I too was once plagued by anxiety attacks.
At my very worst, a few weeks after a very traumatic experience when I was beaten unconcious outside a pub in the early nineties, I spent a few days experiencing a wave of them - one every twenty minutes! Yes, one every twenty minutes, just sitting in my armchair! I couldn't even sleep and I was so exhausted I really thought I was a goner. The onset of clinical depression set in shortly afterwards. I had to have some heavy medication for a while.
I have had the occasional attack over the years, usually when queueing in a supermarket or bank (my favourite places for panic attacks). Usually, I have been under some stress or I've not been getting enough sleep. I just slow down and talk myself through it. A good trick is to count backwards from a hundred in multiples of three - this usually concentrates my mind on the numbers and not my panic. I'm still happy when I'm out of the shop though!
My only advice to you gsdx is to do your best to treat this attack as a 'one off' occurence. If you dwell on it too much you're likely to trigger more of the darn things! And you must re-visit the place where you had your recent attack soon.
I don't think I'll be ever free of them totally, but I have learned to live with them. And when I have spoken to other people about them, I found out that just about everyone has suffered from a panic attack at sometime or another.
Best of luck.
Alan
At my very worst, a few weeks after a very traumatic experience when I was beaten unconcious outside a pub in the early nineties, I spent a few days experiencing a wave of them - one every twenty minutes! Yes, one every twenty minutes, just sitting in my armchair! I couldn't even sleep and I was so exhausted I really thought I was a goner. The onset of clinical depression set in shortly afterwards. I had to have some heavy medication for a while.
I have had the occasional attack over the years, usually when queueing in a supermarket or bank (my favourite places for panic attacks). Usually, I have been under some stress or I've not been getting enough sleep. I just slow down and talk myself through it. A good trick is to count backwards from a hundred in multiples of three - this usually concentrates my mind on the numbers and not my panic. I'm still happy when I'm out of the shop though!
My only advice to you gsdx is to do your best to treat this attack as a 'one off' occurence. If you dwell on it too much you're likely to trigger more of the darn things! And you must re-visit the place where you had your recent attack soon.
I don't think I'll be ever free of them totally, but I have learned to live with them. And when I have spoken to other people about them, I found out that just about everyone has suffered from a panic attack at sometime or another.
Best of luck.

Alan


