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How Do You Identify A Starting Panic Attack?

  • Post starter Post starter Deleted member 27340
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Deleted member 27340

How do you tell you're about to get a panic attack?

I'm often anxious constantly, and then the difference between normal anxiousness and a starting attack is sorta floating. My first omen would be shaking, I think.

I was just wondering if any of you have one thing that always comes first in an attack that allows you to identify it even though you're already on constant anxiousness?
 
Metallic taste in the back of my throat.

If I miss that: Narrowed vision, acute hearing, loss of internal monologue, shallow breathing, loss of sensation or pain spikes, jaw clamps shut, heart rate increase (120bpm - 145bpm normal 55bpm), muscle twitching to shaking to spasms, emotional lightning storm or pure calm.

That's my transition order. I can often catch it and subvert it at some point right up until the end. Other times I can just ignore it (walk about and do things, super surreal). If not either of those 2, I just have to ride it out.
 
irregular breathing, leading up to hyperventilation. Tense shoulders, pulled up towards the head.
These are also two things you can work on to prevent the buildup.

Edit: considering your constant anxiety, you'd do good considering methods for relaxation throughout the day. I do that too, and I find it works (such as yoga, sports, breathing exercises).
 
I hyperventilate and clench my muscles. When I feel nauseous I know my anxiety is accelerating. I used to just grab a Xanax, but I'm working on my breathing to keep calm.
 
For me it's a strong increase in my overall anxiety, as well as:
- strong feelings of impending doom,
- losing the ability to distinguish between realistic and unrealistic fears,
- viewing everyone and everything as either a threat or being in danger
- feelings of helplessness and panic
- very high heart rate

All those things cause each other to exacerbate so I keep spiralling down until I am nothing but a trembling mess.
 
For me, I know I am at the tipping point when I get the sudden feeling of not being able to get enough air. I can breathe just fine, so my lungs are working. It just feels as though I am breathing the same breath over and over, getting a little less air each time. It's really quite terrifying when it happens. Then having to consciously slow my breathing down, feels so counterintuitive. If I just listen to my brain I will hyperventilate.
 
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