EKG, blood work, and x-rays of the lungs looked good, so the doctor sent me home with a prescription for Ativan and some information to read about dealing with stress. Dealing with an anxiety attack is not something new. I've had friends and family deal with it, and I do deal with anxiety regularly, but this is the first time it has been this severe. I laughed as I read the material, because it was definitely what I've been dealing with. And then, I decided that since I work out so much through writing, that maybe writing a little about this will help reduce the anxiety. And maybe it won't, but at least I'll know I shared the stress with people who care and I didn't keep it all bottled up inside.
So here it is. I'll start each section with a quote from the reading materials and then I'll fill you in on how that fits my life.
1) Try to locate the sources of stress in your life. That may not be obvious! These may include:
--Daily hassles of life which pile up (traffic jams, missed appointment, car troubles, etc.)
Actually, the sources of stress in my life are pretty obvious, at least to me. Here are some of the recent daily hassles:- With the exception of the entryway and stairs (cleaned by a wonderful friend this week), my house is a total disaster. It's never as clean as I'd like, but with being sick and stressed for 2 months, it's worse than usual. I basically have the time and energy to add to the mess, but not to do much of anything about it. Keeping the laundry, dishes, and garbage somewhat under control is the best I can expect, and I don't always get that done. Dust (which causes more breathing problems) is completely out of control.
- Money. Too many expenses and not enough income. Enough said. Most of you probably understand this. I'm just hoping that getting the ER bill doesn't send me back there again!
- I forgot a credit card payment (just got busy and forgot I hadn't paid it) until a transaction was denied. Awkward.
- Students aren't ready for NATS.
- I'm trying to get involved in more MMTA education programs, but I messed up multiple things in getting a student enrolled in the voice exams.
- Lots of students still haven't paid me, but I haven't had the time and energy to run invoices and get them sent so I can get paid.
- If I push myself too hard, a fibromyalgia flare up reminds me that I can't do that. Basically, I've been living with a flare since August.
All that is pretty normal, everyday stuff I deal with all the time.
--Major life changes, both good (new baby, job promotion) and bad (loss of job, loss of loved one.)
This is a big one.
- My friend and mentor died this summer. Besides feeling the loss, I'm also feeling the need to step up. Both of the voice teachers that had the biggest influence on me are both gone now and it's my turn to carry on the legacy.
- I'm not leaving teaching voice, but I am starting a new career (which isn't paying much at this point, other than joy and health). Situations have changed, enabling me to take more of a leadership role in our local tai chi community, and within a year or two, I may be able to make that role more official. That's great, but it definitely adds some stress.
- Recent events have caused me to more closely examine my spiritual life. There are some big decisions that need to be made, and it's difficult to talk to most people about these. And not talking feels like not being open and truthful, which feels like a violation of my integrity. I've found a church that feels like home and that helps me see things in a different light. I'm not sure that I am ready to leave my old church or that I even want to, but I'm not sure how long I can walk in both worlds.
- I've been asked to join a blog team (Yay!) and I've been asked to submit a guest blog for another group that is doing a series and they value my perspective on this topic. I'm really excited for both opportunities, but it's one more thing on my plate. Plus, as you can tell, my own blogs tend to be more vomiting feelings and I'd like these to be slightly higher quality.
--Overload: feeling that you have too many responsibilities and can't take care of all of them at once.
- See all of the above.
- I'm trying to be more involved in MMTA programs, but they need people to run the programs and I don't feel like I can take on anymore. At the very least, I should be volunteering for every event I enter students in. I also don't feel like I can run a program when I'm still messing up getting my first student enrolled for it.
- We have a Tai Chi Down Under Fundraiser on Nov. 2. It will be awesome, but I will be stressed until it's over. By the way, if you want to make some food for the bake sale or work at the bake sale tables that day, let me know. We need all the help we can get.
- I have this great website system that also helps me with scheduling and bookkeeping for the studio, but it still requires a lot of work to get all the data entered. And I am always behind.
--Feeling helpless, feeling that your problems are beyond what you're able to solve.
Believe it or not, this one is not a major issue right now. I will get through this. I know that. The quality of my work might not be what I want, but the world will not come to an end because of it. In that, at least, I think I've come a long way in the last several years.
2) Notice how your body reacts to stress. Learn to listen to your body signals. This will help you take action before the stress becomes severe.
This one just makes me laugh. I know the signals. And I also know a lot about how to cope with them. But I can't exactly stop a lesson or a class and make people wait while I do 30 minutes of deep breathing and meditation. I'm trying to work it in at other times and do quick fixes between lessons, but sometimes you just have to push through, or take a day and a half off work like I did this week, which only moves the stress to a later date when I have to make all of that up.
I'm also exercising at least 5 days a week (3 days of 2 hours of tai chi and qigong, 2 days circuit training and walking for a total of 45-60 minutes). That physical activity really does help, especially when I'm not too exhausted to move.
I now also have Ativan to treat the anxiety, but that basically means sleeping (or at least no driving and anything else needing clear thinking for 6-8 hours.) Again, not a great solution for when I feel stress or anxiety at work.
3)When you can, do something about the source of your stress. (Avoid hassles, limit the amount of change that happens in your life at one time and take a break when you feel overloaded.)
Laughing. Again. Until I win Powerball, most of these stresses won't go away.
4) Unfortunately many stressful situation cannot be avoided. It is necessary to learn HOW TO MANAGE STRESS better. There are many proven methods that will reduce your anxiety. These include simple things like exercise, good nutrition and adequate rest. Also there are certain techniques that are helpful: relaxation and breathing exercises, visualization, biofeedback, and meditation. For more information about this, consult your doctor or go to a local bookstore and review the many books and tapes available on this subject.
- Thank you for admitting that we can't avoid all stress.
- I love how "HOW TO MANAGE STRESS" is all capital letters like they are yelling at me.
- See above for exercise I do.
- Nutrition does make a difference. Food sensitivities add to stress. I'm pretty much gluten free now and since I think I also have sensitivities to dairy, chocolate, and sugar, I'm also working to minimize, and hopefully eventually eliminate, those.
- I'm the queen of anti-stress breathing and relaxation techniques. I have a few visualization exercises that work well. I've done biofeedback, and I'm exploring different kinds of meditation.
- I probably know more about anxiety than my doctor.
- I probably need to get back to regular counseling appointments, but I don't know how to fit that into my schedule and my budget (Ha! Ha!) right now without adding more stress.
- I already own a bunch of related books.
- Going to the bookstore means spending money, which causes stress. I may explore some more things from the library. Due dates and late fees are less stress than not having money for bills because I spent it at the bookstore.
So…that's my anxiety story. I don't expect the things that cause stress to change anytime in the near future, but hopefully I'll continue to get better with how I deal with them.
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