Hi, I don't know if this is just me, but I've been having trouble hearing people say they have "panic attacks" all the time, when they don't really have them, or at least not the kind of "panic attacks" I understand. I know it's not right to compare sufferings, etc. because it's not comparable, and I don't think anyone's pain should be treated less seriously, but the problem is just that when everybody is using the term "panic attack" to describe a general feeling of anxiety and fear, what term should we use to describe what is happening to us?? How do you distinguish them?
For me a "panic attack" is simply the worst experience possible, and to use "hell" to describe it is no exaggeration. When it hits I feel like I'm about to die--or rather, I feel like I'd rather shoot myself than staying conscious for another second. The world around swirls and feels completely different and nightmarish, and I can't breath or function normally and I can't even walk. For a long time I couldn't find the words to describe this experience, so when I first found out there was a term for it from my t and p I was relieved.
But these days I hear so many people say they had "panic attacks" when what they really mean is that they panicked. They would tell me how they had a "panic attack" and then did this and that and thought about this and that. But I was like...how could you possibly do or think about ANYTHING when you have a panic attack?! How could you want to do anything other than passing out or rushing to the ER?
Well, I know I'm probably being a bit harsh on people, and I don't want to. I myself sometimes make the mistake of using terminology too liberally, and I hate putting down other people's suffering. But it bothers me because I'm afraid that when I say I have a "panic attack", people would no longer know what I'm talking about. They would think I mean the same thing as the people I just mentioned above. And then how could I possibly tell them how I feel?
For me a "panic attack" is simply the worst experience possible, and to use "hell" to describe it is no exaggeration. When it hits I feel like I'm about to die--or rather, I feel like I'd rather shoot myself than staying conscious for another second. The world around swirls and feels completely different and nightmarish, and I can't breath or function normally and I can't even walk. For a long time I couldn't find the words to describe this experience, so when I first found out there was a term for it from my t and p I was relieved.
But these days I hear so many people say they had "panic attacks" when what they really mean is that they panicked. They would tell me how they had a "panic attack" and then did this and that and thought about this and that. But I was like...how could you possibly do or think about ANYTHING when you have a panic attack?! How could you want to do anything other than passing out or rushing to the ER?
Well, I know I'm probably being a bit harsh on people, and I don't want to. I myself sometimes make the mistake of using terminology too liberally, and I hate putting down other people's suffering. But it bothers me because I'm afraid that when I say I have a "panic attack", people would no longer know what I'm talking about. They would think I mean the same thing as the people I just mentioned above. And then how could I possibly tell them how I feel?