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Anxiety Management
Anxiety management involves learning several skills that will
help you cope better with PTSD symptoms. People usually try all
of these anxiety management techniques to determine what helps most.
When PTSD symptoms strike, anxiety management techniques are used
to reduce the intensity of symptoms and the distress they create.
But it is not enough to understand the principles behind these techniques;
they must be practiced repeatedly until they can be employed easily
and automaticallyalmost without thinking about them. Some
people use anxiety management techniques to help control anxiety
while they do exposure therapy. Five different techniques for anxiety
management are:
Breathing
training
When we feel frightened
or anxious, a natural part of our "fight or flight" response
is to breathe rapidly and deeply, which can often result in hyperventilation.
Hyperventilation produces uncomfortable or even frightening sensations
that make you feel even more anxious. In fact, some describe a "vicious
cycle" in which anxiety or fear provokes hyperventilation,
which in turn increases anxiety and fear. Breathing training can
help stop this cycle before it gets out of control. back
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Relaxation
When frightened
or anxious, we tighten our muscles so that we are ready to fight,
flee or freeze. While this reaction is appropriate in the face of
imminent danger, PTSD symptoms are a reaction to past danger and
are inappropriate in the present. back to top
Assertiveness
training
Assertive
communication is a direct and honest expression of your feelings,
preferences, needs or opinions that does not offend or threaten
another person. It means standing up for your legitimate rights
without violating the rights of others. Unassertive communication
occurs when you do not directly express your feelings, needs or
opinions. For those with PTSD, unassertive communication can accentuate
distress and dysfunction. back to top
Positive
thinking and self-talk
In
this technique, the goal is to replace negative or destructive thoughts
with positive thoughts. For example, instead of thinking, "I
can never control my emotions," we can learn to say to ourselves,
"No one can control all their emotions all the time, but is it really
true that I can never control my emotions? No. I can think about
times when I have had better control over my emotions..." One popular
book that provides more detail about constructive thinking is entitled
Feeling Good by David Burns (see Reading
List). back to top
Thought
stopping
Thought stopping asks you to stop thinking
distressing thoughts. A therapist may ask you to think a distressing
thought and when you indicate that the thought is clearly in mind,
the therapist shouts "Stop." This startles you and interrupts the
thought. You can learn to first shout, later say and finally whisper,
"Stop," whenever a distressing thought occurs.
This anxiety management technique is controversial
because it is the opposite of what exposure therapy requires. Exposure
therapy, which has been shown to be very effective in treating PTSD,
requires long periods of confronting the triggers of PTSD discomfort
to allow habituation to occur. Thought stopping, by contrast, maintains
that one should stop, or turn off, discomforting thoughts. While
this may provide short-term relief for some individuals, it seldom
provides lasting benefit because the distressing thoughts and feelings
almost always come back. In fact, thought stopping before habituation
has time to work may make the person more sensitive to the very
thoughts being stopped.
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