- Post starter
- #973
Oh @KwanYingirl I am feeling so much compassion for you. I have terrible dental phobia. Is there no way s/he can give you gas? Something? I forget if you are on any meds? Can you take something to take the edge off the anxiety? What about going to whole foods or some kind of herbal store and getting a homeopathic (e.g. Calms Forte) which can help a little. Also, if you can find it, get some Yogi Kava Stress Relief tea and drink a bunch before you go (it really does help...not totally but takes the edge off). Also, if you have earphones and something to play music on...I find that really helpful. Play the music really loud. Occasionally the doc will have to ask if you're okay, but mostly it lets me go into a different zone land. Also, wear really comfy clothing. Bring something soft to hold in your hands so you can fiddle with it (whether it's play-dough or a stuffed animal or something). I get all hung up and don't do these things with my dentist sometimes because I feel like he'll think I'm weird...and this is just for fillings and cleanings. But for what you're doing? WTF. Whatever helps you is most important.
The other thing you can work on is breathing (called pranayama in yoga). The one that really helps me is imagining your whole core as a vessel that will be filled with breath. As you breathe in, you fill the vessel in thirds--it comes down through the top (your throat) and fills in the bottom (your belly), and as you continue to breathe in, the vessel fills. Then, when you breathe out, you empty the vessel. Ideally more slowly than you filled it (not like a big fast sigh out). Just slowly. You can figure out your own count...mine tends to be 4 counts in and 4-8 counts out. But the key is not to force it. Just let it happen naturally. You can practice this between now and then. The longer out-breath calms the central nervous system.
And keep focusing on the end result of this work you're having done. It is so positive. And you have so much courage. You are doing a brave thing, and you are doing it for yourself. So maybe whenever you start to get nervous about the procedure, you can keep your focus on why you're doing it. You will feel so much better when it is all over. It is a time limited procedure. It will be over in a limited amount of time. You have survived far more than this. You can do this, and you will be fine. Talk to those anxious parts of you and keep reminding them that you are doing this so that everyone inside can feel better. xoxo
The other thing you can work on is breathing (called pranayama in yoga). The one that really helps me is imagining your whole core as a vessel that will be filled with breath. As you breathe in, you fill the vessel in thirds--it comes down through the top (your throat) and fills in the bottom (your belly), and as you continue to breathe in, the vessel fills. Then, when you breathe out, you empty the vessel. Ideally more slowly than you filled it (not like a big fast sigh out). Just slowly. You can figure out your own count...mine tends to be 4 counts in and 4-8 counts out. But the key is not to force it. Just let it happen naturally. You can practice this between now and then. The longer out-breath calms the central nervous system.
And keep focusing on the end result of this work you're having done. It is so positive. And you have so much courage. You are doing a brave thing, and you are doing it for yourself. So maybe whenever you start to get nervous about the procedure, you can keep your focus on why you're doing it. You will feel so much better when it is all over. It is a time limited procedure. It will be over in a limited amount of time. You have survived far more than this. You can do this, and you will be fine. Talk to those anxious parts of you and keep reminding them that you are doing this so that everyone inside can feel better. xoxo