Thursday, June 23rd, 2011 at
4:52 am
Article by Ricky Azzuri
Distress, fear and worries are part of of everyday lives of huge number of anxiety disorders patients from all around the Planet. Normal fear and anxiety are an essential part of human existence. They help us to refrain from unpleasant and unsafe situations and therefore play warning or adaptive function.
The fear is always affiliated to a particular object or a situation and anxiety is an indeterminate emotional experience. The menace in Generalized Anxiety Disorder is less detectable, unclear, so it is usually described as a floating fear. If the fears, worries and anxiety start to dominate and control someones life, when they start to severely interfere with their home, social and business life, then we can say that the individual most likely suffers from an anxiety disorder.
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Thursday, March 17th, 2011 at
5:19 am
Generalized anxiety disorders (GAD) is a familiar disorder now characterized by irrational fears and worries about certain things in our daily lives. Up to five percent of the population suffers from this sort of condition.
Not a single person can claim they never worry. It is entirely normal to worry about your employment and your family unit. Worrying in itself is not a problem until it becomes so exaggerated that you can not function. Family, friends, spouses, health issues, finances, death, and work become major sources of uneasiness for those individuals suffering from GAD. Extreme anxiousness tends to rule a person’s life and may last for up to six months.
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Tuesday, February 15th, 2011 at
5:17 am
Generalized Anxiety Disorder Symptoms & Treatment
There are ways to treat generalized anxiety disorder symptoms. But first, what is generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) all about? It has to do with worrying too much over issues and situations that might not even warrant the anxiety displayed for them. Relaxation and leading a normal life is practically impossible for someone who is battling with extreme anxiety.
GAD patients most likely have the same things on their minds as most people. They could be fretting over money, work challenges, health concerns or family woes. Only for someone with GAD, the worry level is cranked up a few notches. However, whether the anxiety is proportional to the situation or is excessive, they both have a similar ending. There is no off button for the anxious thoughts.
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Wednesday, February 9th, 2011 at
2:53 am
Depression is a serious mental illness that plagues millions of people worldwide. It is also highly socially stigmatized and people often mask depression symptoms, and even pretend they are not there. Indicators of a depressive condition are hypersomnia (sleeping too much), dysphoria (severe feelings of unpleasantness, the opposite of euphoria), sad demeanour, antisocial tendencies, anxiety, panic, and sometimes suicidal thoughts or ideations.
These symptoms have often been categorized as weak and improper, leading people to hide them and deal with them in problematic ways. This can cause secondary indicators of depression, such as addiction (to manage the symptoms, also called “self-medication”) or staying in bed all day which can lead to missed work and other commitments. This will often cause a downturn in the quality of life of someone with depression, and likely cause the depression to worsen.
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Wednesday, January 26th, 2011 at
5:18 am
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is an anxiety disorder that has struck about 6.8 million Americans as verified by the National Institute for Mental Health in 2007. This type of anxiety disorder makes a person worry disproportionately to the real cause or source of anxiety. There are some generalized anxiety disorder treatments available but before we head on to that, you must be familiar first with GAD.
Typically, the patient worries on simple everyday things such as work challenges, family problems, relationship issues, money problems, friendships and many more. The trouble with generalized anxiety disorder is that it has several physical symptoms that plague the sufferer incessantly such as irritability, agitation, sweating, hot flashes, rashes, difficulty with breathing, fidgeting, nausea, numbness in the hands or feet, muscle pain, insomnia, fatigue and others.
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Sunday, January 16th, 2011 at
5:17 am
It is ordinary to experience anxiety from time to time, especially if you are under a lot of stress. But, if the anxiety that you’re feeling bothers your everyday routines, relationships and makes it difficult to take pleasure in life, you may be experiencing general anxiety disorders. It is probable to build up the problem as a youth or as an adult. The condition has likely symptoms as panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder and other sorts of anxiety, but they are all varied disorders. Being together with this disorder can be a long-term struggle. Usually, in most cases, it gets better with drugs or psychotherapy. Creating changes in lifestyle, learning coping skills and utilizing relaxation techniques can also be of assistance.
There may be occasions when your uncertainties do not entirely devour you, but you still experience anxiety even when there is no clear reason. Example, you may experience severe concern about your safety or that of your special someone, or you may have a wide sense that something unlikely is about to occur. General anxiety disorders usually starts at a young age, and the signs may widen more slowly than in other types of anxiety disorders. It is a long-term disorder that needs ongoing therapy. Special management are accessible that will not make you experience anxiety at most times. But you are always liable to becoming worried, especially when life becomes worrying.
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Tuesday, January 4th, 2011 at
5:18 am
In generalized anxiety disorder, an individual has unrelenting, nagging feelings of worry or anxiety. These feelings are either bizarrely intense, or out of proportion to the actual troubles and dangers of your everyday life. The disorder is defined as persistent worry on a daily basis or almost every day, for six months or more. In several cases, generalized anxiety disorder symptoms makes you feel worried most of the time, even since early days or teenage years. In other cases, the anxiety may be predisposed by a crisis or a period of stress, such as a job loss, a family illness or the death of a relative.
Even if the problem sooner or later goes away and the strain passes, an unsettled feeing of anxiety may last months or years. On top on the distress from nagging worries and anxieties, people with generalized anxiety disorder symptoms may be physical and psychological in nature. The physical symptoms may guide them to hunt for treatment from an expert physician, cardiologist, pulmonary specialist or gastroenterologist. Stress also can amplify the anxiety or end with a phobia, such as a fear of dogs, driving a car or attending a party. Persons with generalized anxiety disorder may have low self-assurance or may feel self-doubting, because they interpret intentions or actions coming from other people negatively, threatening or critical ways.
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Wednesday, December 15th, 2010 at
5:19 am
Generalized anxiety disorder is not an easy condition to live with. Having suffered light anxiety for several years, which for a full year progressed into acute extreme generalized anxiety, I can tell you that I’ve taken pretty much every anxiety remedy and experienced all the anxiety symptoms in the book, from headaches which last for several weeks on end, to electrical shock sensations in my brain while trying to go to sleep at night. Since I found the Linden Method, however, that is all in the past
Yes, There Is A Cure
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Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010 at
10:39 pm
Do any of you take prozac for a generalized anxiety disorder? I used to take it and thought it was a good tool to help me combat some things, but that was a long time ago. I have a mild case of o.c.d. and some social anxiety. High levels of stress make all of these worse. I am thinking about starting up the counceling again and possibly taking prozac again. Does the prozac help with any of the above listed? Do you like it and would you recommend it? Serious answers only and thank you!
Friday, October 29th, 2010 at
10:39 pm
Generalized anxiety disorder symptoms are very common, the problem is most people ignore them. The symptoms ARE early warning signs, so please don’t take them lightly. Now check if you have any in the list below, if so you need to think about treating them before they become a bigger issue, you will be surprised how easy they are to control.
Generalized anxiety disorder symptoms usually start off with the list below.
List for the most common Generalized anxiety disorder symptoms.
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