I have anxiety.
I think I always knew this – on some level – in the background, but this year saw it reached a certain level that compelled me to seek professional help. (And holy bejesus, am I glad I did.)
Opposed to panic attacks or episodes, my anxiety manifests in an overwhelming sense of dread. I work myself into a state where I catastrophise everything; the strange man on the tram becomes so much more than an eccentric dude – when I’m having a bad day he’s suddenly an immediate threat who I should be fearful of.
On my worst days, I can’t walk in a straight line down the street. I spend it turning in circles, checking behind my shoulder constantly, just in case someone dangerous is lurking. Then there are the vivid, sweat-inducing night terrors, which not only ruin my night’s sleep – but tend to ruin the day ahead, too.
Blergh, so much doom and gloom. This story gets sunnier, I promise.
My anxiety almost exclusively stems from a traumatic event when I was 19. And while my bad days are now mere blots on my year – far outweighed by my sunny, anxiety-free days – they’re still there. Peppered across my calendar. Particularly in fear-ridden weeks like the one we’ve just had.
Actually, my worst weeks with anxiety this year have been those punctuated by horrifying news stories: In April, May and June it was terrorism. This week it was the mass shooting in Las Vegas.
Hearing about these awful things ignites a feeling inside me that I’m in immediate danger. I’m far from being the only one who feels that way, too. Scientists have found that when we read or listen to a particularly troubling news story, it spurs a massive release of cortisol, ultimately leaving our body in a state of chronic stress.
Top Comments
Interesting and makes so much sense!
But I feel there needs to be a balance of not reading things that negatively impact you versus being ignorant of what is going around you. I have a friend who deliberately doesn't read any bad news of any kind - she doesn't want to feed into the general fear of house prices, terrorism, climate change, you name it. At the same time she knows so very little of what goes on in the world and has made some uneducated and bad decisions around this.
Would be curious to know what the psychologists thinks about this.
Thanks for sharing Michelle. I have anxiety too, and I’ve never stopped to think that my love of crime tv series, podcasts and depressing news stories could be making it worse. I feel like shit after listening, watching and reading the stuff, but I can’t stay away. I feel the need to understand how and why these horrible people do these horrible things, and it eats at my soul.
Starting today, I’m going to unpin that Apple News widget, unfollow these news stations on Facebook, and go cold turkey on crime fact and crime drama series. By cleaning up my media intake, maybe I’ll dread life less!