About Phobia

A phobia is an intense fear of something that, in reality, poses little or no actual danger. Common phobias and fears include closed-in places, heights, highway driving, flying insects, snakes, and needles. However, we can develop phobias of virtually anything. Most phobias develop in childhood, but they can also develop in adults.

If you have a phobia, you probably realize that your fear is unreasonable, yet you still can’t control your feelings. Just thinking about the thing you fear may make you anxious. And when you’re actually exposed to your phobia, the terror is automatic and overwhelming.

The experience is so nerve-wracking that you may go to great lengths to avoid it – inconveniencing yourself or even changing your lifestyle. If you have claustrophobia, for example, you might turn down a lucrative job offer if you have to ride the elevator to get to the office. If you have a fear of heights, you might drive an extra twenty miles in order to avoid a tall bridge.

Types

1. Arachnophobia – Fear of spiders
2. Social phobia – Fear of social situations
3. Aerophobia – Fear of flying
4. Agoraphobia – Fear of inescapable situations
5. Claustrophobia – Fear of confined spaces
6. Emetophobia – Fear of vomit
7. Carcinophobia – Fear of cancer
8. Rontophobia – Fear of thunderstorms
9. Necrophobia – Fear of death
10. Acrophobia – Fear of heights

Click Here for Full List of All Types of Phobias

Causes

# Genes – some of us seem to be born more anxious than others. Research suggests these problems can be inherited through our genes. But even someone who doesn’t naturally worry can, under enough pressure, become uncomfortably anxious.

# Circumstances – sometimes it’s obvious what is making you anxious. When the problem disappears, so does the anxiety. However, some extreme situations are so threatening that the anxiety goes on long after the event. You can feel nervous and anxious for months or years, even if you were physically unharmed. This is called post-traumatic stress disorder.

# Drugs – recreational drugs like amphetamines, LSD or ecstasy can all make you anxious – for some people, the caffeine in coffee is enough.

# Life experience – bad experiences in the past or big life-changes such as pregnancy, changing job, becoming unemployed or moving house.

Symptoms

Anxiety symptoms

* Feeling worried all the time
* Tiredness
* Irritability
* Unable to sleep
* Difficulty concentrating
* Racing heartbeat
* Sweating
* Muscle tension and pains
* Shaking
* Breathing heavily
* Feeling dizzy or faint
* Indigestion or diarrhoea

If you are anxious already, the physical symptoms can make you worry they are signs of a serious illness. This can make you even more anxious.

Panic symptoms

* Sudden and overwhelming fear and sense of loss of control
* Breathing quickly
* Increased pounding heartbeat
* Sweating
* With a bad panic attack, you may feel that you are going to die

Phobic symptoms

* A phobia is strong feeling of anxiety in situations that frighten you. For example, if you have a phobia of dogs, you feel anxious when there are dogs around, but feel fine at other times.
* You tend to avoid the situations that make you anxious – but this makes the phobia worse as time goes on.
* Your life gets taken over by the things you have to do to avoid such situations.
* You realise that there is no real danger and may even feel silly about your phobia, but still can’t control it.

Anxiety and panic are often accompanied by feelings of depression, losing your appetite, or seeing the future as bleak and hopeless.

Treatments

Self-help

* You can learn relaxation techniques through groups or professionals or teach yourself with books, CDs and DVDs. Regular practice will help you to relax when you need to most.
* Self-help leaflets and books based on cognitive therapy.
* You may not want to talk to family members about your phobia or feelings of anxiety – but it can help. Try a friend or relative you trust and respect, and who is a good listener. They may have had the same problem themselves, or know someone else who has.
* It can be easier to talk to people with similar problems in a group. They understand what you are going through and may be able to suggest ways of coping. These groups may focus on anxieties and phobias, or on other problems. These include women’s groups, bereaved parents groups, survivors of abuse groups.

Psychotherapies are talking treatments which can help you understand and control your anxieties. They can happen in groups or individually, for several weeks or months. It’s generally a form of cognitive behavioural therapy.

Medication

* Tranquillisers (valium-type medicines, like most sleeping tablets) are very effective, but should only be taken for a short period of time as they can be addictive.
* Antidepressants work well but can take two to four weeks to work. Side-effects include nausea, drowsiness, dizziness, dry mouth and constipation.
* Beta blockers are usually used to treat high blood pressure but can be used, in low doses, to control the physical shaking of anxiety.