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Cognitive Therapy's Treatment of Anxiety
by James Krehbiel
Excessive
anxiety is troublesome. For many, it can be an immobilizing
experience. Anxiousness can be associated with social avoidance
and withdrawal, can be a factor in relationship difficulties, can
create painful symptoms, and can trigger a need to rehash issues
related to our past and future.
Anxiety
triggers the “fight or flight” response, ramping up our sympathetic
nervous system.
I believe that the most successful treatment approach to dealing with
anxiety is through the application of Cognitive Therapy.
Cognitive Therapy is a very structured, practical, and understandable
approach to dealing with anxiety.
CT is
based on the principle that one’s spontaneous thoughts, cognitive
distortions, and underlying beliefs affect an individual’s current
behavior.
Spontaneous thoughts are free-flowing expressions of our self-talk
triggered by a specific event. For example, if your house is on
fire and you are trying to safely leave, you might say something like,
“Oh my God, I’ve got to get out of here – if I don’t hurry, I might get
killed.”
Cognitive
distortions are the lenses through which we may view reality. For
example, if you have been rejected for a date, you might use emotional
reasoning by saying, “Being snubbed makes me feel like a dud, and
therefore I must be one – I’ll never get a date.”
Underlying
beliefs are the core assumptions that govern our life. For
example, if we were raised in a household where emotional abuse was
present, we may experience a reality that goes something like
this.
“It is
important to avoid conflict at all costs. If I try to get close
to others, I may get hurt – I better keep my distance.”
Anxiety is a reaction to our thinking, beliefs, and underlying
assumptions about life. However, it is usually not our primary
anxiousness that creates our distress. It is our secondary
symptoms – or our “anxiety about our anxiety” that intensifies our
symptoms.
Almost everyone experiences anxiety, but not everyone catastrophizes
about it. Let’s say that you are taking a midterm exam in
college. There are several ways you might respond when you open
the test booklet and note that there are numerous questions that you
are not prepared to answer.
First,
you might respond by saying, “Wow, none of these answers look
familiar. I don’t remember studying this – I’m going to flunk
this test. If I fail it, there goes my grade for the
semester. Wait until my parents find out, they’ll kill me!”
Or an
alternative, rational response might be, “Gee, I don’t understand these
first three questions – that’s ok, I’ll just take some deep breaths,
relax and work on the questions that I am familiar with. Then
I’ll go back and tackle the one’s I couldn’t answer before.”
Our manner of self-talk determines the level of our anxiety. When
we ‘awfulize’ about anxiety, it tends to intensify it. When we
respond rationally to our anxiety it tends to diminish its effect.
Rationally responding to anxious thoughts is critical to minimizing the
effect of anxiety.
Many people tend to believe that their panic or anxiety “appear out of
the blue.” They may feel confused and perplexed by the sudden
emergence of their feelings. Cognitive therapists view anxious
feelings as a byproduct of faulty thinking. There is no mystery to
it.
Teaching
others to respond rationally to self-defeating self-talk is the primary
goal of therapy.
Individuals who experience anxious panic attacks are usually troubled
by symptoms such as a racing heart, sweating, fear of dying,
hyperventilating, and a need to escape social situations.
Helping
individuals to manage panic attacks takes understanding and
patience. Assisting people to realize that their panic is
time-limited is important. Since panic tends to take on a life of
its own, it is important to address the secondary symptoms or the
“panic over the panic.”
When
people panic, they tend to magnify their symptoms through
self-defeating thinking, perpetuating the panic attack. Teaching
people to relax into their panic is helpful.
The following are some guidelines for those who experience anxiety and
panic:
• Anxiety is time-limited. It is comforting to know that it
always diminishes in its impact over time.
• Don’t fight with your anxiety. It only makes things
worse. Lean into your anxiety, embrace it, and it will subside.
• Schedule a “worry time.” Go into a quiet room, relax and try to
expose yourself to your anxieties. Try to bring on your symptoms
and you will find that it is difficult to do.
• If you have a tendency to panic, create an exit strategy. Plan
a way to remove yourself from anxious situations to bring relief.
• Refocus your attention away from your anxiety. For example,
when people experience panic attacks that involve a racing heart, I
might encourage them do jumping jacks to demonstrate that there is
nothing physically causing their symptoms. This strategy actually
lightens the situation and their symptoms.
• If you are anxious, chunk things down into smaller parts.
People tend to feel overwhelmed when they look at the entire
picture. Rather than clean the entire house, pick a specific task
such as shredding a few unnecessary documents.
• Stay in the present. Don’t rehash your history or anticipate
your future. Worrying about your future or history serves no
useful purpose. You can’t control it anyway.
Cognitive Therapy emphasizes replacing self-defeating thinking with
more rational ways of responding to stressors. Identifying goals
of therapy, approaching them in a practical manner, and providing
homework assignments for people are significant ingredients to
Cognitive Therapy’s response to anxiety.
~~
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=James_Krehbiel
James P. Krehbiel, Ed.S., LPC is an author, freelance writer, and
nationally certified cognitive-behavioral therapist practicing in
Scottsdale, Arizona. He can be reached at http://www.krehbielcounseling.com
His personal growth book is Stepping
Out of the Bubble
~~
Related books on using cognitive therapy:
Mind
Over Mood: Change How You Feel by Changing the Way You Think, by
Dennis Greenberger and Christine Padesky
Cognitive
Therapy: Basics and Beyond by Judith S. Beck
The
Client's Guide to Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy: How to Live a Healthy,
Happy Life...No Matter What! by Aldo R. Pucci
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