anything goes with emma chamberlain - how i deal with dissociating and anxiety [video]

Episode Date: March 26, 2023

[video available on Spotify] today i wanted to talk about something super fun, super lighthearted, super hashtag good vibes. that's just the mood I'm in today. so today i wanted to talk about my anxie...ty. yayyyyyyy. i wanted to talk about it because it's one of the most challenging things i deal with on a daily basis. i’ve struggled with a lot of different mental health struggles. anxiety is definitely not the only one. but i would say anxiety has been the most challenging overall, and it just never really seems to go away for me. it's something that i'm constantly battling, and so i just wanted to talk about my experience and how i deal with it. and that's what's on the agenda. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, today I wanted to talk about something super fun, something super fun, something super lighthearted, something super good vibes, hashtag good vibes. I don't know, that's just the moot I'm in today. So today I wanted to talk about my anxiety. Yay! Yay! I wanted to talk about it because it's one of the most challenging things I deal with on a daily basis. I struggled with a lot of different mental health struggles, okay? Anxiety is definitely not the only one, but I would say anxiety has been the most challenging overall, and it just never really seems to go away for me. It's something that I'm constantly battling. And so I just wanted to talk about it today. Talk about my experience, talk about how I deal with it,
Starting point is 00:00:54 and that's what's on the agenda. I would say my anxiety started at birth. I don't think a day has gone by in my life when I haven't think a day has gone by in my life when I haven't been anxious. And that's very different than the other mental health struggles I've had because my struggle with, say, depression came on when I was in high school, etc.
Starting point is 00:01:19 Like, everything else I've dealt with has kind of showed up later in life whereas my anxiety has been with me since day one. And I would say the way that it showed itself when I was a kid was in my emotional attachment to my parents. And then when I wasn't around my parents, stuffed animals.
Starting point is 00:01:41 I grew up an only child, and I was very attached to my parents. They have always been my world. They've always been my best friends. They've always been my only place of comfort. That is my parents to me. And I'm so grateful for that because I know that that is not necessarily a super common experience. And I've just always been very
Starting point is 00:02:07 dependent on them for better or for worse. I don't know if that's necessarily a good thing. And when I was a child, I had a really hard time separating with them at any point. So when I would have to go to preschool or I would have to go to a play date with my friends, I would break down. And so I began coping with that by replacing my parents with a stuffed animal. If I couldn't be with my parents, I'd be with a certain stuffed animal.
Starting point is 00:02:39 I started associating stuffed animals with my parents, usually because they would give me these stuffed animals, and then I would feel like there was a piece of them in these stuffed animals. So I had quite a few over the years. I had one named Biggie Big. This is probably the most iconic stuffed animal I had in my childhood.
Starting point is 00:03:01 It's even tattooed on my arm. If you're watching the video episode, you can see it's this tattooed on my arm. If you're watching the video episode, you can see it's this little bunny on my arm here. Biggie Big was like my best friend. Okay. When I was feeling scared, anxious, uncomfortable, I could take Biggie Big's ear and I could suck my thumb in rub Biggie Big's ear on my lip. How I figured out that this made me feel safe and comfortable and less anxious, I don't know, but it distracted me, it made me feel comfortable, and that was the coping mechanism I had for my anxiety as a child. But unfortunately, biggy big was a little bit too big, okay? He was like a foot tall, or maybe 10 inches tall.
Starting point is 00:03:50 And when I started going to school, preschool, I couldn't bring Biggie Bigg with me. So I had to find another stuffed animal. So I had a little tabby cat that I used to bring around with me. I also had a little teeny dog stuffed animal that I'd keep in my pocket, a tiny little dog. Like it was maybe the size of a clementine orange, you know, like pretty tiny. And I always had to have a little stuffed animal with me.
Starting point is 00:04:18 And if I didn't, I felt naked. I did not like feeling alone. I've always felt very alone in the world when I was not with my parents. I felt vulnerable. I felt scared. And it was torture for me. I was always the kid who didn't want to sleep over when everybody was having a sleep over. I was always the kid that had to leave, you know, like the birthday party early because they were anxious and wanted to go see their parents, that was always me. I remember one time I was at a park in my neighborhood and I fell into a river. There was like a river that ran next to the park and the little tiny dog stuffed animal
Starting point is 00:05:00 that I always kept in my pocket fell out into the river. Now, to add some significance to this little dog stuffed animal, his name is Mikey Mike. So if I refer to him as Mikey Mike, now you understand. Mikey Mike was given to me by my dad and every time I would miss him or feel scared or feel anxious, I'd reach into my pocket and I would hold on to Mikey Mike and I'd squeeze Mikey Mike and I would focus on squeezing Mikey Mike and eventually I would calm down. So Mikey Mike falling out of my pocket and starting to flow down the river made me lose my mind. I was freaking out. I was crying. My friend was trying to help me find it. Eventually we found Mikey Mike. Thank God. Okay. He's covered in dirt. He's disgusting. I didn't care. God, home, wash him off, put him back in my pocket. Mikey Mike was always in my pocket. It wasn't just like I enjoyed these stuffed animals because they were my little friends. It was my only
Starting point is 00:06:07 Because they were my little friends. It was my only sense of comfort at the time when my parents went around My emotional attachment to objects lasted until I was probably eight or nine years old Especially with biggie big my bunny my little bunny doll thing With the ear and I would suck my thumb and rub the ear on my lip Every day and Obviously got to an I got to a point where I couldn't do that in public, obviously. Like I was doing that, sucking my thumb with big, bigs ear until I was eight or nine years old.
Starting point is 00:06:37 Yes, it did get to a point where I was like, okay, I can't do that anymore in public. So it became something I just did at home. But I needed that to cope with how scared I was of everything. I didn't understand why I was so scared. Like I just constantly felt scared and uncomfortable. But eventually my anxiety kind of calmed down. You know, in middle school and high school, I definitely did have anxiety, but it was more social. I would get anxious that people didn't like me.
Starting point is 00:07:11 I would get anxious that I did something embarrassing. I was so focused on social interactions that my anxiety was mainly rooted in that, rather than having separation anxiety from my parents. But I would say this was a period of my life that I was actually doing pretty good with my anxiety. Middle school and high school, I was more depressed, but that's a story for another day. We're talking about anxiety today.
Starting point is 00:07:35 Now, my anxiety was pretty good for those teen years. The worst was yet to come. Looking back now, I still acknowledge that I struggled with it and I still empathize with myself then, but my God, it really only got worse. So I consider that time minor, anxiety now in comparison to what I deal with now. But I think the reason why I wasn't anxious was because I was so distracted. You know middle school and high school for me was a time of such growth.
Starting point is 00:08:21 That I didn't even have the mental space to be anxious almost. I was so focused on daily life in a way that almost gave me no room to have anxiety about things that are more existential. I was worried about the small, mundane little details of daily life. Oh, am I going to make it to school on time? Oh, am I going to have a date to homecoming? Oh, am I going to stay with my friends at lunch today? Or are they going to be being mean to me? Or, oh, do I want to hang out with that girl? She's kind of pissing me off recently.
Starting point is 00:08:58 Like, I think I need a break from her. Like, that was the type of shit I was thinking about. It's interesting that when I was a child, I was anxious about my parents and something happening to them. And that is like a far more existential anxiety than what I was experiencing in middle school or high school. It's interesting to me because it's like I almost experienced a less sophisticated form
Starting point is 00:09:21 of anxiety in middle school and high school, then I did as a very young child. It's almost like my very young mind was able to see the bigger picture. And then I lost sight of that in middle school and high school. It was only really anxious about surface level bullshit that didn't really matter. Whereas I would argue me having anxiety about my parents is incredibly rational. Me having anxiety about whether or not a boy likes me and it literally destroying me, you know, like that to me is stupid.
Starting point is 00:09:55 In much more normal, I would say too. Like that's an anxiety that everybody deals with. I wouldn't say that's necessarily a demonstration of actually having an issue with anxiety, right? But long story short, middle school and high school, I don't know, I don't think my anxiety was that bad. It was pretty normal, I would say. It wasn't excruciating, it wasn't ruining my life, it wasn't controlling me, it was a lot milderer and it was about a lot less serious topics than when I was a young child. Then I had a weird turn of events in my life and all of a sudden I start making videos on YouTube and I start gaining followers on Instagram and I start gaining followers on YouTube and I start gaining followers on Instagram and I start gaining followers on YouTube
Starting point is 00:10:47 And I start gaining followers on Twitter and all of a sudden I'm like, whoa, what the fuck? And then about a year after that, I have somewhat of a career on the internet. Now, this is when the anxiety starts to creep back in for the first time in a really big, really serious way. I think what retriggered my anxiety in a big way was the fact that all of a sudden, I was like incredibly accessible by whoever wanted to access me through the internet. I felt exposed to the world. Even though the entire world was not fucking watching my YouTube channel, because anyone could, if they wanted to, you feel exposed. And that sort of triggered some anxiety
Starting point is 00:11:34 for me. The fact that anyone could be out there watching me, somebody who's creepy, a fucking murderer, anyone, anyone out there could be watching me. And that started to freak me out. And then I had another wave of anxiety starting to feel like, wait a minute, I don't deserve this to have people watching me paying attention to me on the internet. I don't deserve this. And that started to give me anxiety.
Starting point is 00:12:01 Having all this imposter syndrome feeling like I don't deserve what I've built in a way. As my career on the internet grew more, I started to feel isolated because I started to realize that it was not as easy to make genuine friends now that I have maybe more to offer in the eyes of people and I need to be more careful and I'm much more prone to get taken advantage of. Now this made me very anxious because what I realized was is the only people who I know truly have my back are my parents. And this sort of reinvigorated this anxiety around my parents, something happening to them.
Starting point is 00:12:49 But I want to express properly how this anxiety was not just normal discomfort. You know, I would already be anxious sort of baseline. And then these sorts of things would just amp it up by 10,000. And that's what was so challenging about this time in my life when I was growing my career on the internet already with this sort of baseline of having anxiety. You know, it's like when a lot of anxiety and doing things happen to you and you already are just anxious baseline, it can become so overwhelming so fast because your resting position is being anxious
Starting point is 00:13:30 and then it's like you add on all this shit and it's like, oh my God, it's so much mentally to handle. So I started to become anxious about my parents again, realizing that they might be the only people I have who truly care about me for me as a human being and aren't trying to gain something from their relationship with me. I knew that they didn't, but I didn't know that about anyone else. And that was God awful.
Starting point is 00:14:01 And then in between all of those big moments where I had big explosions of anxiety due to me already being anxious and then something else happening on top of it, I was having these little struggles here and there that were less explosive maybe, but still challenging. And I think the way I coped with my worsened anxiety after middle school and high school was through a few things. You know, I'm looking back at the last few years at how I've coped with my anxiety. And I've kind of tried everything. You know, there was a period of time when I spent all my time with people. You know, I was constantly around friends, constantly around people, never alone,
Starting point is 00:14:49 never giving myself a moment to sort of be alone in my anxious thoughts. I've also dealt with it through being super emotionally invested in romantic relationships I've been in in like I can remember one in particular many years back where I Was just so focused on the relationship because it was a distraction for me. It was like a drug I also would say that there's been times when I sort of drink alcohol I Mean, I'm very grateful for this. I don't think I've ever abused alcohol
Starting point is 00:15:27 or any substance for that matter to help with my anxiety. But I definitely have had phases of my life when I've been drinking a lot, just like on a frequent basis to sort of get the edge off. But what I learned from that was that alcohol makes anxiety far worse. You wake up the next morning after drinking and you have worse anxiety than you had the day before, you know, times 10. So I learned that fast. But those were some of my coping mechanisms, although I would say none of them worked. None of them worked. And so my anxiety continued to get worse and worse and worse and worse. And I would say the past year has been one of the hardest
Starting point is 00:16:14 years for me with my anxiety thus far. So now that you sort of have my anxiety history, now let's jump to today. In order to jump to today, I need to tell you a story. And I've actually told this story before. So if you've heard it before, just relax and I'll make it quick. So I have always wished that I could smoke weed. Like I've always wanted to smoke weed because everybody's like, Emma, like you're so anxious all this time. If you could just smoke weed, everything would be better. Like you need to smoke weed.
Starting point is 00:16:48 It's so helpful. And I've always been like, okay, I will, sure, like I will do anything. Sure. And I've tried smoking weed a few times. I have an entire episode about weed. So if you want to go check that out, go ahead. But I've tried a few times and it's been awful pretty much every time. The first time I smoked a dab pan, okay, lost it. How to panic attack, freaked out, whatever.
Starting point is 00:17:16 Smoked a joint once, one little teeny little, of the joint, super cool, super lit, how to total freak out, Off the joint, super cool, super lit, had a total freak out, thought I was time traveling. Like I'm not kidding, I have a terrible reaction to weed. And then there's been a few other times too. Every time I tried it, absolute chaos. Total panic attack, total freak out, not good. Okay, and so I just kind of decided that weed was not for me.
Starting point is 00:17:44 But then I got introduced to these weed gummies, these edibles, and I was like, okay, cool. And so I took an edible one night, and it was actually really great. I was like, this is what weed is all about. Okay, cool. I just felt relaxed and sleepy and that was it. And I was like, okay, this is great.
Starting point is 00:18:07 Maybe I could get into this. So then for a few months, I was actually taking edibles in small doses, you know, just to kind of get me relaxed at the end of the day. And it was great. It was like a total part of my routine for a little bit there. And I felt like it was actually really helping me.
Starting point is 00:18:22 I felt overall calmer in my life during that time. And I could have totally been placebo, but I don't know. I felt like there was no harm being done by me taking these edibles to fall asleep at night. And then something bad happened. So I took my edibles one night to go to sleep. And I'm scrolling through Instagram.
Starting point is 00:18:46 The way I'm about to describe this, you're gonna not understand what I'm saying, but you just really try here. So imagine this, I'm scrolling on Instagram and I see a post and it was like a weird post. It was like something that kind of caught my eye, but I kept scrolling. And then in my mind, while I'm high,
Starting point is 00:19:03 I'm like, wait wait did I see that was that post-real and then I scroll back up in my feed to go see if I could find it. So I scroll back up couldn't find it. Then I start freaking out because I'm like did I fucking imagine that I saw that like did I not actually see that and so I start freaking out I start kind of having a panic attack. And I hadn't had a panic attack in a while. And actually, before that point, I only had maybe had a handful of panic attacks in my life. You know, a real full-fledged panic attack.
Starting point is 00:19:41 But in this moment, I had a panic attack and I started to feel so weird. I felt like time was moving really slowly. I felt like I wasn't in my body. And obviously when you're high, you already kind of don't feel like you're in your body in a little way. But this was like a whole new level. This was a whole new feeling I'd never felt. I felt like I was 50 feet outside of my body. My mind and body could not have felt more disconnected. I almost felt like I had amnesia in a way. Like I felt like I couldn't remember anything. Like everything felt foreign to me. Like when I looked around the room I was like I don't even know where I am. Like is this even my fucking house? Like I was like
Starting point is 00:20:22 looking around like whatever. I looked in the mirror. I was like I don't even recognize this person. Everything around me felt Forant to me and time was moving so slowly and I called my dad. I'm freaking out and I'm like I think I'm having I took an edible. I'm freaking out and he started, you know calming me down I texted my boyfriend. I'm like have you what do I do? What do I do? And I'm just having a fucking meltdown. I'm having a full panic attack. I'm my body is shaking. I'm like losing it and I couldn't remember things properly like I would start to talk and then I would forget what I was talking about and then I'd remember and Then I'd forget and it was like my memory was coming in and out. I thought that I was talking about. And then I'd remember, and then I'd forget. And it was like my memory
Starting point is 00:21:05 was coming in and out. I thought that I was destroyed permanently. Like I thought I would never recover from whatever I was experiencing then. And it was the most terrifying feeling I've ever felt my life. Hands down. And the most terrifying part was not the panic attack itself, you know, me hyperventilating, me shaking uncontrollably, all of that. It was what was happening in my mind. I was unable to think clearly in a way that I had never experienced before. You know, I'd had panic attacks before where I'd completely lost it.
Starting point is 00:21:40 I was so scared. I was so anxious. It was unbearable to a point where I have a panic attack and my whole body reacts and I'm shaking and hyperventilating and my mind's racing and I've experienced that. But in that state, I'm thinking clearly. I'm almost thinking too fast, right? But when I had this experience while I, it was almost like I couldn't think at all. And I didn't even feel like I was in my body at all. And it was so fucking scary. I can't, this is why I'm never touching weed again. You will never see me high again, ever,
Starting point is 00:22:16 because not only was that experience so traumatizing, but I've had experiences similar to that since then without the influence of weed. And that's why the last year has been so hard for me because what I discovered was dissociating. And I had never experienced dissociating as a part of my anxiety before. Now, I'll explain to you what dissociating is. Dissociating, according to MayoClinic.org, is feeling disconnected from yourself in the world around you. For example, you may feel detached from your body or feel as though the world around you
Starting point is 00:22:56 is unreal. Everyone's experience with dissociation is different. BetterHealth.vic.gov.au. Wow, okay. Says mental illnesses such as OCD, panic disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorder may cause similar symptoms to dissociative disorder. Okay, my point of that is many people can experience it this sort of sensation in many different ways. But this experience with weed was the first time I had ever dissociated. And the reason why I don't think I've really talked about it much before
Starting point is 00:23:34 is because I genuinely don't know how to explain the sensation. I've tried to explain it to my parents. I've tried to explain it to my friends who don't experience it. I've tried to explain it to my boyfriend. Like, it doesn't matter. Nobody understands unless they've explained it to my friends who don't experience it. I've tried to explain it to my boyfriend. Like, it doesn't matter. Nobody understands unless they've experienced it. I remember people I knew, friends I used to have, telling me that they were dissociating
Starting point is 00:23:53 and that they were like, it was uncomfortable. And I was always like, what are you talking about? Mm, I don't get it. I could not comprehend what that feeling felt like until I experienced it myself because it's such a bizarre fucking feeling. We could not comprehend what that feeling felt like until I experienced it myself because it's such a bizarre fucking feeling. But for whatever reason, ever since that day, I have consistently struggled with more panic
Starting point is 00:24:17 attacks and more feelings of dissociating. I'm going to try to further describe it. I found a little excerpt online. It can also be described as feeling detached from yourself, like in a dream-like state, feeling weird or off-kilter, and like everything is surreal. The disconnection that you can feel between your mind and body when you dissociate can make it so hard to be social.
Starting point is 00:24:44 And prior to this point in my life, I had never really struggled with being social. I mean, I struggled with being away from my parents in being social when I was a child, but when it came to talking to people, I would say I was pretty normal. If I had any sort of anxiety, it was not out of the ordinary. Once I was a little bit more grown up and mature. Obviously, when I was a child, it was different. But going to dinner, like, okay, going to dinner with a friend, never made me anxious,
Starting point is 00:25:17 right? I would just be excited. But now that I fear at any given moment, I could start dissociating and feeling weird, getting that weird feeling. That scares me because when I feel like that, I can't think clearly at all. When I'm dissociating, I don't feel like I'm in control of what I'm saying or thinking, although I am. And that's what's so bizarre about it. It makes no sense. It's completely contradictory.
Starting point is 00:25:48 It's like, on one hand, I feel completely out of control. I feel like I can't think clearly. Therefore, I can't speak clearly. But what's weird is, I can. I'll find one I'm dissociating. I'm having conversations, but I'm not even, I don't even feel like I'm there. Like I'm not even consciously thinking about what I'm dissociating, I'm having conversations, but I'm not even, I don't even feel like I'm there. Like I, I'm not even consciously thinking about what I'm saying. I'm just saying.
Starting point is 00:26:11 And when I reflect on it, I'm like, I didn't even say anything weird. How is that possible? But this whole experience has made me a lot more socially anxious because I fear that I might dissociate when I'm in a social situation and say something weird or just feel out of control in general and that scares me. And what scares me even beyond that is the fact that when I dissociate I tend to get a panic attack because I'm so scared of the feeling of dissociating that it makes me have a panic attack. And the whole thing is so challenging. But I also understand that this is just a normal part of the way that my brain works. And everything's okay. I'm okay.
Starting point is 00:26:53 The world around me is okay. The thing about anxieties, that anxiety is not real. Like irrational anxiety, which is the majority of the anxiety that I feel is not real. I'm not losing my mind. I'm not going to permanently feel that way. It's just a moment in time. But it's so hard to remember that. And the first year or so that I was experiencing this sort of pattern of general anxiety mixed with this feeling of dissociating mixed with a higher frequency of panic attacks was just so exhausting for me.
Starting point is 00:27:38 And the thing is, it wasn't even happening for a reason. Like, don't get me wrong. There were things that would sometimes trigger it maybe, but there were also times when it just would come out of nowhere. Like I would just start disassociating for no reason. And for the first year or so that I was experiencing all this, I was a wreck because every time I would feel it, I'd be like, this is the time that it's never gonna go away. I'm gonna be stuck with it.
Starting point is 00:28:07 It's almost like when you're crossing your eyes and then your mom says, they're gonna get stuck that way. That's like what I was saying to myself, every time I would have a panic attack, every time I'd dissociate, I was like, this is going to last forever. I'm never going to get out of this feeling. I'm gonna be stuck with this forever
Starting point is 00:28:23 and it's gonna kill me. But then it passes., I'm going to be stuck with this forever and it's going to kill me. But then it passes. And I'm fine again. And sometimes weeks will go by and I won't dissociate. I've had like a month go by where I haven't dissociated. I've had weeks go by where I don't have a panic attack. I've had a month go by where I don't have a panic attack. I never know when this stuff's going to happen.
Starting point is 00:28:43 But I will say that at this point, I've found a lot of ways to deal with it and I wanted to share those with you, things that I've learned that help with more intense anxiety and even just normal day-to-day anxiety. Anxiety in general, I've had to figure out ways to deal with this because it's almost like survival in a way. I have to figure out how to deal with this because it's almost like survival in a way. I have to figure out how to deal with this in the right way because I don't have a choice. And so I'm going to share with you some of the ways I personally deal with my issue with this.
Starting point is 00:29:18 The first thing that I do is I reflect on what I need. Sometimes when I'm anxious, when I'm having a panic attack, when I'm dissociating, I need to talk to someone what I need. Sometimes when I'm anxious, when I'm having a panic attack, when I'm dissociating, I need to talk to someone. I need to call my parents. I need to call one of my friends. I need to call my boyfriend. I need to call someone. Sometimes that is the last thing I want to do and I need to be alone. And if I'm in a public setting, I might just need to go to the bathroom for a second in those moments. When I'm not alone, but I need to be alone really quick, I'll take what I can get. You need to ask yourself, what do you need right now? And that's so important because I think a lot of times we don't ask ourselves what we need.
Starting point is 00:30:04 And instead we just do what we think we need without asking. Does that make sense? Like, a lot of people talk about how when you're anxious or panicking, you need to talk it out with someone. But there's also a lot of people that say that when you're anxious or panicking, you need to just take deep breaths on your own. A lot of people are giving advice left and right about what the right thing to do is when you're struggling with anxiety or whatever. The only person who knows what they need is you. So don't listen to the little voice in the back of your head
Starting point is 00:30:37 telling you, well, I read something online that says that when you're anxious, you should be alone. Or I read something online that says when you're anxious, you should not be alone. Don't listen to anything that you've ever heard in the past. Don't listen to any advice that anyone's ever given you. Ask yourself, what do I need right now? And there's a chance that you might ask yourself what you need.
Starting point is 00:30:57 And it's like your brain's telling you, I need to be alone. So then you go and have a moment alone and then you're like, this is making it worse. Check in with yourself every minute and ask yourself, okay, what do I need to be alone. So then you go and have a moment alone and then you're like, this is making it worse. Check in with yourself every minute and ask yourself, okay, what do I need now? What do I need now? And just keep adjusting what you're doing until it eventually passes. In a really scary moment,
Starting point is 00:31:20 like when you're having a panic attack or you are dissociating. Those are moments when you need to be heavily checking in with yourself like every few seconds, honestly, because it's so intense. Another thing I do or try to do is let it happen when I'm in a moment of fear, I try to just close my eyes and let it happen. It draws out the whole process when you try to fight against it. If you're about to have a panic attack and you start fighting against it, you will probably lose that battle. I mean, I've had a few times when I've almost had a panic attack, like I felt it happening, I felt it coming on. I've started to shake and like I can't breathe and it like starts to happen. And then I've taken deep breaths and I've got, I've calmed
Starting point is 00:32:14 myself down and I've been able to not get it. That usually is in social settings, but it's tough. Like sometimes you just have to go walk into the bathroom in the middle of a dinner party and have a fucking panic attack. Hyperventilate, cry if you need to, like just let it all out. And then once it's over, you just, and you feel better, you released it. Now this is just my experience. Again, I'm not like a fucking, I'm not a doctor, I'm not a psychologist, I'm not a therapist,
Starting point is 00:32:50 so I'm just telling you how I deal with this stuff, but you know, somebody else might have a completely different experience where they're like, no, I have to fight against my panic attacks, not let them happen, and that's what makes me feel better. Listen, I don't know for sure, this is just what works for me. Continuing on, I let myself have the panic attack. I let myself dissociate. I let myself get really, really anxious. I just let it happen. I let it pass.
Starting point is 00:33:14 And then I'm able to properly move forward. That's the only way that I can get through it. And I try to just accept it while it's happening. Instead of fighting against it and being like, no, Emma, you need to stop. You can't feel this way. Stop. Think about something else. Think about something else. Think about something else. I just try to sit in the feeling a little bit and address it head on in a way. But that's a lot easier said than done. Because when you're having a panic attack, it can be hard to stop for a minute and say,
Starting point is 00:33:47 this will pass soon. Let yourself hyperventilate. Let yourself freak out. Instead, I find myself fighting against it, trying to stop it, trying to convince myself that it's not happening or something. It's all really weird psychological battle in your mind when you're going through it. I think my favorite way to sort of not fight against it, but also to try to make it better
Starting point is 00:34:16 is to number one, take deep breaths, which I know sounds so ridiculous, but I cannot even tell you how much Deep breathing has helped me through the last year of my life with all this anxiety. I Mean I'm deep breathing all day. I start to feel myself get really anxious and my heart starts beating up And I can feel it and my chest starts to get tight and I start to feel like I can't breathe and I know I'm like Okay, something my my body is anxious like I don to feel like I can't breathe. And I know I'm like, okay, something, my body is anxious. Like I don't know, like I'm getting, something's beginning here. Even if my mind is actually fine, sometimes my body beats me to it. It's really interesting.
Starting point is 00:34:56 If I feel anxious in my head or in my body, I just start deep breathing. Like I breathe into my nose, breathe out my mouth, breathe in my nose, breathe out my mouth, and I just keep doing it. And while I'm doing that, I'm focused on my breath on one hand, but I'm also letting my mind just run through what it's running through.
Starting point is 00:35:20 And I just keep deep breathing until my mind eventually slows down. It's not easy though, and I know. I don't want to make it sound easy because it is fucking hard. I also don't force myself to do anything challenging if I'm having a panic attack or I'm dissociating. Like, if I start to feel it coming on and I'm trying to write an email, I'm not going to keep trying to write that email. I'm going to stop what I'm doing immediately and I'm trying to write an email. I'm not gonna keep trying to write that email. I'm gonna stop what I'm doing immediately and I'm gonna start deep breathing.
Starting point is 00:35:50 I'm gonna lay down flat and just close my eyes and just relax. I'm going to go in the bathroom and count to 50. You know, I'm gonna do something that just distracts me and relaxes me for a second while my mind sort of gets back to a manageable place. I don't even know why it works because when I'm in the bathroom, say counting to 50. It's like I'm counting to 50 and I'm deep breathing. But I'm also panicking simultaneously. It's all happening at once.
Starting point is 00:36:27 But there's something about doing a little task, like deep breathing or counting to 50, that slows your brain down a little bit, while not completely distracting you or trying to take the attention away from what's happening in your mind. And last but not least, I have to remind myself that it's going to pass because in those moments, you're so scared and you feel like you're going to feel like that forever and you're not. And that's what you have to remember, but it's so fucking hard because when you're in it, you're like, I'm stuck here.
Starting point is 00:36:58 Like my brain is going to feel like this forever. I'm never going to get out of this and I'm stuck like this and I'm never going to get out of this and it makes it worse. Honestly, half of the time when I'm having a panic attack or I'm dissociating and then it causes a panic attack, my biggest fear is that that feeling is never going to go away. But the truth is it will go away. You know, it will pass. And so I just have to remind myself of that.
Starting point is 00:37:24 Remind myself that this is normal, this is just part of being a human. Everything's gonna be okay. This is not necessarily a rational reaction to anything that's actually going on. Don't get me wrong, you can get a panic attack about something and it be rational. But what I'm talking about is me just getting a panic attack
Starting point is 00:37:43 for no reason, me just dissociating for no reason. Those are the hardest moments because there's no way to rationalize why my brain is doing what it's doing. And so it's extra scary for me. And so in those moments, I have to remind myself that it's going to pass over and over again. I'm like, this will pass. This will pass.
Starting point is 00:38:03 And then it does. And then it's fine. Oh my God. Anyway, you guys, this is a very complicated topic. And it's a very, very upsetting thing to deal with. And if you deal with anxiety, panic, attacks, dissociating, anything like that, I really truly feel for you because it is so fucking awful and whether it's triggered by a life event or it's triggered by nothing at all, it feels like the end of the world in those moments. And it's one of the most excruciating things I've ever felt. There's no easy fix to it, you know?
Starting point is 00:38:46 But I think getting to a place where you can remind yourself that it's going to pass and getting to a place where you can calm yourself down without trying to push the experience away. If that makes sense, is the best way to be. Acknowledging and accepting the fact that you are scared and you're freaking out. Telling yourself, you're gonna ride it all the way through, and you're gonna come out the other side feeling much better, coming to that that conclusion and figuring out how to handle it that way I think is really, really helpful. But anyway, that's all I have for today. Thank you guys for listening. Thank you guys for hanging out. You can listen to anything
Starting point is 00:39:37 goes every Sunday and every Thursday. You can check out anything goes on Instagram at anything goes or on Twitter at AG podcast. You can check out my coffee company Chamberlain Coffee. Use code AG15 for a little discount. That's all I got for today. Thank you guys so much for listening. Thank you for hanging out. And I hope that this was helpful for somebody out there who's dealing with the same thing, just to feel a little less alone or to maybe hear an experience from somebody who deals
Starting point is 00:40:11 with something that someone you know deals with. Did that make sense? Okay, I have to go. I appreciate and love you all. And I'll talk to you soon. I keep forgetting to give you guys forehead kisses. Forehead kiss. Okay, I love you guys.
Starting point is 00:40:27 Talk later. I keep forgetting to give you guys forehead kisses. Forehead kiss. Okay, love you guys. Talk later.

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