WillowMarie
Silver Member
Yea, so I am pretty sure I had a panic attack last night at work. Which might make it two this week... (haven't had any, that I know of, for over ten years... why now??) It has been pretty quiet at work the past couple of weeks, but last night I had to deal with a very upset customer.
She was just being rude and wanted everything her way. I had called the online site for her to talk to, but she refused to talk to them, said she was feeling sick, wanted me to make them give her free shipping when she wasn't going to be spending enough on the purchase to qualify for free shipping, and she didn't want it shipped to the store for free because she would spend gas getting to the store. I told her they already told me their answer was no, they couldn't do anything, but she still wanted me to talk to them.
I had enough and told the associate next to me that I needed to go calm down and asked if he could take over. He was like, NOOOO! (LOL) And I replied, the manager is right there (she was with a customer), ask her to do it.
And I fled into the bathroom. I could feel the tears coming. I was trying to let them come and just feel them because it is so easy for me to push them away/distract. I was trembling which is normal around angry/irritated people for me, so that wasn't freaking me out. I don't know it if was the way I was breathing, you know how you start breathing faster/differently if you start crying really hard. I started to breathe that way even though the tears weren't coming out yet, as in preparing to cry real hard.
All of a sudden I felt really dizzy and realized my fingers were cold and almost feeling numb, so I focused on grounding because I thought it was the beginning of a panic attack. I was running my hands over the stall wall that had this raised pattern and focused on breathing deep to calm myself. Then when the bathroom was clear, I went to the sink and suds up my hands for five minutes just focusing on how it felt and staring myself in the eyes in the mirror (this actually is a very good grounding technique I am finding for me).
After I was calmer I left the bathroom, ran into the associate I had asked to take over and asked if the lady was still over there. He said yes, and that the manager had told the customer she was being mean when she became angry I just left the situation. And when the customer said she wasn't, the manager said, yes you were, I was a right there (maybe seven feet away where she was helping the other customers) and could hear the way you talked to her. It made me feel really supported to hear that. I also told him I was taking my break since she was still out there.
I went into the breakroom and just felt my body trembling (it was pretty bad this time, like I was pretty sure other people would be able to notice) and I still wanted to break down in tears. I tried to let myself feel the emotions, take deep breaths, I was feeling pretty detached when I did this because I would look up and realize people were looking at me, look them in the eyes, that would make me feel more grounded, and it would push away the feelings more.
After 15-20 min. I felt way calmer and headed back out to the floor. I ran into the manager that helped the customers after I left and she told me, I should just yell at the customers next time... I thought that was funny, but supportive, but told her I didn't want to get in trouble.
She was just being rude and wanted everything her way. I had called the online site for her to talk to, but she refused to talk to them, said she was feeling sick, wanted me to make them give her free shipping when she wasn't going to be spending enough on the purchase to qualify for free shipping, and she didn't want it shipped to the store for free because she would spend gas getting to the store. I told her they already told me their answer was no, they couldn't do anything, but she still wanted me to talk to them.
I had enough and told the associate next to me that I needed to go calm down and asked if he could take over. He was like, NOOOO! (LOL) And I replied, the manager is right there (she was with a customer), ask her to do it.
And I fled into the bathroom. I could feel the tears coming. I was trying to let them come and just feel them because it is so easy for me to push them away/distract. I was trembling which is normal around angry/irritated people for me, so that wasn't freaking me out. I don't know it if was the way I was breathing, you know how you start breathing faster/differently if you start crying really hard. I started to breathe that way even though the tears weren't coming out yet, as in preparing to cry real hard.
All of a sudden I felt really dizzy and realized my fingers were cold and almost feeling numb, so I focused on grounding because I thought it was the beginning of a panic attack. I was running my hands over the stall wall that had this raised pattern and focused on breathing deep to calm myself. Then when the bathroom was clear, I went to the sink and suds up my hands for five minutes just focusing on how it felt and staring myself in the eyes in the mirror (this actually is a very good grounding technique I am finding for me).
After I was calmer I left the bathroom, ran into the associate I had asked to take over and asked if the lady was still over there. He said yes, and that the manager had told the customer she was being mean when she became angry I just left the situation. And when the customer said she wasn't, the manager said, yes you were, I was a right there (maybe seven feet away where she was helping the other customers) and could hear the way you talked to her. It made me feel really supported to hear that. I also told him I was taking my break since she was still out there.
I went into the breakroom and just felt my body trembling (it was pretty bad this time, like I was pretty sure other people would be able to notice) and I still wanted to break down in tears. I tried to let myself feel the emotions, take deep breaths, I was feeling pretty detached when I did this because I would look up and realize people were looking at me, look them in the eyes, that would make me feel more grounded, and it would push away the feelings more.
After 15-20 min. I felt way calmer and headed back out to the floor. I ran into the manager that helped the customers after I left and she told me, I should just yell at the customers next time... I thought that was funny, but supportive, but told her I didn't want to get in trouble.
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