anut4disney
<font color=blue>Just call me bashful <img src="h
- Joined
- Aug 18, 1999
- Messages
- 2,876
If they gave out gold medals for worrying, I would be on the top podium. I worry about everything.
imsorry said:Yes!!! I worry about EVERYTHING. When the painters were coming on Saturday, I woke up super early, worried I wouldn't be up and dressed in time. I worried if I should talk to them, offer them something to eat or drink, I worried if I picked the right colors. After the job was done (it looked great) I was up that night worrying if I should have picked eggshell finish instead of flat. Now DH has me worried that the painter didn't give us a receipt!![]()
When we are going to Disney, I worry that DH will try to make me go on Rock N Roller Coaster or Tower of Terror! Now I am worried about Expedition Everest on the next trip. I worry that I won't feel good when I get there. I worry that it will be too hot and humid. Or God forbid, RAIN!![]()
I could go on like this all day, but my hands are starting to shake just thinking about all this!!!![]()
Brier Rose said:OMG..are you my twin???
I can't believe how much your post hit home with me! I was just reading it going that's me!!!![]()
so YES I am a worrier to the extreme!
These days I manage it by obsessivly planning Disney trips! Really..I get my mind sooo focused on that, that I don't have room to worry about the bad stuff. At least that's a fun thing to worry about.![]()
imsorry said:Yeah, but what about the RIDES???? The Weather??? the Plane?????![]()
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The Lines???? Suppose I get skin cancer from laying by the pool????
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lewilder said:For anyone who recognizes that their worrying is unhealthy and wants to change, consider therapy. There's also an excellent book I used called "The Feeling Good Handbook" by David D. Burns.
lewilder said:(My first post!)
I WAS a chronic worry-er and wound up clinically depressed. No fun!
Cognitive behavioral therapy worked for me. It is a method of identifying distorted thoughts and learning how to think in an untwisted way. It is not simply "positive thinking" or "looking on the bright side," but instead learning to recognize the specific, distorted patterns of thinking that makes us nuts, and substitute thoughts that are more rational and normal.
For anyone who recognizes that their worrying is unhealthy and wants to change, consider therapy. There's also an excellent book I used called "The Feeling Good Handbook" by David D. Burns. I hate the title and I hate the cheesy photo of the author on the front cover, but the contents made a huge difference in my life. Good luck, all.
I have two sisters-in-law who have been in therapy for years, trying to get at the underlying causes of their anxiety (and making very little progress). When I started therapy I tried diving into that issue, too. My therapist said, yes, it is sometimes helpful to know the WHY -- genetic predisposition, poor role models, trauma or abuse, whatever -- but it is not always relevant. You can have everything in your life going perfectly well, and still suffer from horrible anxiety. You can have a horrible life and still be upbeat. It's not what happens to us that causes us to be anxious or depressed; it's our reaction to what happens to us. And that reaction is controllable.Christine said:Welcome!!!
I just started CBT (just finished my 3rd session). So far we haven't done much as the therapist is trying to get to the "meat" of my anxiety.
I have read the Burns book a long time ago. Unfortunately, I am way past a book helping me. I noticed my therapist is using one by a guy named Andrew (or is it Arthur) Beck and some of the passages I've read have REALLY hit home.
Anyway, if you don't mind discussing (we can take it to PMs if you do) were you skeptical of CBT at first? I just have this underlying feeling/belief that I've been this way for so long that nothing can "undo" me.