Post #3: Hypochondria/ Health Anxiety

Understanding and overcoming Hypochondria / Health Anxiety

Nothing is more important than our health. No amount of money can buy it. There are famous, powerful and ultra-wealthy people who have fallen to the grip of diseases and illnesses. And they would trade it all for a well and balance health again.

We are all alarmed and triggered when there’s something that has the potential of threatening our health. We recognize a sign of abnormality and search for answer so we can correct it. Once it is corrected, the symptoms subside, and we return to our normal life.

Unfortunately for anxiety and panic attack sufferers, this becomes a cycle of hell that consumes and sometime ruin their life. Since anxiety can cause so many mental and physical symptoms. Their victims constantly experience one symptom after another, from one part of the body to the next.

Physical symptoms experienced by anxiety sufferers are REAL! It’s not “just in our head”. I myself experienced hundreds if not thousands of them. There was no one who could convince me at the time that it was because of sensitized nerves, that it was all because of anxiety. Until I found Dr. Claire Weekes book “Hope and Helps for your Nerves”.

That sounds like me!

I spent most of my days googling what a symptom that I had would indicate. And, of course, I found diseases that match with my symptom perfectly. Now, in my mind, I had that disease, and no one could tell me otherwise. I would go to my doctor and do whatever necessary to get a scan or test done to confirm my new-found problem.

The result came back, everything was normal. A big sigh of relief, I would laugh at myself for being so silly. A boost of energy rush through my body. Confidence returned to me, and I felt like a new person. The test confirmed that I’m healthy so I would go on and live a normal life now. Anxiety is no more. Right? NO!

A couple days later, I would feel a twitch, a pain, a numbness at a different part of my body. Or I would feel dizzy, nauseous, hot cold or both at the same time, and many more sensations that you can think of. Or even if I heard people discussing about an illness or disease that they or someone else had. I would freak out and back on the internet I go.

The previous one wasn’t correct; this is the real one!

And magically, whatever the description that Google has about that disease is what I started to feel exactly. My body somehow managed to produce the exact symptoms and sensations that Dr. Google would suggest. Now all my confidence is gone. Anxiety got a hold of me once again.

The more I stressed about my body, the more stress hormone was released into my system which further sensitized my nerves. Highly activated and sensitized nerves intensify every little feeling I had about this new “disease”. I didn’t know anything about anxiety at that time, so I had no choice but to call my doctor and beg for another test.

Another test, another medical bill, another normal result which game me another short-lived happiness. Until the vicious cycle starts again. This went on for years. It was exhausting and overwhelming. I did consider ending it all but didn’t have the strength to do it.

The breakthrough

At the point where everything seems so gloomy. When life was covered by a blanket of disappointment, exhaustion, hopelessness and an impending doom, I found hope. I realized that it wasn’t the symptoms that I was struggling with. It was my interpretation of the symptoms that keeps me in the living hell.

I realized that I had to switch my mindset about the way I feel. First, I have to truly accept my anxiety, and everything that comes with it. I had to break my habit of googling for answers. I had to stop asking people for reassurance. I had to quit my addiction of finding short-term comfort.

IT WAS SO HARD at first, but with commitment, discipline and a massive determination to gain my life back, I was able to break the cycle. I fell off the wagon a few times, I gave into my addiction and hop on my laptop looking for explanation and reassurance and got pulled back into the health anxiety hole.

Trust me, I understand how scary anxiety symptoms and sensations can be. It is easier said than done when you feel like your life is at risk. But if you read Dr. Weekes book, you’ll learn that anxiety is nervous condition. It has everything to do with your nerves. Our body has nerves endings connected to every part and organ. So, when nerves are sensitized due to months and years of excessive stress and tension, they will create symptoms to whichever part or organ they connect to.

And since our brain never really sleeps, some people experience symptoms even while they’re asleep. You don’t feel pain when you cut your hair and nails because there are no nerve endings there, that’s why we barely ever hear people complain about symptoms related to their hairs or nails. Most symptoms are around the head, heart, eyes, belly areas where nerves endings are found the most. Knowing this makes anxiety symptoms seem much less scary and easier to accept.

Think about this situation. You have a headache, and your doctor gives you 2 answers:

1- “It seems to be allergy related, nothing important” or

2- “It seems to be related to your brain function; we’ll keep an eye on it”

Same headache, but the second answer would send you into panic and misery right away. You would focus on the headache and feel it intensifying by the day. But if your doctor gives you the first answer, you wouldn’t pay much attention to it, and it probably goes away without you even knowing it.

You see, as hypochondriacs, we give ourselves the second answer all the time. It’s never been the symptoms that torment us; it’s the fear that we create about the symptoms.

So, to cure hypochondria, finding answers for every problem is not the way, even if you have your entire body scanned by the best medical equipment. Fear created by sensitized nerves will keep you in its prison. You have to practice shifting your interpretation about how you feel. Remove fear from the equation and your anxiety will starve and eventually dies. You will gain your life back. You will find yourself again.

Practice A.C.E.R. and read the post about reassurance seeking to strengthen your belief that anxiety will be defeated if you put in the work and the will.

Good luck to you

Post #2: Reassurance Seeking is a Drug

Understanding why reassurance seeking is not productive in anxiety recovery

People with anxiety and panic attacks disorder constantly look for answers. They search everywhere for an explanation for the way they feel. Visting doctor offices, the emergency room, seeing therapists, googling symptoms are a major part of their daily routine.

I remember scanning my body every morning to look for symptoms and sensations so I can find ways to get rid of them. I would worry if there was a symptom and also worry if there wasn’t any.

I found myself addicted to seeking reassurance. “Is this anxiety?”, “can this be caused by anxiety?’, “Did you have this symptom? did it go away? how long did it take to go away? were the questions I asked people on the daily basis. Every time I found a satisfactory answer, I would feel a sense of relief. My body feels normal, and a rush of confidence run through me like a wave of positivity.

Well, that never lasts long. As soon as the reassurance confidence wears off, another symptom pops its head up. Devastated and disappointed, we go right back on google to find another answer. At this point, it’s not the answer that we care for. It was more of the “feel good” sensation of finding the answer that we’re after.

I just need to know if this is normal with anxiety, and I can move on with my life

Assurance seeking is like a drug. It gives us immediate relief, but it ties us to our anxiety. We need more and more reassurance to go on with our life. Fighting the urge to ask for reassurance is extremely difficult. Because anxiety feels so terrible and scary! Just a few minutes on Google can bring us the relief, why not? Right?

People just don’t understand that it’s never been about the symptoms. It’s about the fear that we have about those symptoms. We can handle the symptoms, but we can’t handle the fear that comes with them. That’s why we seek reassurance, to get rid of the fear.

Stop the search for reassurance takes courage, discipline and the power of will. Next time you catch yourself wanting to ask for reassurance, remember this post and stop. Try to do something else. Wait for the urge to pass. If you catch yourself saying this “Just this one symptom and I will stop asking”, know that it’s a lie you tell yourself again and again.

Think about symptom searching as a pill that will keep you having anxiety. Do you want to take that pill? If the answer is a NO, then it’s time we make a change. It’s time we break the habit. It’s not easy but you can do it!