What is an anxiety disorder?
Occasional feelings of anxiousness are normal during stressful times. For people with anxiety disorders, however, this worry or fear doesn’t go away and symptoms intensify and interfere with your daily life. Not all anxiety disorders are the same. In fact, there are a few different types of anxiety disorders including generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, and phobia-related disorders, according to the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). Read on for the signs and symptoms of anxiety disorders.
Your worrying is no longer โhelpfulโ at all
A certain amount of worry helps people get through their dayโafter all, itโs that little bit of pressure you feel that motivates you to complete tasks and to keep your life in order. However, too much worry could be one of the symptoms of anxiety disorder, the most common mental illness in the United States, according to the NIMH. โWorrying enough to heighten your awareness that you have a test and that it requires studying, thatโs good, and thatโs adaptive,โ says Aaron Fisher, PhD, assistant professor of clinical psychology at the University of California, Berkeley. โIf, though, your worry is so great that it blows right past preparation and actually freezes you in your tracks and you donโt study because youโre so worried that you feel frozen or stuck, thatโs problematic.โ Think about whether your anxiety is helping or hurting you. If itโs doing more harm than good, it might be a sign that you could be living a better life without as much of it. Consider trying these trusted home remedies for natural anxiety relief.
Youโve always been a worrier, but you just experienced a major life transition
While anxiety disorders can surface at any age, many researchers track specific traits that patients display throughout life, even at a young age. โAnxiety disorders tend to start actually quite young, and typically theyโre observable in young children and adolescents. People who have generalized anxiety disorder will describe themselves as always having been a worrier,โ says Danielle Keenan-Miller, PhD, director of the psychology clinic at the University of California, Los Angeles. โFor other people, they cope quite well and never experience significant anxiety until there are major life transitions for them or other kinds of stressors.โ Many will begin experiencing an abnormal amount of symptoms of anxiety after big life events like taking a new job, having a child, becoming a single parent, or moving.
You recently lived through a traumatic event
While some psychologists donโt categorize post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as an anxiety disorder, experiencing an especially negative or frightening experience can have a significant impact on someoneโs anxiety levels. โEven if itโs not to the level [of PTSD], people can also develop new worries after a traumatic life event,โ says Keenan-Miller. โSome people, if they have a car accident, will become quite worried about driving.โ Find out the 7 silent signs of high-functioning anxiety.
Youโve had one or more panic attacks
Fisher emphasizes that one panic attack does not necessarily indicate symptoms of anxiety disorder, as panic attacks are a normal, evolutionary response to extreme fear. โA lot of people have panic attacks, way more people than have panic disorder,โ says Fisher. โItโs important to remember what a panic attack is: Itโs a full application of your fight-or-flight response. That is an evolutionarily adaptive function.โ When the accelerated heart rate, pain, and extreme fear that accompany a panic attack justify treatment is when someone begins experiencing these panic attack symptoms without understandable reason, or they fear the panic attacks themselves. For that reason, one of the most effective psychological treatments for panic disorder is exposure therapy, which entails exposing oneself to panic attacks and their triggers enough to work through fears directly.
You shape your life around your fears
According to Ann Kring, PhD, a professor of clinical psychology at UC Berkeley, many people with anxiety disorders operate well without realizing they have them because they avoid facing what worries or scares them. โFor some people, theyโre living their lives, and maybe theyโre not going outside or theyโre avoiding certain situations but theyโre doing just fine,โ says Kring. โIt doesnโt necessarily feel like itโs interfering with their lives until all of a sudden something pops up and theyโre invited to do something and they decide not to do it.โ When your anxiety starts detracting from your ability or willingness to live your life fully, treatment might enable you to live a richer life.
Your anxiety keeps you from social functions youโd otherwise want to attend
Getting nervous in front of a crowd is very normal, and so is stage fright before a presentation or speech. But when simply being around other people becomes difficult or nerve-wracking, it might be a sign of social anxiety. โIf you find that every time you have to be around other people your heart rate is accelerating and you feel kind of flushed and nauseous or something like that, then thatโs a different thing,โ says Fisher. โYouโre getting to a different level or consistency of how anxious youโre getting thatโs not necessarily connected to a specific event or a specific threat.โ Here’s how joining a social anxiety support group can help.
You experience physical symptoms, too
Many sufferers of anxiety disorders, especially those with generalized anxiety disorder, will visit the doctor wondering about physical pains like headaches, stomachaches, and back pain, explains UCLA professor of clinical psychology Carrie Bearden, PhD. โPeople are confused, they keep going to the doctors, they donโt know whatโs wrong,โ says Bearden. โIf you have this constant worry as well as these physical symptoms, then we would start to think that itโs an anxiety disorder and that the physical symptoms are related to that.โ Physical symptoms of anxiety as simple as constant hunger and bad posture can be signs you’re headed for an emotional breakdown. Doctors typically evaluate these physical symptoms to see if there is another medical cause before anxiety. Find out if anxiety causes high blood pressure.
You often have trouble sleeping
Many of us have experienced at least one sleepless night thanks to anxiety about something in our lives, but when insomnia starts to become a regular occurrence, itโs unhealthy. โIf you donโt sleep a lot the night before your first marathon, thatโs probably fine,โ says Keenan-Miller. โBut if you donโt sleep for weeks because youโre worried about an upcoming race, even if what youโre thinking about is a real stressor, you probably donโt want that to go on for a long time. Itโs disruptive to peopleโs life functioning.โ Find out the 9 things everyone needs to know about anxiety.
Your anxiety is causing you significant distress
Psychological disorders all occur along a โcontinuum of human experience,โ says Fisher, meaning that all of us experience, and are meant to experience, some of these symptoms of anxiety every once in a while. The most important deciding factor in whether or not your anxiety has become a disorder worth treating is whether itโs causing you significant distress, or impairing you from being able to live your life. โI would start encouraging people to notice whether theyโre really stressed and/or do they have a noticeable impairment,โ says Fisher. โAre they missing classes, are they missing days of work, are they avoiding social functions that they might otherwise want to go to, are they not going to see the movie theyโre really excited about?โ If the answer to these questions is yes, and youโd like some help with your anxiety, do not hesitate to contact a psychologist in your area to start talking about it. You can also find a therapist near you at the website for the Anxiety and Depression Association of America. Next, find out the 14 things only people living with anxietyย will understand.
- National Institute of Mental Health: "Anxiety disorders"
- Aaron Fisher, PhD, assistant professor of clinical psychology at the University of California, Berkeley
- Danielle Keenan-Miller, PhD, director of the psychology clinic at the University of California, Los Angeles
- Ann Kring, PhD, a professor of clinical psychology at UC Berkeley
- Carrie Bearden, PhD,ย UCLA professor of clinical psychology