But anxiety is something different all together. It's an abstract that's difficult to explain to people if they've never experienced it. People who suffer from anxiety usually have a hard time with the idea of letting their mind 'just being still' because there's always noise, but the anxiety itself is different for every person that deals with it - so I can only wrap my brain around how it affects me.
At any point in the day, my brain is a hot mess. There's a million different thoughts going in a million different directions, at a million different speeds. For the most part, it's just 'white noise', and it's something I've learned to deal with over the years. I've stopped fighting it, and have found that it's easier to just let my mind drift from one thing to the next to the next, because that casual lack of focus on quieting all the noise is something I've never really been able to do.
However, more often than not, that casual unfocused drift gets stuck in a loop, and by the time I become aware of it, my body has already started physically reacting to it with a panic attack. My heart beats hard, my hands sweat, I get light headed....so my body tries to counter it by fidgeting. I bounce my leg, or my foot shakes, or my fingers tap. My breathing becomes more labored, sometimes my chest hurts...and then the feeling of helplessness and terror sets in, because I can't control what's going on, and BAM. I'm in full meltdown mode, and there's little I can do to stop it other than ride it out.
Anxiety/panic attacks make me want to hide, or cry, or yell. But mostly, I want to run away from wherever I am, and find a safe place (usually my house), so I can ride the storm out alone.
Sometimes my panic attacks can last for just a few minutes, sometimes they can last for hours, but since I've had them just about all my life, I've learned to function pretty normally around folks - even when I'm in the middle of one. Most people never even know that I'm quietly melting down inside. The closest most folks get is a feeling that I'm not really listening 100%...because, well...I'm not.
I didn't even really know that they weren't normal, until they started getting REALLY bad about 12 - 14 months ago.
When they started getting worse, I could no longer function when a really bad one hit - and that hasn't changed. Drugs have helped, and so has therapy, because I've learned what SOME of my triggers are, as well as how to recognize the signs of an oncoming episode. Even if my husband can see panic start to creep into my eyes, he goes into 'emergency management' mode...checking to see if I have my meds with me, making sure I take some, or maybe even getting me out of the environment I'm in so I can feel more safe. He's gotten so good, that sometimes he can tell that I'm about to have an attack even before I can.
However, I still get violently bad panic attacks that render me nearly useless until I can calm my mind down, and that's where routine comes in.
See, as much as pushing myself out of my comfort zone and trying new things is good for my depression and lack of self-esteem, it's bad for my anxiety. I have to live a delicate balance in order not to tip myself too much in one direction, especially since my anxiety can be triggered by (seemingly) nothing at all sometimes. I actually find a lot of ironic humor in that because I'm a Libra anyhow...but I feel that even the smallest change in tare fucks me up more than a 'normal' person.
If I start to feel like I'm overwhelmed, I start tasking myself. I do it in my job(s) and I do it at home. That thought out rhythm of one foot in front of the other when it comes to 'this is how we do these things' helps calm my brain faster than any amount of chemical can...because once I'm to a point I need to take a pill, it's already too late.
Tasking myself puts me into a routine...which is something familiar to my head. I don't have to think - i just focus on doing. Cleaning is a good example of how I work through my anxiety sometimes, because it helps. It's something I can control. It's something I can see an immediate result with. It's something that has a beginning, a middle, and an end. It's reliable. It's a routine.
Now, I'm not talking OCD level of routine...I'm not someone who has to count how many times I wipe the counter, or do things in a particular order...it just has to get done....and usually done uninterrupted. It's a process I'm focusing on because the noise in my head has gotten too loud for me to function.
So I have routines in my life that I follow, because they're a place of safety to me, and I find the less I have to "think" (or even let my brain wander), the less the anxiety wins.
But this poses a challenge, because the noise is still there, I'm just focusing on one channel a little louder than the others. I'm still thinking about all of that other shit, but when I'm tasking, thinking about all that other shit becomes an ancillary process. It still doesn't make the noise go away.
That's why I like running, which is funny coming from a fat chick. (I don't exactly run...I kind of fast shuffle...and lord knows I look silly with everything shaking at once...but I don't care.) When I get on the treadmill, my brain stops. The only thing my brain thinks about is putting one foot in front of the other. It will occasionally tell me that I need to stop and get a drink of water, but for the most part, there's nothing else going on in my cabeza. The only reason I listen to music is for help with my rhythmic coordination, since I've got two left feet. I will occasionally read the news (close captioning), but usually, when I'm staring at the tv...there's literally nothing processing in my brain. Not a goddamned thing.
And I love it. I love that I've finally found something that turns my brain off, even if it's just for 20 minutes in the morning. That 20 minutes sometimes leaves me feeling more rested than an entire night of fitful sleep. (My anxiety causes some bad nightmares sometimes).
Even more of an upside? I'm losing weight in the process. I'm strengthening my heart and improving my endurance. The endorphins from working out have also been proven to help ease the symptoms of depression, so it's a win-win-win situation all around.
So...yeah. Running. :)
