sun seeker
Diamond Member
I suppose this is part of hypervigilance. I hate how my mind just won't stop moving from one thing to be anxious about to another and how there is seemingly no way to tell what is something legitimate that I should be worried about (or do something about) and what is just the product of a mind that can't turn off. If things start getting too quiet and calm, it's as if my mind starts doing backflips to be sure I don't get too complacent. At the root of all the things I get like this about, if I dig deep enough, are the same few basic fears that stem from early trauma, though by this time they are often encased in a lot of layers.
Sometimes it gets to the point where I've reasoned with myself that if I'm anxious about it, it probably isn't real. I've even made lists of the things I've obsessed over and how many of them have actually happened, and the ratio is very small. But that doesn't mean none of them are ever real... and once the anxiety gets bad enough or persists long enough, trying to talk myself out of it doesn't get me anywhere.
It's exhausting. How do you learn to differentiate between "real" anxiety and anxiety that's just... anxiety? How do you know whether to treat it as a symptom or as a sign you need to do something about the specific thing you're anxious about? Or do you just have to live with it until you've worked through enough of the trauma that your mind calms down? I need some help here, I'm clueless.
Sometimes it gets to the point where I've reasoned with myself that if I'm anxious about it, it probably isn't real. I've even made lists of the things I've obsessed over and how many of them have actually happened, and the ratio is very small. But that doesn't mean none of them are ever real... and once the anxiety gets bad enough or persists long enough, trying to talk myself out of it doesn't get me anywhere.
It's exhausting. How do you learn to differentiate between "real" anxiety and anxiety that's just... anxiety? How do you know whether to treat it as a symptom or as a sign you need to do something about the specific thing you're anxious about? Or do you just have to live with it until you've worked through enough of the trauma that your mind calms down? I need some help here, I'm clueless.