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Agoraphobia - Another Perspective - Healing is Possible
By :
Dorthy M. Neddermeyer PhD
The term agoraphobia is generally misunderstood and mistreated. Its literal definition suggests a fear of "open spaces." This is not only incomplete, but a misleading view. Agoraphobics are not necessarily afraid of open spaces. Instead, they are afraid of having panicky feelings, wherever these fearful feelings may occur—at home, in public buildings, or in crowded supermarkets, driving a car or driving over bridges or places that are certainly not "open," but are unfamiliar or triggers feelings of being "out of control."
Agoraphobia and Interpersonal Stress
By :
Stephen Price
People who develop agoraphobia are more likely to have experienced certain stressful events in their life within the year prior to onset. This article covers a study analyzing the types of stressful events that coincide with the development of agoraphobia.
Agoraphobia and Life Circumstances
By :
Stephen Price
Life circumstances, or how you perceive your life circumstances, can be a major contributing factor in the onset of agoraphobia. In general, people are more likely to develop agoraphobia when they feel trapped in life circumstances they feel they cannot escape from. This article reviews a book chapter from "Freedom from Agoraphobia" by Dr. Mark Eisenstadt.
Is Agoraphobia Genetic?
By :
Stephen Price
Discussion of evidence to suggest that agoraphobia may be partly genetic.
The Agoraphobia Family Environment
By :
Stephen Price
The agoraphobic, or high-anxious personality just described isn't all genetic. Some of it stems from a person’s family environment. The following elements or occurences within an individual’s family contribute to the development of a high-anxious personality.
The Agoraphobia Mindset
By :
Stephen Price
This article describes 10 irrational thought patterns that contribute to agoraphobia, anxiety, and panic
The Agoraphobia Mindset: Black-or-White Thinking
By :
Stephen Price
Most people with agoraphobia engage in black-or-white thinking. Black-or-white thinking (also called all-or-nothing thinking) is viewing everything in terms of absolutes or extremes. Things are either right or wrong, good or bad, with no in between.
The Agoraphobia Mindset: Catastrophic Thinking
By :
Stephen Price
Catastrophic thinking is a type of thinking done by many people with agoraphobia that contributes to the disorder. Catastrophic thinking is blowing negative events or feelings way out of proportion. It is turning small mistakes or minor setbacks into major catastrophes through exaggerated thinking.
The Agoraphobia Mindset: Emotional Reasoning
By :
Stephen Price
People with agoraphobia often engage in a type of distorted thinking called emotional reasoning. For people with agoraphobia, emotional reasoning often complements overgeneralizing and plays a key role in the development of agoraphobia.
The Agoraphobia Mindset: Fatalistic Thinking
By :
Stephen Price
People with agoraphobia often engage in fatalistic thinking. Fatalistic thinking is thinking of yourself as powerless to make choices or affect the outcomes of your own life.
The Agoraphobia Mindset: Holding Rigid Expectations
By :
Stephen Price
People with agoraphobia often hold rigid expectations. Holding rigid expectations is thinking of personal preferences, wants, or choices in terms of absolute rules. Rigid expectations are usually expressed with words like “should,” “ought to,” “have to,” and “must.”
The Agoraphobia Mindset: Magnifying the Negative
By :
Stephen Price
Magnifying the negative ia a type of thinking practiced by people with agoraphobia that is a close cousin of black-or-white thinking. Magnifying the negative means dwelling on the negative aspects of something and making it seem much larger than the positive aspects. You will often hear people with agoraphobia who think this way making statement that start with "yeah, but."
The Agoraphobia Mindset: Negative Mind Reading
By :
Stephen Price
People with agoraphobia often engage in a type of faulty thinking called negative mind-reading. Negative mind reading is assuming that other people are thinking and feeling negative things about you without any real evidence to support your assumption.
The Agoraphobia Mindset: Overgeneralization
By :
Stephen Price
People with agoraphobia tend to overgeneralize, especially when it comes to negative situations or events. Overgeneralizing means assuming something that happened one time in one place or situation (usually a negative event) will continue to happen in all places and situations.
The Agoraphobia Mindset: Personalizing
By :
Stephen Price
Personalizing is a type of faulty thinking practiced by people with agoraphobia. Personalizing is assuming the blame for something that you might have influenced but was not totally under your control. This leads to anxiety that comes from feeling too responsible for other people’s emotions, decisions, or behavior.
The Agoraphobia Personality
By :
Stephen Price
People with agoraphobia (and other anxiety disorders) are likely to exhibit the high-anxious personality traits discussed in this article.
Why Some People Are More Prone to Agoraphobia and Panic Attacks
By :
Stephen Price
Physical differences have been observed among people who are prone to panic attacks or develop agoraphobia and panic disorders. The following are descriptions of these physical differences.
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