle Hans focused upon the sympathetic nervous system. Well, panic sufferers know this system well, as under the direction of our fear and emotion circuitry, the sympathetic nervous system launches our physical fight/flight response. According to Eysenck, neuroticism involves, shall we say, a “hyperactive” sympathetic nervous system.

Continue reading ‘Panic Attacks, Temperament, and Uncle Hans: It’s a Matter of Engineering?’ »

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