| PHOBIAS
"I'm scared to death of flying, and I never
do it anymore. I used to start dreading a plane trip a month before I was due to leave.
It was an awful feeling when that airplane door closed and I felt trapped. My heart would
pound and I would sweat bullets. When the airplane would start to ascend, it just reinforced
the feeling that I couldn't get out. When I think about flying, I picture myself losing
control, freaking out, climbing the walls, but of course I never did that. I'm not afraid
of crashing or hitting turbulence. It's just that feeling of being trapped. Whenever I've
thought about changing jobs, I've had to think,'Would I be under pressure to fly?' These
days I only go places where I can drive or take a train. My friends always point out that
I couldn't get off a train traveling at high speeds either, so why don't trains bother
me? I just tell them it isn't a rational fear."
A specific phobia is an intense fear of something
that poses little or no actual danger. Some of the more common specific phobias are centered
around closed-in places, heights, escalators, tunnels, highway driving, water, flying,
dogs, and injuries involving blood. Such phobias aren't just extreme fear; they are irrational
fear of a particular thing. You may be able to ski the world's tallest mountains with
ease but be unable to go above the 5th floor of an office building. While adults with
phobias realize that these fears are irrational, they often find that facing, or even
thinking about facing, the feared object or situation brings on a panic attack or severe
anxiety.
Specific phobias affect an estimated 6.3 million adult
Americans and are twice as common in women as in men. The causes of specific phobias are
not well understood, though there is some evidence that these phobias may run in families.
Specific phobias usually first appear during childhood or adolescence and tend to persist
into adulthood.
If the object of the fear is easy to avoid, people
with specific phobias may not feel the need to seek treatment. Sometimes, though, they
may make important career or personal decisions to avoid a phobic situation, and if this
avoidance is carried to extreme lengths, it can be disabling. Specific phobias are highly
treatable with carefully targeted psychotherapy.
Phobias aren't just extreme fears; they are
irrational fears. You may be able to ski the world's tallest mountains with ease but feel
panic going above the 5th floor of an office building.
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