I can totally relate to what people here are going through. I had my first panic attack when I was 11 years old. That was in the very early 80's. I've had a million of them since. Back when I had my first one, I'd never heard the term "panic attack" at all. Not the way you do today. I went to a doctor for it and didn't even know how to describe what I was feeling. I remember telling him that I felt like someone was chasing me with a knife but nobody's there and I can just feel that when watching tv. He told my mother that I physically had nothing wrong with me and that I'm probably just looking for attention. He told her that right in front of me too because I guess he thought that if he brought it out in the open, I'd stop doing it. I remember just staring at him and having this overwhelming feeling of depression come over me as I thought.........Jesus Christ, I'm never going to get any help for this.
People around you that don't suffer from anxiety or depression get frustrated with you and I can understand that. After awhile, they start to think........what the hell's wrong with him? Get over it already. I went from the age of 11 to 21 thinking that I was the only person in the world that had panic attacks so depression just went hand in hand with that. I can't describe how alone I felt during those years. I'd never heard the term "panic attack" until I was 21 in the early 90's. I'd try to describe what I was going through to friends but I'd always get that look of......you're insane..........back at me and so I got very good at hiding my anxiety. People didn't have a clue that I had it. I also started drinking alcohol at 14 because it helped the anxiety and I had no other options considering that my doctor couldn't even help. Alcohol helped for awhile but then it turns on you because you feel more anxious the next day when the withdrawal kicks in on top of your anxiety.
My anxiety and depression got so bad that I actually planned a day to kill myself. When I was 21, I was agoraphobic unless I was drunk, and depressed out of my mind about it. It was just getting worse and worse so I'd had enough and just thought to end it. My stepfather had guns for hunting so I was ready to just put a bullet through my head. I remember the day before, I said out loud.........."God, if you're out there, do something now because I'm out of time here." I didn't actually think anything would happen but thought I'd try anyway. The next day which would have been my last, my mom calls me up to help her go grocery shopping. She hurt her hand and couldn't carry anything so I went with her. I couldn't even stay in the store for too long because you always feel like every eye is on you when you have bad anxiety so I left and sat on a bench outside the store. It was in a mall. I sat watching people walk by and they all seemed so normal. I just kept thinking that I'll never know what that's like and had to keep my head down because it was just depressing the crap out of me. When I looked up, I noticed that I was sitting in front of a book store and there was a book in the window on sale called Hope And Help For Your Nerves by Dr. Claire Weekes. That sounded like exactly what I needed and so I bought the book. I got home that day and read it with the gun beside me. I can honestly say that that book saved my life and I'd recommend it, or anything by Dr. Claire Weekes, for anyone suffering from anxiety. Until I read that book, I'd had zero coping skills with anxiety other than............chug alcohol quickly, sober up, repeat.
I've had everything that anxiety can through at you. The heart palpitations, panic, feeling like you're in a dream, shaking, dizziness, going days without sleep, lump in the throat, shaking voice and all the other "fun" stuff. The depression that went along with it was exactly what sucka mentioned earlier in this thread. When you get to that hopeless level, it's really hard to get out of it. I haven't had a panic attack in over 10 years but still have lingering anxiety. What's frustrating with it all is I can go months without anxiety and then have a bad episode with it and it feels like I'm right back where I started but if you don't dwell on setbacks, it makes things a little easier.
Anyway, I really wanted to post this to maybe make someone else feel less alone and to mention the Claire Weekes book in case anyone who's suffering had never heard of it.
There's also a free progam out there that works well too. It's free but I think they take a $10 donation if you want a few extra downloads. I have nothing to do with the place and just wanted to mention it and I'm providing the link to it for anyone who might be interested.........
http://www.selftherapy.org/
Everybody's different and different things work for different people. There's very expensive anxiety programs out there which I think are a total rip off with price but have some good information in them as well. I mean one of them is I think 13 cd's and a booklet and they charge over $400.00 for it. Where the hell do they get their prices from? Did they hire Lady Ga Ga to narrate the thing? You can always find those programs for free the same way you might find a cd for free on the internet but you didn't hear that from me.
I think the main thing with getting over anxiety is to learn how to keep your mind calm because the rest follows. That's what drugs do for you anyway. They calm your mind so you body goes along with it.
Anyway, I apologize for how long this is and wish the best of luck to anyone who's going through anxiety and depression because I know the pit of despair that it can throw you into.