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is probably the most misunderstood subject in the area of the
anxiety disorders. Most clinicians and therapists have not been
adequately trained to understand or diagnose anxiety disorders in
general -- and the clear-cut distinction between these two
anxiety disorders is almost never understood. Even
normally reliable and scientific sources fail to make the correct
distinctions in this area.
(As
an additional note: Many people with any type of anxiety disorder
are typically misdiagnosed as being "depressed''. This
occurs because anyone with an anxiety disorder, including panic
and social anxiety, is naturally "depressed" over their
anxiety and the significant impairment it causes in their daily
lives. Technically, it is more accurate to diagnose people with
anxiety disorders as "dysthymic". The main point,
however, is that it is the anxiety that causes the depression (dysthymia)
and not the other way around. Once the anxiety shrinks and is
overcome, the depression goes away with it.)
PANIC
DISORDER
People
with panic believe very strongly that the "attack" they
experienced means that something is physically wrong with
them.
For
example, many people with panic disorder fear that they are
having a heart attack, that they're about to lose control, or
that they're going crazy. Other people with panic believe that
because they can't catch their breath that they're suffocating,
or that the dizziness, lightheadedness, and "unreal"
feeling they experience means they have a terrible undiagnosed
illness.
The
person with a tightness around the head fears they have a brain
tumor. The person with muscle spasms fears they're coming down
with a muscular disease. Heart palpitations and/or skipped
heartbeats "prove" that there's something wrong with
the heart.
People
can be checked, rechecked, and use the hospital emergency rooms
repeatedly before it ever begins to get clear to them that what
they are legitimately suffering from is anxiety, and not a
physical, medical condition.
The
central point is that people with panic fear that they have a
physical, medical disease. Otherwise, what else could
explain the suddenness and awfulness of that first panic attack?
How could the mind have something to do with the horrible
swirling emotions and feelings that overload the person during
this traumatic and emotional attack?
A
great many people who experience their first panic attack find
their way to the hospital emergency room or go directly to their
physician's office. They feel their life is in danger and they
legitimately want a diagnosis to explain it. When doctors report
that they can find nothing wrong with the person medically, it
only heightens the person's anxiety. After all, something
MUST BE WRONG or else how do you explain the horrific sensations
and emotions they went through during the panic attack?
Unfortunately, many people are never told that they are
experiencing anxiety, and that a panic attack could be the
culprit.
Sometimes,
especially when the panic occurs frequently and in many diverse
places, the person feels more and more restricted as to where
they can go and still be safe. When a person feels their
"safety zone" is a limited area around their house, and
they fear they’ll have panic attacks as a result of getting too
far away from this protection and safety, they may become agoraphobic.
SOCIAL
ANXIETY DISORDER (Social Phobia)
People
with social anxiety disorder do not believe that their anxiety is
related to a medical or physical illness or disease. This type of
anxiety occurs in most social situations, especially when the
person feels on display or is the center of attention.
The
socially-anxious person has extremely high anxiety when they're
put into a position to make small talk to a stranger or interact
in a group. The anxiety becomes worse when the person fears that
they are going to be singled out, ridiculed, criticized,
embarrassed, or belittled. People with social anxiety find it to
be a terrifying experience to interact with unfamiliar people,
give any type of public presentation, or even be publicly
noticed. For example, the office may be planning a birthday party
for the socially-anxious person -- and instead of this being a
pleasant and happy experience -- it will cause great anticipatory
fear and dread -- because they will be on display.....in front of
all those people.....and then they fear they will do something to
make a fool of themselves......
The
person with social anxiety is sometimes viewed as
"quiet", "shy", "introverted", or
"backward". They are continually concerned that other
people will notice their anxiety and they will be humiliated and
embarrassed as a result. Most people with social anxiety disorder
hold down jobs that are well beneath their capabilities and
capacities because they fear job interviews, working in a
position where there is too much public contact, and being
promoted to a position where they would have to supervise other
people. When socially-anxious people isolate themselves as much
as possible and are somehow enabled to stay at home and not work,
their social contact can drift down to the immediate family or to
absolutely no one at all.
Once
a person avoids almost all social and public interactions we say
the person has an extreme case of social anxiety disorder, more
commonly called avoidant personality disorder. As you
would expect, people with social anxiety disorder have an
elevated rate of relationship difficulties, and substance
abuse.
To
escape the constant anxiety, many people with anxiety (both panic
and social anxiety people) turn to the age-old, damaging anxiety
reducers: alcohol and substance/drug abuse.
SYNOPSIS:
DIFFERENCES
People
with panic disorder experience a horrible anxiety attack
accompanied by many physical symptoms that are originally
interpreted as a physical, medical problem. Socially-anxious
people experience horrible anxiety in social situations that lead
them to stay away from other people because of the anxiety it
causes. They see anxiety as a "fear" and do not believe
it is caused by a physical, medical condition.
Panic
and agoraphobic people are many times very social. In fact, the
majority of panic people enjoy the company of talking and being
with other people. This is nowhere more apparent than in a
therapy group with other people who have panic and/or
agoraphobia. The room is alive, active, open, friendly, and
sometimes even noisy.
Contrast
this picture with the life of socially-anxious people. Even
though they are lonely and would like to be with other people and
enjoy their company, the heightened anxiety this would cause
overpowers the loneliness. Thus, the socially-anxious person
stays alone. In a therapy group meeting of socially-anxious
people, the room is fairly subdued, particularly during the first
few sessions. Individuals are afraid of talking, drawing
attention to themselves, and risking anticipated embarrassment.
Contrary
to popular conception, people with social anxiety disorder do not
develop agoraphobia. Agoraphobia results from the fear of panic
attacks, not from the fear of social interactions. Likewise,
people with panic disorder do not develop avoidant personality
disorder. Avoidant personality disorder results from social
anxiety as people continue to cut themselves off from most of the
world because of the fear of social interactions and other
people, not from the fear and dread of having a panic attack.
(Note:
We, as a therapeutic and research community, are light years
behind where we should be concerning the anxiety disorders. It is
still prevalent within our own professional communities to
dismiss the anxiety disorders as unimportant and not be able to
make the clear-cut clinical distinctions that are apparent to
those who specialize in this area.)
Also,
contrary to current psychiatric/psychological nomenclature,
people with social anxiety do not have "panic attacks".
They experience extreme anxiety in social settings where they
fear they will have to perform or be on display. It is not
uncommon for socially-anxious people to use the terminology
"I panicked". Again, however, the distinction here is
that the person is not talking about the sensations leading to a
physical pain or condition. They are referring to a very high
level of anxiety and the adrenaline rush that accompanies
it.
It
is possible for a person to have concurrent symptoms from
both of these anxiety disorders, although one or the other will
usually be more prevalent. For example, a person with panic
may also be socially-anxious concerning several different life
situations, such as fear of public speaking and fear of being
assertive. It is also possible for a person with one of the
anxiety disorders to develop another disorder at a different
period during the lifespan. People may also simultaneously suffer
from several of the other anxiety problems, such as
obsessive-compulsive disorder, post-traumatic stress, and/or
generalized anxiety disorder.
It
appears from the latest epidemiological data that social anxiety
disorder is the most common of the anxiety disorders.
Lending
credence to this data is that many socially-anxious people find
it extremely difficult to seek help – going to therapy is a
social event where the person is dealing with an authority figure
on a 1:1 basis. Just the thought of this can create high levels
of anxiety, and hold the person back from seeking help (even
though they want it desperately).
Panic
disorder with and without agoraphobia seems to be the second most
common anxiety disorder.
The
anxiety disorders as a whole continue to be the disorders that
plague and afflict the largest number of people on the
planet.....
The
anxiety disorders as a whole continue to be the area in which the
LEAST amount of research and clinical experience is
available.....
The
general public continues to hear more about the obscure
psychological disorders that seem bizarre and strange, thus
commanding a greater deal of media attention.....
And
because of this mis-focus, people with anxiety disorders continue
to be the losers.....
Please
read our other pages on the anxiety disorders. And remember...each
and every anxiety disorder is both treatable and can be
conquered. No one needs to live their life with an ongoing
anxiety disorder. Help IS available, but please seek out help
carefully from professionals who have experience in treating
anxiety disorders.
At
present, the best help seems to exist in anxiety clinics whose
practice focuses solely on these disorders. Ask questions of
anyone you may potentially visit. Make sure they fully understand
the problem that you want help to overcome. Don't let anyone tell
you that panic, agoraphobia, social anxiety, or avoidant
personality disorder cannot be overcome.
There
are many of us who have suffered through the pain of an anxiety
disorder first hand, and can vouch for the fact that it is
possible that you can overcome anxiety, too. An experienced and
knowledgeable therapist and a motivated client is all that is
needed to gently move ahead and conquer the worst of your fears.
--
Thomas A. Richards, Ph.D., Psychologist
The
20 audio session therapy series: "Overcoming Social Anxiety"
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