Archive for May, 2009
Saturday, May 30th, 2009 at
2:12 pm
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Why do I have a phobia of walking past people ?
Friday, May 29th, 2009 at
3:29 pm
Kreator – Phobia (Live)
Friday, May 29th, 2009 at
11:03 am
PHXxX asked:
Hell yeah! Best metal-band in the whole world! \m/ I traveled all the way to Sweden on my own to see them live in Gothenburg 28/2 – 2009!
But anyway… Kreator playing “Phobia” live, recorded during their tour in 2001-2002 From the DVD “Live Kreation – Revisioned Glory” (2003)
Phobias: The Terror Within
Friday, May 29th, 2009 at
9:21 am
Phobias are surprisingly easy to acquire and surprisingly easy to lose. And whilst they may seem strange or bizarre, they are quite common and easily explained.
WHAT IT FEELS LIKE TO HAVE A PHOBIA
Most people with a phobia are normal, happy, intelligent and well-balanced.
They have just got this phobia, this thing they feel powerless to do anything to change. So it’s very frustrating because a part of them (the rational thinking part) knows that it doesn’t make sense, that they are okay and probably quite safe with that thing or in that situation. But they nevertheless find that when they are exposed to that thing or situation, or even just thinking about it, another part of them (the irrational unconscious part) drives out rational thought and anxiety and panic floods in.
Have a can read through the science of phobias to see exactly how and why this happens.
Phobias will often start to affect self-confidence and self-esteem. Sufferers feel they are not understood, that others think they are stupid. And it can make them feel embarrassed and stupid. Like a slur on their sanity.
But phobias are a very human thing. It’s to do with the way we are wired. And they rarely go any deeper than that: they are usually just a simple pattern-matching process rather than some dark Freudian psychosexual thing from childhood.
HOW PHOBIAS BEGIN
There are several ways to get a phobia. We may:
Learn it as a child from a parent (typically our mother) because we model their behaviour and thinking styles so strongly.
Suffer a traumatic incident or very emotionally upsetting event.
Learn it vicariously by being traumatized by someone else’s trauma. For example, if a survivor of traffic accident recounts their ordeal very vividly, a listener with a very powerful imagination may develop a phobia.
Build it up slowly in our minds. Sometimes there is no specific event that sets up a phobia. Instead, there’s a slow build-up of ideas reinforced by a series of small relatively minor incidents. Driving phobia and fear of flying can be slow-builds with something mild (like being stuck in a traffic jam or a bumpy flight) which normally would be okay but at the time the individual was perhaps a little more stressed that normal (background stress levels raised by other things like relationships or work) and this tipped them into a mild panic attack. This builds into a phobia.
At the start, it may take some time for people to recognise that they have a phobia. But then the panic starts to occur more frequently and consistently and a pattern emerges.
It’s important to understand that anybody can get a phobia.
HOW PHOBIAS CONTINUE
The response that drives our phobias is our most instinctive survival response – the ancient “fight or flight” response. So when we are in danger we either prepare to stand and fight or to run away.
Sometimes the unconscious mind – which is responsible for survival – overdoes it and gets an idea that a particular things or situation is life-threatening and attaches the fight or flight response to it.
So it attaches feelings of discomfort, anxiety or terror to that object or situation to make the individual avoid it in future, thus keeping them “safe”. And it is usually very successful at doing this so the phobic quickly finds themselves engaged in all kinds of avoidance behaviours.
So the phobic response is simply a protection mechanism that got glued to the wrong kind of thing – something that in reality may not be life-threatening at all. In fact, with another part of their mind – the conscious mind – the phobic will have always known this. But that hasn’t helped because this isn’t about being logical and rational – if it was then no-one would have a phobia.
No, this is about the irrational, illogical and creative unconscious mind which is a great virtual reality simulator – creating monsters in the mind which, of course, do not exist in the real world. Imagining things beyond the realm of probability, possibility or likelihood even.
When the protection mechanism gets glued to the phobic trigger, the unconscious mind creates a very strong pattern around that thing. And after that, whenever it recognizes a match to that thing – and it doesn’t have to be a precise match – it will trigger those same feelings of anxiety and panic. This is why phobia tend to spread out and generalize – particularly agoraphobia and claustrophobia – as more a more situations are approximately matched, creating more and more reference templates for “life-threatening ” situations. And every time panic occurs it just reinforces the idea the mind has got that this is “dangerous” or “life-threatening”. This is why phobias get naturally worse over time rather than better.
SAFETY & AVOIDANCE STRATEGIES
Safety and avoidance behaviours are used by the sufferer to reduce the “threat” and to manage and conceal their distress and embarrassment.
As more and more situations are avoided, the sufferer’s world starts to shrink. Resources, time and energy are used in planning and avoiding the particular things or situations around their phobia. Partners and friends may have to be heavily relied upon. Excuses are made to avoid certain activities. Situations and people may be manipulated. Jobs, invitations and trips may be turned down. And there is a loss of freedom and independence as the comfort zone shrinks.
Eventually these “solutions” become part of the problem: the avoidance and control behaviours become the handicap on living. Professional help is often sought as this point.
HOW PHOBIAS ARE CURED: THE FAST PHOBIA CURE
The key to curing phobias is to work with, rather than against the unconscious part of the mind that created the phobia, allowing it to re-evaluate these objects or situations as non-life threatening. And it can be given this opportunity by engaging the very same imagination and creativity that it used to create the phobia in the first place. A bit like a Sumo wrestler using his opponent’s own weight to overcome him.
This is what a remarkable treatment called the Fast Phobia Cure does: it allows the mind to review the trigger object or situation from a position of calm detachment so that the thinking mind can go to work on these things and re-evaluate them as non-threatening. This de-conditions the pattern that drove the phobia. So it won’t trigger again. The phobia won’t work anymore. The cause – the pattern – is gone. And without the cause there are no symptoms.
By: Guy Baglow
About the Author:
WHAT IT FEELS LIKE TO HAVE A PHOBIA
Most people with a phobia are normal, happy, intelligent and well-balanced.
They have just got this phobia, this thing they feel powerless to do anything to change. So it’s very frustrating because a part of them (the rational thinking part) knows that it doesn’t make sense, that they are okay and probably quite safe with that thing or in that situation. But they nevertheless find that when they are exposed to that thing or situation, or even just thinking about it, another part of them (the irrational unconscious part) drives out rational thought and anxiety and panic floods in.
Have a can read through the science of phobias to see exactly how and why this happens.
Phobias will often start to affect self-confidence and self-esteem. Sufferers feel they are not understood, that others think they are stupid. And it can make them feel embarrassed and stupid. Like a slur on their sanity.
But phobias are a very human thing. It’s to do with the way we are wired. And they rarely go any deeper than that: they are usually just a simple pattern-matching process rather than some dark Freudian psychosexual thing from childhood.
HOW PHOBIAS BEGIN
There are several ways to get a phobia. We may:
Learn it as a child from a parent (typically our mother) because we model their behaviour and thinking styles so strongly.
Suffer a traumatic incident or very emotionally upsetting event.
Learn it vicariously by being traumatized by someone else’s trauma. For example, if a survivor of traffic accident recounts their ordeal very vividly, a listener with a very powerful imagination may develop a phobia.
Build it up slowly in our minds. Sometimes there is no specific event that sets up a phobia. Instead, there’s a slow build-up of ideas reinforced by a series of small relatively minor incidents. Driving phobia and fear of flying can be slow-builds with something mild (like being stuck in a traffic jam or a bumpy flight) which normally would be okay but at the time the individual was perhaps a little more stressed that normal (background stress levels raised by other things like relationships or work) and this tipped them into a mild panic attack. This builds into a phobia.
At the start, it may take some time for people to recognise that they have a phobia. But then the panic starts to occur more frequently and consistently and a pattern emerges.
It’s important to understand that anybody can get a phobia.
HOW PHOBIAS CONTINUE
The response that drives our phobias is our most instinctive survival response – the ancient “fight or flight” response. So when we are in danger we either prepare to stand and fight or to run away.
Sometimes the unconscious mind – which is responsible for survival – overdoes it and gets an idea that a particular things or situation is life-threatening and attaches the fight or flight response to it.
So it attaches feelings of discomfort, anxiety or terror to that object or situation to make the individual avoid it in future, thus keeping them “safe”. And it is usually very successful at doing this so the phobic quickly finds themselves engaged in all kinds of avoidance behaviours.
So the phobic response is simply a protection mechanism that got glued to the wrong kind of thing – something that in reality may not be life-threatening at all. In fact, with another part of their mind – the conscious mind – the phobic will have always known this. But that hasn’t helped because this isn’t about being logical and rational – if it was then no-one would have a phobia.
No, this is about the irrational, illogical and creative unconscious mind which is a great virtual reality simulator – creating monsters in the mind which, of course, do not exist in the real world. Imagining things beyond the realm of probability, possibility or likelihood even.
When the protection mechanism gets glued to the phobic trigger, the unconscious mind creates a very strong pattern around that thing. And after that, whenever it recognizes a match to that thing – and it doesn’t have to be a precise match – it will trigger those same feelings of anxiety and panic. This is why phobia tend to spread out and generalize – particularly agoraphobia and claustrophobia – as more a more situations are approximately matched, creating more and more reference templates for “life-threatening ” situations. And every time panic occurs it just reinforces the idea the mind has got that this is “dangerous” or “life-threatening”. This is why phobias get naturally worse over time rather than better.
SAFETY & AVOIDANCE STRATEGIES
Safety and avoidance behaviours are used by the sufferer to reduce the “threat” and to manage and conceal their distress and embarrassment.
As more and more situations are avoided, the sufferer’s world starts to shrink. Resources, time and energy are used in planning and avoiding the particular things or situations around their phobia. Partners and friends may have to be heavily relied upon. Excuses are made to avoid certain activities. Situations and people may be manipulated. Jobs, invitations and trips may be turned down. And there is a loss of freedom and independence as the comfort zone shrinks.
Eventually these “solutions” become part of the problem: the avoidance and control behaviours become the handicap on living. Professional help is often sought as this point.
HOW PHOBIAS ARE CURED: THE FAST PHOBIA CURE
The key to curing phobias is to work with, rather than against the unconscious part of the mind that created the phobia, allowing it to re-evaluate these objects or situations as non-life threatening. And it can be given this opportunity by engaging the very same imagination and creativity that it used to create the phobia in the first place. A bit like a Sumo wrestler using his opponent’s own weight to overcome him.
This is what a remarkable treatment called the Fast Phobia Cure does: it allows the mind to review the trigger object or situation from a position of calm detachment so that the thinking mind can go to work on these things and re-evaluate them as non-threatening. This de-conditions the pattern that drove the phobia. So it won’t trigger again. The phobia won’t work anymore. The cause – the pattern – is gone. And without the cause there are no symptoms.
By: Guy Baglow
About the Author:
Guy Baglow is a leading phobia specialist and founder of the mindspa phobia clinic ( www.phobiaclinic.co.uk ), the UK’s leading specialist private phobia clinic in Harley Street – a world centre of healthcare excellence in London. An online clinic ( www.phobiaclinic.net ) has downloadable treatments including the Fast Phobia Cure.
How do I overcome my phobia of taking tests?
Friday, May 29th, 2009 at
3:06 am
Woman with chicken phobia , scared of chicekn !
Thursday, May 28th, 2009 at
1:53 pm
mzaher asked:
A woman scared, afraid, terrified of chicken. funny as hell. it’s REAL !
Any ideas on what to do about a dog with storm phobia?
Thursday, May 28th, 2009 at
7:23 am
eandmtravis asked:
I have a seven year old beagle, Simon. He is terrified of thunderstorms and I cannot calm him down. He pants, paces, drools, shakes, and whines. We keep him in the front part of the house when it storms, and he constantly scratches on the door and cries, it keeps us up all night. I’ve seen online some sort of cape or jacket for dogs to calm them down, and have also seen different medications do either of these work? HELP!!!!
I have a seven year old beagle, Simon. He is terrified of thunderstorms and I cannot calm him down. He pants, paces, drools, shakes, and whines. We keep him in the front part of the house when it storms, and he constantly scratches on the door and cries, it keeps us up all night. I’ve seen online some sort of cape or jacket for dogs to calm them down, and have also seen different medications do either of these work? HELP!!!!
What’s the phobia name for the fear of losing someone close?
Wednesday, May 27th, 2009 at
10:11 pm
Is there a name for a phobia of speaking to adults?
Wednesday, May 27th, 2009 at
9:41 pm
Cure Your Phobias
Wednesday, May 27th, 2009 at
8:42 am
Phobias are clear according to the American Psychiatric Association, as an irrational and undue horror of a focus or site. Phobias mostly grow behind childhood, adolescence, or early adult life in reaction to a frightening incident or location.
Phobias are the most customary mental disorder in the United States. Far more women than men are unnatural by phobias. Phobias involve people of all ages, from all walks of life, and in every part of the world. Phobias can sincerely effect a role’s life.
Types of Phobias
Phobias belong with a large group of mental harms known as angst disorders that enter fixated-compulsive disorder (OCD), panic disorder, and location-upsetting stress disorder. Social horror and situational phobias, such as dread of heights or of blocked-in spaces, typically arrive by the mid-20s.
The causes of compound phobias, such as agoraphobia and public dread, are uncertain. Sometimes phobias run in families. Phobias are persistent, irrational fears of things or situations that persist even however the nightmare has no base in stream realism.
Symptoms of a phobia contain the following: Feelings of panic, dread, horror, or terror, brisk heartbeat, shortness of breath, trembling, and an overwhelming craving to escape the situation. Symptoms can last several hours, but usually greatest after 10 resume. Symptoms of Phobias can interfere with your ability to work, entertain, and go about a daily regular.
Therapy
One of the most successful is cognitive behavioral therapy which helps people with phobias face their fears, oppress their symptoms and in time accepting of suchlike was causing their farthest concern. Therapy for fear disorders regularly involves medication or definite forms of psychotherapy. Supportive therapy, such as group therapy, or pair or family therapy, and to educate significant others about the disorder is also effective.
Besides conventional medicine, alternative treatments such as relaxation and serious breathing techniques as well as herbal and homeopathic remedies may be very helpful along with psychotherapy.
Conclusion
Phobias are among the most treatable mental fitness harms. Depending on the severity of the provision and the style of phobia, most correctly treated patients can go onto lead routine lives. According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, only about 10 percent of reported luggage become lifelong phobias. In verity, most people who obtain dealing of phobias completely overcome their fears for life.
The good newscast is that with a modest mindset in place and the right tools to face life’s daily challenges, facing our anxiety phobias and fears can get much easier over time.
By: Joan Shine
About the Author:
Phobias are the most customary mental disorder in the United States. Far more women than men are unnatural by phobias. Phobias involve people of all ages, from all walks of life, and in every part of the world. Phobias can sincerely effect a role’s life.
Types of Phobias
Phobias belong with a large group of mental harms known as angst disorders that enter fixated-compulsive disorder (OCD), panic disorder, and location-upsetting stress disorder. Social horror and situational phobias, such as dread of heights or of blocked-in spaces, typically arrive by the mid-20s.
The causes of compound phobias, such as agoraphobia and public dread, are uncertain. Sometimes phobias run in families. Phobias are persistent, irrational fears of things or situations that persist even however the nightmare has no base in stream realism.
Symptoms of a phobia contain the following: Feelings of panic, dread, horror, or terror, brisk heartbeat, shortness of breath, trembling, and an overwhelming craving to escape the situation. Symptoms can last several hours, but usually greatest after 10 resume. Symptoms of Phobias can interfere with your ability to work, entertain, and go about a daily regular.
Therapy
One of the most successful is cognitive behavioral therapy which helps people with phobias face their fears, oppress their symptoms and in time accepting of suchlike was causing their farthest concern. Therapy for fear disorders regularly involves medication or definite forms of psychotherapy. Supportive therapy, such as group therapy, or pair or family therapy, and to educate significant others about the disorder is also effective.
Besides conventional medicine, alternative treatments such as relaxation and serious breathing techniques as well as herbal and homeopathic remedies may be very helpful along with psychotherapy.
Conclusion
Phobias are among the most treatable mental fitness harms. Depending on the severity of the provision and the style of phobia, most correctly treated patients can go onto lead routine lives. According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, only about 10 percent of reported luggage become lifelong phobias. In verity, most people who obtain dealing of phobias completely overcome their fears for life.
The good newscast is that with a modest mindset in place and the right tools to face life’s daily challenges, facing our anxiety phobias and fears can get much easier over time.
By: Joan Shine
About the Author:
Find tips about clown phobia and needle phobia at the Phobia List website.












