Santa Clara University

The Wellness Center - Anxiety

Wellness Center

Anxiety

 

What is Anxiety?

Anxiety affects our whole being. It affects how we feel, how we behave and has very real physical symptoms. It feels a bit like fear but whereas we know what we are frightened of, we often don’t know what we are anxious about. Mild anxiety is vague and unsettling - severe anxiety can be extremely debilitating.

 

What Causes Anxiety?

Anxiety is often triggered by stress in our lives. Some of us are more vulnerable to anxiety than others, but even those who become anxious easily can learn to manage it well. We can also make ourselves anxious with “negative self-talk” – a habit of always telling ourselves the worst will happen.

 

How will I Recognize Anxiety?

As well as feeling apprehensive and worried (possibly without knowing why), you may experience some of the following physical symptoms:

 

·    Tense muscles

·    Trembling

·    Churning stomach

·    Nausea

·    Diarrhea

·    Headache

·    Backache

·    Heart palpitations

·    Numbness or “pins and needles” in arms, hands or legs

·    Sweating/flushing

 

It is easy to mistake symptoms of anxiety for physical illness and become worried that you might be suffering a heart attack or stroke. This of course increases anxiety.

 

When is Anxiety a Problem?

We all become anxious from time to time. It becomes a problem when it interferes with life in the absence of real threat, or goes on too long after the danger has past.

 

What if I just avoid the things that make me anxious?

Avoiding situations that make you anxious might help you feel better in the short term. The trouble is the anxiety keeps returning, and has a habit of spreading to other situations. This can lead to you avoiding things like shops, crowded places, lectures or tutorials. So although avoidance makes you feel better –

 

·    Relief is only temporary – you may worry about what will happen next time.

·    Every time you avoid something it is harder next time you try to face it.

·    Gradually you want to avoid more and more things.

 

Ok, so what else can I do to feel better?

 

·    Learn to manage stress in your life. Keep an eye on pressures and deadlines and make a commitment to taking time out from study or work.

·    Learn a variety of relaxation techniques. Physical relaxation methods and meditation techniques really do help. We have some relaxation tapes at Student Counseling that will help you get started. Health food shops also sell a variety of relaxation tapes.

·    Look after your physical self. Eat healthily, get regular exercise and try to keep a regular sleep pattern. Avoid alcohol, cannabis and junk food.

·    Practice deep abdominal breathing. This consists of breathing in deeply and slowly through your nose, taking the air right down to you abdomen. Visualize the air travelling right down to your abdomen and say the word “calm” to yourself as you breathe in. Then breathe out slowly and gently through your mouth. As you breathe out visualize the stress and tension leaving your body with your breath and think the word “relax.” Deliberately let your muscles go floppy as you breathe out. Take three deep breaths at a time. If you breathe deeply for too long you may feel dizzy from the extra oxygen. You can repeat the three breaths after a short time of breathing normally.

·    Learn to replace “negative self talk” with “coping self talk.” When you catch yourself thinking something negative like “I can’t do this, it’s just too hard,” try to change it to something more positive, like “This is hard but I can get through it.” It can be helpful to think of “changing the tape” that runs through your mind. It is useful to make a list of the negative thoughts you often have and write a list of positive, believable thoughts to replace them.

·    Anxiety can be exhausting and debilitating. Don’t suffer alone for too long. It often helps to talk to a Counselor or Psychologist, who can help you find ways to deal with stress in your life and teach you skills to manage anxiety.

 

 

If you think you are experiencing signs of anxiety, please seek help. You are not alone.
Counseling Center
Cowell Health Center

Wellness Center

 

Other Anxiety Resources

  • Anxiety and Panic Disorders - University of South Florida
  • Are You Living in Fear? Getting a Handle on Panic Attacks - University of Texas at Austin
  • Coping with Music Performance Anxiety - University of Wisconsin -- Eau Claire
  • How to Handle Fears - University of Florida
  • Obsessive Compulsive Disorder - University of Cincinnati
  • Overcoming Social Anxiety - University of Texas at Dallas
  • Public Speaking Anxiety - Mary Washington College
  • Public Speaking Anxiety - University of Tennessee at Martin
  • Quick Relaxation Techniques - St. Joseph's University
  • Relaxation - Northern Michigan University
  • Relaxation Exercise - University of Florida
  • Relaxation Response - University of Wisconsin -- Eau Claire
  • Some Brief Relaxation Exercises - Texas Woman's University
  • Taking the Worry Out of Anxiety - University of Wisconsin -- Eau Claire
  • Top 10 Reasons for Anxiety About Starting College - University of Chicago
  • Treating Anxiety and Stress Naturally - Brooklyn College
  • What Are Panic Attacks? - Massey University
  • What Is Anxiety? - Massey University
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    Source: Student Counseling & Resource Services --University of Chicago Virtual Pamphlet Collection