Anxiety and Sensitised Nerves

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Someone asked if I'd share this in a public post (this is from a private message we had).

As well as taking Citalopram, I found understanding about anxiety was a big breakthrough for me and helped me recover.

Years ago I read all of Dr Clare Weeks books and it was the first time someone had actually made anxiety seem so simple to understand.  I wanted my doctor and medical team to talk to me the way she talked to her patients but they didn't back then.  I was frightened of the word 'mental' and wasn't comfortable having therapy, which was carried out in a cold, unwelcoming victorian hospital, and the whole experience just made me more anxious and frightened than ever.  I knew I wasn't mad, I just had this feeling that I didn't understand, these thoughts that brought this feeling on and nobody once told me it was anxiety.  Never.  One doctor suggested I had Obsessional Neurosis, another said depression - was I neurotic?  What were all these feelings, why did I have them, where do I go ........ these thoughts churned around my head daily, adding to my anxiety, strengthening those frightening thoughts ....... and I found the answer in those books ..... I had anxiety.  Everything I felt and thought was all due to anxiety.  Fix the anxiety and the rest would be fixed too.  Simple.  Though it wasn't that simple getting out of it.

But just knowing that sorted all the confusion out in my head and instead I could just concentrate on one thing.  I see many people doing what I did - always searching for an answer, panicking and questioning every symptom, they get confused and go round in circles searching for an answer - just as I had done.  The answer for me was in those books (plus the other newer book I found this year and I can't mention here).  To me, they were simple answers - and a simple route back to normality - though that simple route was not easy.

Those books talked about sensitisation which I found interesting.

When you suffer with stress over and over, your nerves become a little sensitive over time.  This means that they start to become 'trigger happy' and emotions start to become more exaggerated.  Your nerves cannot sustain this sensitivity forever and needs time to calm every so often ...... but what do we do?  ... we continue to push ourselves more, add more stress and make our nerves more and more sensitive, pushing and pushing them until they can't cope anymore until they break down, resulting in an outpouring of adrenaline and anxiety.

For a 'normal' person, if they'd had that anxiety feeling they'd be able to cope with it, but to a person that's been working those nerves to the maximum and feeling those emotions more and more, they will probably respond to the anxiety differently - with fear.

So our nerves are now screaming at us - the heart is pounding, we sweat, shake, and the anxiety is raging around our bodies and we feel absolutely terrified of all these new feelings.  We are over reacting to a physical feeling, but our emotions are already exaggerated, our bodies tense and alert and we start to fear this.  Our body is super sensitised .......... everything we feel and think is over exaggerated.  We hold our bodies tensely, fighting this 'thing', we clench our teeth, hold our stomaches tight ........ it is so tiring.

We simply need to reverse this, to bring this sensitisation back down to normal, and that is by relaxing towards the anxiety, release the tension on the stomach, release that clenched jaw, ....... just let go of tension and float along.  We should not react to the anxiety with tension, not fear it ....... and this will in time make our nerves calmer, soothing them so eventually they'll return to normal which will then bring all our reactions back to normal too.

The body needs a rest.  We rush about and hold it so tight against fear which adds to the problem.  If you held a heavy weight for a long time then your muscles would soon tire and would scream at you they wanted to rest.  This is the same about tensing to anxiety.  Stop rushing about, slow down, let go of those tense / tight muscles, relax, slump ....... but don't just sit there, but instead whilst relaxing you must at the same time carry on about your day as normal.  Slowly.

This is why 'normal' people don't have this reaction to anxiety because their nerves are at a normal level.  When your nerves are heightened they will respond to anything and everything - its like they're alive and buzzing around your body.

Along with medication, helping to treat anxiety is to first understand that everything you think and feel are all due to anxiety.  All the 'what if I did this', 'what if my anxiety doesn't go', 'what if I'm this' and 'what if I'm that' ........ all these questions and many more that go round and round in your head all day creating more anxiety, and questions that are never answered.  I had my fair share of them.  People start to avoid things and places because they feel anxious - but it isn't these places they fear, but it is the fear itself they fear.  They fear that feeling so avoid places because they know they'll feel it there ...... and so the association with places starts.

Its the same with scary thoughts.  We fear our thoughts, and so our mind goes looking for more.  They produce anxiety and so we then try to avoid these thoughts which just exaggerates them.  We should instead let those thoughts be there, let them flit in and out, relax towards them and carry on with whatever we're doing.  The anxiety will build up but it will also pass too.  Over time ..... much time ..... your body slowly becomes desensitised to the place, thought or whatever it is and relearns not to be frightened.  You're reversing the process.

It was this that I began to understand.  For a very long time though I couldn't get started on this as I expected to feel relief immediately.  I'd think 'but I let those thoughts come and go and they still frighten me' ......... but I didn't understand that yes they would still frighten me, but I had to let them, relax, carry on.  It wasn't until I started taking SSRI's that it all began to fit together and I could see what Dr Weeks meant, could see it was just anxiety I had and how to relax towards my fears.  Yes the medication helped me recover but I think 16 years of anxiety I just couldn't do it with just a book back then as I had too many habits to deal with.

Anxiety is physical.  Nerves are physical and they become 'jagged'.  They just need to become smoothed out again.  

Take away the hurdle of the constant questions, there is no need to over analyse each symptom ...... they are all there purely because you have anxiety.  Once the anxiety starts to ease, so to will all those symptoms - so why waste time trying to sort them out.

Nurture the body with good food and gentle exercise too.

Take life at a slower pace - we all are so used to rushing everywhere, fitting things in - and its good for us for a while.  Too much pushing it and those nerves start to get overworked.

Just slow down and let go throughout your day.  Nobody can see anxiety coming and you won't know until is too late and you get your first panic attack or taste of anxiety.  When that starts its quite shocking as we don't ever feel anything like it so that's why it becomes frightening.  Those sensitised nerves will make you over exaggerate everything and they just need to be reversed.When the Citalopram started to kick in, I found understanding all this just helped sort the jumbled mess in my head.  I found one path to follow, I didn't need to question anything anymore as knew all the symptoms would ease along with the anxiety.

They did.

 

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  • Posted

    So this is why

    leg muscles are so sore .

    • Posted

      Hi Amy

      Thank you for bringing this message from Katecogs to the forefront again. I haven't seen it before but it's going to make fascinating reading when I can take it all in. Huge thank you to Katecogs for sharing all your knowledge with us. Superb!

    • Posted

      I'd forgotten I'd written that .......

      But yes, it could be why you feel muscle fatigue. Your body is tired from carrying anxiety around all day and it could also be how you hold yourself, as most people with anxiety will be tense.

      You'll get all sort of aches and pains, but put it down to anxiety.

      K x

    • Posted

      Hi Sonia

      Yes this is so true and how we get stuck in a cycle of anxiety / fear / anxiety as basically its the feeling of anxiety we fear, not all the associated intrusive thoughts etc., because they produce the very thing we fear, all of which keeps us in the constant loop.

      Understanding anxiety is half the battle done - if you don't understand how it works then it'll continue to frighten you, adding fuel to the fire. Take away the fuel and that fire will start to die.

      Kx

  • Posted

    This is exactly what anxiety does to me, just leaves me with this unsettling tingling throughout my body and knots in stomach. Trying to eat anything is a huge struggle.

    I know I need a few days of relaxation before I can get these feelings to go away, but it’s hard when it’s there every single day.

    20mg-30 citalopram always helped with this, but this time it isn’t and it’s making me worried that these pills will never work for me again. Might try going up to 40mg and see if I can finally feel like myself again. It’s basically the only hope I have left at the point.

    • Posted

      The tingling feeling is your nerve endings on fire ....... that’s how I describe it anyway. Anxiety is the result of stress which affects your nervous system, hence the term nervous breakdown. Your nerves have had enough. The fear of anxiety just keeps piling on more anxiety to the body keeping those nerves tingling away.

      Everybody fights anxiety which is wrong, and instead you need to relax towards it, let it be there, let it rage whilst you carry on as normal. Very hard to do I know but the book I rave about explains this. If you have flu you wouldn’t keep searching for an answer, wouldn’t fret about the side effects of a runny nose etc, but instead you’d let your body heal in its own time. Same works for anxiety. Trouble is its our natural instinct to fight it, but doing the opposite is key.

      Change the way your how mind and body reacts to anxiety. Fear it, try to suppress or avoid it and it will shout loud at you because you’ve made it important, but let it be there, pay it (and the intrusive thoughts), and it will lose is power, get bored and go away over time. Absolutely 100%.

      You can’t make the feelings go away, again this is fighting it. Relaxing the body as you move around helps. During recovery anxiety will walk beside you all the way, and as the meds kicks in it breaks the cycle.

      Medicine will surely help you, even without this understanding - though understanding anxiety helps so much. Knowledge is power.

      Starting meds a second does seem to take longer so you do need lots of patience. Stick with the dose you used before - lots of people struggle with 40mg. The meds will work again .....

      K x

    • Posted

      Yeah my leg muscles are totally sore. Almost crampy and my feet tingle. UGH.

    • Posted

      I’ve actually been up and down on this dose multiple times lol. It’s not my second time.

      It could just be a really bad spell of anxiety and depression and may need 40mg this time to get out of it. I can always lower in spring (which is when I always feel better, pretty sure I have SAD).

      I’ll see what my doctor says anyways, but I have a little bit of hope (which is better than none).

    • Posted

      Hi Nina

      Ah, you said 20-30mg always helped you and you were worried they wouldn’t help again, so just assumed you’d been on it before.

      SAD is caused by a drop in Serotonin and / or Melatonin levels - SSRI’s keep Serotonin at a steady level so its worth asking your Doctor about taking Melatonin?

    • Posted

      He upped my pills to 40mg for the next few months and told me to take melatonin, magnesium, and zinc before bed so I’ll be starting it all tonight 😃

  • Edited

    Love this fantastic insight from katecogs and her advice! we will all get there. x

  • Posted

    hi kate

    fantastic post

    i keep dr clare weekes in my ibooks library, iknow shes always there if i get into bother, she is one powerful ally!

    game changer!

    rob x

    • Posted

      Hi Rob

      Yes her books became my bible and I took great comfort from them. A great pioneer of her time.

      Her method certainly helped me, and I’m able to be meds free now.

      Understandng sensitisation was the biggest break-through for me. Learning that it meant my nervous system was on high alert - it notices every thought and feeling to an extreme, and we find it very hard to focus on anything else but how we think and feel. Sensitisation means we have too much stress hormone in our body (hence the chronic anxiety) and it needs releasing - deep breathing, exercise etc help calm your nervous system. The medicine calms your nervous system and all thoughts and feelings will return to normal.

      Her books actually work (and the same as another author I rave about).

      I've also got her books (think I've got them all) - and like you, know I can rely on them if I find myself slipping.

  • Posted

    Loved your post .very helpful .

    • Posted

      Ooh just seen your post. Thanks, glad you found my post helpful. Sensitised nerves makes such sense ...... 😉

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