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If you recall, in part I of this article, Jane, my client
who dictated her treatment plan to be biofeedback freaked out in her first
biofeedback session with a full blown panic attack. After she left with her
husband I thought I’d never see her again and hoped I wouldn’t hear from her
attorney in the form of a law suit. Actually as apologetic and embarrassed as
she was, a law suit was a very remote possibility. But I wonder how many clients
in similar situations might not be considering law suits against clinicians
using inward focusing techniques that can bring on panic attacks. Then again,
their personality is not that of a trouble maker and as long as they continue
suffering from anxiety, they would never allow themselves to be in a court room
for fear of having an anxiety attack and having to run away or lose control.
But Jane did call within a few days. She was too fearful to come to the
office—she blamed her anxiety attack on my small 12’X12” treatment room (more
than twice the size of most treatment rooms) as opposed to the inward focusing
technique that I used. She asked if I’d consider in-home sessions. Reluctantly I
agreed.
A week later I arrived at her home with an EMG biofeedback instrument in hand. I
didn’t want a repeat of our first meeting so I avoided using any relaxation
exercises—inward focus. I took more time to get to know Jane. I got the feeling
that she could talk for hours about her symptoms, but I wanted to know more
about what led to the beginning of the anxiety attacks—what stressors brought on
anxiety? According to the Homes-Rahe Stress Scale, I’d be looking for some
rather significant life changes six months to a year before the onset of
symptoms.
Yes, her panic and anxiety started about six months after she and her family
moved back to NJ from the Florida Keys. “Ah ha,” I thought to my self although I
didn’t know what to do with this information except to learn more about her.
Seems that she was unhappy living in Florida—no close friends and she missed the
camaraderie of her sisters and mother in NJ.
Eventually she convinced her husband to change jobs and move back to NJ with her
teen age son in expectation of life being the way it used to be. But much to her
disappointment, her sisters were married with other interests and the
relationship with her mother was different—the camaraderie she remembered was
gone. She wasn’t any happier in NJ with her family than she was in the Florida
Keys.
I could certainly understand that she probably would like to run away from this
whole mess. How could she explain to her husband the move was for naught? And
her teen age son was getting into some trouble with drugs—another disappointment
for which she was unprepared.
I explained my take on her plight by asking her, “OK, you were unhappy in
Florida, convinced your husband to uproot the family, change jobs, and move back
to NJ so you’d be happy with your family only to find that your relationships
with your sisters and mother has changed and that your son was getting into
trouble. Wouldn’t you just like to run away from this whole embarrassing mess?”
She acknowledged that she’d like to escape the whole entire mess.
I explained that her brain was simply taking action on that desire. I explained
the fight/flight reaction to stress—how when we feel threatened the unconscious
intelligence gets us ready to fight or run—even a threat to our egos, family
status…--and that since she is not a fighter (personality wise), there’s plenty
reason to unconsciously want to run away. But being a responsible person, she
would never allow her self to run away.
OK, then we talked about diet and how certain foods can trigger anxiety—sweets,
refined carbohydrates, caffeinated beverages…
All this was nice, but she still had trouble understanding how she was ever
going to gain control of anxiety since it just happens “out of the blue.”
Essentially, this is the first step—educating the conscious mind. I left her
home without ever using the biofeedback instrument and focused on the challenge
of making a difference in her life—how to shift her from the conditioned
response of anxiety.
First it was apparent to me that the panic anxiety label her primary doctor gave
her was in the absence of understanding much about her background. She came to a
conclusion that she had a problem and no one knew how to cure it—certainly took
her mind off her real problems in life—an escape.
Regardless of what you've been told, using a revolutionary technique, anxiety
panic attack is only a disease of ignorance and can be gotten rid of through
understanding of a few basic concepts! More in the next part of this
article.
end of article--
Richard
Kuhns B.S.Ch.E. NGH certified, a prominent figure in the personal development
field, has three websites:
www.PanicBusters.com featuring the phenomenal new Waking Hypnosis program
demonstrating 80% success for the professional who wants to dramatically improve
his/her skill level in dealing with panic/anxiety sufferers and agoraphobia
While the website is focused for the professional featuring a five hour dvd
training program for the professional, it also has a two hour dvd for the client
plus an e-book titled, Light at the End of the Tunnel for Anxiety and Panic
Attack Sufferers that are available to panic/anxiety and agoraphobia
sufferers.
www.DStressDoc.com featuring the best selling general self help, building
self worth, confidence, stress management and weight loss cd programs.
www.PendulumWarehouse.com
(supplier of pendulums to the NGH) also has colored pendulums for children and
clear pendulums of all sizes and quantities—retail and wholesale.
Keywords:
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agoraphobia
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