Social Anxiety Guide

Social Anxiety Disorder Graphs Section


   


Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Social-Anxiety
Email:
First Name:



Main Social Anxiety Disorder Graphs sponsors


  

Latest Social Anxiety Disorder Graphs Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Social Anxiety Disorder Graphs!



 

Welcome to Social Anxiety Guide

   

Social Anxiety Disorder Graphs Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

Social Anxiety Treatment is Readily Available

from:

If you're one of the millions that suffer from social anxiety and feel helpless because you feel there's no help for you, you couldn't be more wrong. You are not the only one in the world that suffers from this disorder. If you're having problems with what you consider extreme shyness, you may be affected by social anxiety. Some of the things that will make a social anxiety sufferer stressed and fearful are:

• Being criticized or teased
• Meeting new people
• Being the center of attention
• Meeting people in authorities positions (supervisors or other important people
• Having someone watch you while you're doing something
• Most social gatherings
• Interpersonal relationships, either friends or romantic

If any of these symptoms seem to apply to you and how you feel about being social, you may be suffering from social anxiety. Don't feel that you are alone with this problem or that there is no help for you. There are a few very successful types of social anxiety treatment available today.

One of the most successful types of social anxiety treatment is cognitive-behavior therapy. Cognitive behavior deals with our brain and what and how we think. Since so much of our social anxiety stems from how we feel, cognitive-behavior therapy is a very thorough method of social anxiety treatment. It helps us to learn new ways to think and behave in social settings. As a method of social anxiety treatment, it is very widely used and recommended by may therapists and psychologists.

One reason why cognitive-behavior therapy is as successful as a social anxiety treatment is that, when used with consistency, it produces long-term changes in your life. This is, of course, provided there are not other health issues such as Alzheimer's disease, dementia, brain damage which may be contributing to the anxiety. This type of therapy will address many different cognitive areas of our lives, always helping with new thoughts and beliefs are brain comes up with.

Other types of social anxiety treatment are medication, which are usually recommended with the cognitive-behavior therapy. Medications such as anti-depressants, anti-anxiety drugs and beta-blockers for the physical symptoms can be very helpful with social anxiety. Although you may feel a reaction the first day you take an anti-depressant, it actually takes a few weeks for them to have a real effect on the body and the brain. It is also important to realize that these medications will not cure social anxiety, but help to lessen your anxiety while you are undergoing therapy. They should be taken as part of your social anxiety treatment along with the therapy. Therapy is available as individual or group therapy. A trained therapist will recommend what he feels will work best for you based on your needs.




Other Social Anxiety Disorder Graphs related Articles

Social Anxiety Treatments
Social Anxiety Forum
Social Anxiety Support Part 2
Social Anxiety In Children
Social Anxiety Paxil

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Social Anxiety Disorder Graphs News

My So-Called Quantified Life - Technology Review


Technology Review

My So-Called Quantified Life
Technology Review
Eventually, you'll be able to save these comparison charts, and Tictrac will implement some social features as well. "We are very much in learning mode at this stage," he says. Me, too. As it turns out, I did learn a few things about myself.

Read more...


The Chemo 'Tip List' I Wish I'd Had - The Stir


The Stir

The Chemo 'Tip List' I Wish I'd Had
The Stir
Get on the social graph. There is a beautiful and enormous community out there comprised of the most generous, helpful souls you'll ever meet, all of whom have been touched by cancer in one way or another. There is nothing you'll go through that ...

Read more...


OUT FROM THE SHADOWS: Reaching out to students - Kawartha Media Group


OUT FROM THE SHADOWS: Reaching out to students
Kawartha Media Group
Anxiety disorders are the most common of all mental health problems and affect approximately one in 10 people. - Social Phobia: fear of social situations and irrational self-consciousness in social situations. People with social phobia often tend to ...

Read more...


Three Things I Love about Teaching Sociology of Religion Online - Patheos (blog)


Three Things I Love about Teaching Sociology of Religion Online
Patheos (blog)
First, now that I have overcome my initial technical challenges and anxieties, teaching online is fun. In Martin Seligman's book Flourish, he recounts how teaching positive psychology made him realize that learning is deeper when it is engaging.

Read more...


Zzzzzzs the Day - Wall Street Journal


Wall Street Journal

Zzzzzzs the Day
Wall Street Journal
In modern life, the artificial forces that constitute "social time"—the ways in which we structure our days around home and work—have nature on the run. So contends Till Roenneberg, a professor at the University of Munich's Institute of Medical ...

Read more...