[QUOTE 3880658, member: 76"]Lots of people with anxiety have a tendency to catastrophise situations, get some counselling it will really help.
As for fear, personally I think you can only defeat fear by experience and training. I watched the programme, it's a rehash of SAS-Are you tough enough. The SEALS are right though, get used to what scares you and it won't scare you anymore. Simple.[/QUOTE]
When I had sleeping breathing problems stress levels correspondingly rose, much like my youth when I had same.
I could only attribute exercise in the period when things were more level,then attaining very good mindfulness too.
It turned out that I have an inflammatory react to standard bacteria in the house(supposedly its normal to have 9000 varieties in the home). Controlling that(mainly via the humidity level), I'm breathing again and back to being more level headed.
Being the scientific type, I'm now 100% certain that humans often put words/thoughts to stress, when in fact it is bacterial invasion/makeup. Its interesting in that logically, many therapies will thus only succeed in transfering those thoughts onto something else. Or when they 100% work, it is some environmental change(eg house move) that really did it, the thought being just remnants of our autonomous nature.
Needs must, if I had not felt close to death, I doubt I would have come up with my 100% proof.
It also leaves me curious, how much does the millions of bacteria come into play for abnormal stress disorders,
most of the stuff out there in the psychiatry world based on a belief system?
There is little in the NHS for the cause(doctors just administer the system, a dodgy one at times), instead they seem to rely on long term sedation via drugs. Sometimes exercise is a stress prescription, this obviously creating a robustness and/or removal from the causal area.