Anxiety & The Amygdala
Anxiety & The Amygdala
Anxiety & The Amygdala
Amygdala Re-training
summary: "GAARP"
When you exasperatedly claim "I FEEL so scared", you're not
kidding. Sometimes, the feeling of anxiety is just about all there is to
anxiety.
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WHY AM I SO EMOTIONAL?
anxiety-amygdala-emotional
The emotional brain is the oldest, most primitive part of our brain,
which was only ever designed to ensure physical survival. Why?
Because in early times, it was only about physical survival. You
were a good ol' fashioned caveman in a jungle and your only call to
action was to watch out for snakes, bears, foxes and other cavemen
fighting for your meat and fruit. You needed a kind of brain that is
quick, hyper-vigilant and out of consciousness, because
consciousness would have been capable of wiping you off the face
of the earth.
Can you see why our innate, basic emotions like fear are so
automatic?
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social and psychological survival.
"My home keeps the snakes away, but god save me from my son of a
bitch coworker trying to screw me over at work!!"
Being wise and strategic about modern world issues requires you to
usually pause, reflect, weigh pros and cons and proceed. These are
deliberate actions. They're not automatic and visceral like our
emotional impulses. They become second nature to us with time and
practice, but at some initial point, the practice of accessing
rationality by slowing down, pausing, reflecting and choosing
appropriate action is new.
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Thus, given the mechanics of its job, combined with its relatively
new age in human evolution, it takes your rationality take much
longer to kick in than your emotions.
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What is it reacting to? At a high level, we can say that the amygdala
reacts to new or threatening objects in the environment. When its
triggered, it sends immediate rapid fire signals (how?) to your brain
and body. To do what? To make your body ready to fight or flight the
situation.
This is excellent news. Without your body prepared like this, you are
simply not equipped to protect yourself in the face of genuine
danger. How can you run away from a snake if your body doesn't
"feel" like you'll be dead if you don't?
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Another excellent news is that amygdala triggering is so incredibly
quick, automatic and visceral, that "consciously", you have to do
nothing to prepare your body to fight or flight. The bodily reactions
from a triggered amygdala just "show up in your life". One second
you're a beach bum on a hammock sipping his Pina Colada and the
next second you're sprinting for your life when a lizard falls on you.
Be thankful that your amygdala exists. It can save your life when the
dangers are real.
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predictability, familiarity or comfort.
A quick startle response. Experienced that? "Something just moved
around the corner of my eye". "Walking into what I expect to be an
empty room but see someone in it."
In social situations. “These people weren’t supposed to be here”
“First day of college in a new town” “New job, new coworkers, new
boss”
Memory
FACT 3: The amygdala switches off its alarm when it believes that
there is safety. Once the amygdala alarm is switched off, symptoms
reverse themselves to normal. Your heart rate's normal. Your
breathing's normal. Your focus, concentration and coordination is
back.
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FACT 5: Those with a sensitive amygdala are more likely to be
triggered.
FACT 6: Did you show up with a sensitive amygdala from the birth?
Maybe. But the next point is the one to remember.
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These are thoughts you don't like (#3) and memories you don't like
(#4).
Because thoughts and memories trigger your amygdala, you are also
stuck with bodily sensations you don't like. Anxiety symptoms.
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What have you concluded from your history with anxiety? "My
thoughts and memories make me anxious."
Your prefrontal cortex (rational brain) is not able to switch off the
false alarms raised by an amygdala that has been triggered by these
thoughts and memories.
The prefrontal cortex is the part of the higher brain that is supposed
to be the rational one. It assesses the situation rationally, interprets it
rationally and follows it up with aligned action. It's not just about
"thinking" wisely but also correspondingly "behaving" wisely.
The question marks are the potential triggers. For anyone. Not just
someone with anxiety, or predisposed to anxiety. The question marks
are the conflicts.
BUT everyone has a rational brain that has the power to resolve
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conflicts in way that are healthy, thereby overriding the amygdala's
emergency alarm. Once overridden, fear dissipates and the body
returns to balance.
In other words, the higher brain has the power to not lead you to an
anxiety disorder.
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How does his mind guide him to navigate his internal life? When we
ask this question, what we are really asking is "How mature and wise
are you?"
When anxiety is our reality, it usually means that our own wise mind
is not working very well to solve our problems. Its because our
rationality itself is distorted. In psychological language, we call these
Cognitive Distortions.
What are these? Common distortions for the anxious person include
thought suppression, magical thinking, mind-reading, perfectionism,
black-and-white thinking, should-thinking, foreclosure and
emotional reasoning.
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our heads. And because (usually) behavior follows thinking, the
actions we end up taking externally are also distorted.
If you are fully merged with the thought that predicts your death
unless you do "this", how can you not do "this"? That would be
insane, right?
"You are going to die if you don't wash your hands 17 times every
17 minutes."
This kind of thought triggers the amygdala because it's new, it's
sudden, it's automatic and it's talking about "death" for pete's sake.
But if his own rationality is telling Sam that he can only be safe if
this thought either goes away (Pure-OCD) or he listens to it (OCD),
how screwed is he? What his rationality was supposed to say is
"Leave the thought alone. Some thoughts are random. Don't fight the
wrong battles."
Instead, not only is his rational mind giving the wrong message to
suppress thoughts, but it's also paving the way for a deeper and
darker bottomless hole.
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Sam (and every single person in his place) saw that the more he tried
to rid the thought, the more it forced its way back. Instant failure.
But unlike the other person who will willingly admit and accept
human powerlessness over the randomness of some thoughts, Sam
takes this as a matter of life and death.
He did this for the whole day, then the whole week, then the year,
then the next 10 years. He stopped going to college, lost his friends,
worried his family sick, is in-n-out of psychiatrists' offices and
mental hospitals, is on disability, feels insane, is hopelessly
depressed that he couldn't achieve his dreams because of his illness.
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with distressing thoughts.
What does your rationality tell you about how to deal with issues
that rock your boat?
(GAD, Depression) How do you deal with thoughts about your past
failures and regrets? With compassion, flexibility and hope, or
nihilistic surrender?
(Trauma and PTSD) How do you deal with painful memories of the
past? Recycle them into empowerement or haunted by them?
(Panic Disorder) How do you deal with the fear of having a panic
attack? Face the fear anyway or chose to experientially avoid life?
(Social Anxiety) How do you deal with the fear of meeting new
people and facing the possibility of not being approved? Take the
risk or isolate yourself from the world?
Follow these distorted patterns for too long in your life? From too
early in life? In too many areas of life? The stress response is
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perpetually active in your body. Soon enough these are what you
accept as a labels for yourself:
All in all, for one reason or another, you keep them. And these guys
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are the whole deal. The make or break deal. The ones which get to
decide whether you move on or go down.
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AMYGDALA RE-TRAINING
The good news is that once cognitive distortions are recognized and
their destructive potentials brought to the surface, one becomes
deeply motivated to learning new ways of thinking and being.
Here, the rule of thumb is: Drop the distortions but don't force them
to disappear from your head. Knowing that your conditioned
thinking has been distorted is correct, but forcing your brain not to
produce old thoughts will be making the same mistake as before.
You cannot manipulate thoughts (no one can), but you can develop
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new thinking alongside the distortions.
If you expect that your anxiety recovery can only start when the
thoughts "Check the stove again" or "People don't like me" or "I
have wasted my life thinking distortedly" never appear in your head,
then you will fail again. Your amygdala will never see your success
over your fears.
But when the amygdala sees that despite the thoughts, you are safe,
it will have no evidence of a threat.
You cannot "tell" it that things are different unless you create a
memory that things are different.
This means that unless you behave un-anxiously for that first time
and create that god-forsaken positive memory for your amygdala,
you cannot go far.
Now this sounds like a real catch-22 doesn't it? You need to behave
properly to calm your amygdala, but you really need a got-damn
calm amygdala to behave properly in the first place. Right?
Wrong.
You don't need a calm amygdala to make your behavior happen. You
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may prefer one, but you don't as hell need one. Screw it. Not at this
stage of your life (and anxiety). You have to make peace with your
amygdala being what it is by now- "A highly sensitive brain part that
triggers needlessly."
Charles has been fully cured for almost 2 decades, has a wife and
kids, is extremely successful and is a global guru in anxiety
recovery. He couldn't have done that if his amygdala was still raising
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false alarms. His amygdala isn't. Because it got re-trained withe
Charles behavior.
Yes, the symptoms will be a real bitch when you first start out, but so
what? Not once have anxiety symptoms killed anyone. Hold on to
that truth and weather the symptoms. Let the amygdala do what it
wants, and still do the right thing, anyway.
Other times, it really, really depends. I'm not a fan of articles which
lists steps like "get proper sleep", "exercise", "don't worry", "think
less". What if you can't do any of this because of the circumstances
in your life? Then you need a more creative plan. Find it.
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attack? Or is it not going because you prefer watching TV and you're
okay with that?
Which one?
In the end, you have to decide because they're your own triggers.
Not mine. You have to figure out what to do so you suffer less.
These aren't always black or white answers. Who says any "one"
person has the right answer nailed down which applies for all of us?
Screw that. Only you can finally decide this.
With the right kind of tools and support, you can solve the mystery
of your anxiety and head off in the direction of your own values and
goals. Decided by you.
And it's possible even for Sam. At this stage of his life. With all his
prior life spent in anxiety.
Start getting educated and informed on what are the healthiest ways
of thinking and behaving for you. Not for anyone else. But for you.
At this stage. When you come with all of your unique anxious
baggage. The pain and suffering that you've gone through, and the
misguided messes you created for yourself because you didn't know
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any better.
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ARTICLE SUMMARY:
"GAARP"
GENERALLY ACCEPTED ANXIETY RECOVERY PRINCIPLES
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a threat to you.
Behavior is guided by thinking. If your old thinking was faulty, don't use
it. Use new thinking. But don't force old thoughts to go away, including
the thought that tells you how crazy you've been. Watch those thoughts
from a distance instead of merging with them.
The brain can and does change. Theamygdala can and does do both -
sensitize as well as desensitize. Neuroscience is showing that we can
change our brain's wiring at any age. Consider two opposite real-life
cases:
Charles had anxiety everyday for 26 years. He cured it in a week and has
stayed cured since then. How can that be possible without a rewired
brain and a de-sensitizedamygdala?
Leonardo di Caprio voluntarily walked into OCD for his job. Yes, that's
right. After his role in 'The Aviator', Leonardo developed OCD for about
a year. To put this context, it means that he sensitized his own
amygdala.
That's how plastic the human brain is. Then, after getting treated with
mindfulness, he again re-wired his brain to cure his OCD. He then de-
sensitized hisamygdala. His experience was like a switch to alter his
brain - on-off, on-off. Self-directed neuroplasticity.
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Footnotes:
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temperament assessment, then compared the results of their changes in
heart rate. He concluded that certain areas of the brain, primarily the
amygdala, were important centers in the expression and regulation of
behavioral inhibition. back
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