Does your anxieties many times turn into obsessive thinking?

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Does your social anxieties many times turn into obsessive thinking?
yes. 96%  96%  [ 50 ]
no 4%  4%  [ 2 ]
Total votes : 52

Bella1
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04 Sep 2008, 2:00 pm

Yes. I try to get out of my head when it starts interfering with my life like that... listen on music, read a book, focus on something happening around me. Doesn't always work, but it's better to try than make myself numb and detached...



Jellybean
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04 Sep 2008, 2:19 pm

Someone in my apartment threw up yesterday (we have seperate rooms) and I spent the whole day completely convinced that I was coated in germs and that I was going to end up sick too. I nearly made myself sick with the worry! To make things worse, she didn't have a bug anyway, she is fine today! I know what it is like to obsess, the same thought just goes round and round and you just want to bang your head and get rid of them! :wall:


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Aurore
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04 Sep 2008, 2:29 pm

Yes, which is how I ended up anorexic.


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aspergian_mutant
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04 Sep 2008, 9:20 pm

Wow, still going, not one negative vote.........
Anxieties suck don't they?
I wish I had an off button for them.
I think much of them is natures way of a built in survival trait.
keeps us watchful and alert, but we got an extra big helping of them.
and the obsessiveness that comes with it is a way to help us overcome the issues with much thought.
but in modern day times it can turn into more of a pain then a help.



x_amount_of_words
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04 Sep 2008, 9:28 pm

Most things that make me anxious turn to obsessions. It's usually worse when it's some kind of social anxiety. I sometimes stay up all night worrying/obsessing about the same thing. The only way I can really resolve it is to face whatever problem I have and get it over with. If that's not possible, I just avoid it or find ways to forget about it.


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patternist
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04 Sep 2008, 9:48 pm

I am suprised too, not one negative. I have let worries keep me up for days trying to get away from a problem, approach from another angle whatever, no success. It's like I was born without the human defense mechanism of controlled escapism.



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04 Sep 2008, 10:28 pm

Aside from constant worrying that I will never get accepted into veternary college, I only obsess on things I love.



zeichner
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21 Sep 2008, 8:38 am

Bella1 wrote:
Yes. I try to get out of my head when it starts interfering with my life like that... listen on music, read a book, focus on something happening around me. Doesn't always work, but it's better to try than make myself numb and detached...


Yes - absolutely!! ! I've learned to recognize those times just before I start to obsess - and I have a "theme song" that I can sing to myself (it used to be "I'm Gonna Soothe You" by Maria McKee, but now it's "Better Version of Me" by Fiona Apple.) And iTunes has been a godsend, since I can make playlists that are designed to pull my focus away from the "bad place." (Thankfully, I can listen at work.)


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Last edited by zeichner on 21 Sep 2008, 9:06 am, edited 1 time in total.

ooOoOoOAnaOoOoOoo
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21 Sep 2008, 9:00 am

If I feel like someone is out to get me I obsess on it and end up ranting and raving at whomever will listen. This is one possible unpleasant part of having AS. I don't know if all Aspies experience this, I certainly do. It's kind of like a meltdown only it involves obsessing one something and lecturing. I do it when stressed out.
I wonder if others with AS share this, just don't post about it on here? It's not all fun and games.



chtucker18
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21 Sep 2008, 9:54 am

yea most of the time it does, it has ruined things.



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21 Sep 2008, 10:35 am

I always have poblems, I used to think. It's like when you solved one you create a new one, people tell me. As if I want to suffer. But I realise that it is that I can't sit still until something is off my mind.

I can be happy one moment and something surfaces that makes me anxious and there you go...something new to worry about popped up and my day is spoiled, sometimes I think about it for weeks on end, the same goes for arguments with people, I can't get my head around it to forget about what a person has said.


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Danielismyname
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21 Sep 2008, 10:52 am

Yep.



chocoholic
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21 Sep 2008, 4:55 pm

Yes, and the only way to relieve it is to find a solution to the problem. I have great difficulty taking my mind off of it and distracting myself with another activity. I must have a clear solution or resolution for any problem, and I completely obsess over it until I have that closure. Not a pleasant thing, that's for sure.



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21 Sep 2008, 5:54 pm

Yes, all the time. Then I have to google and research it all I can. Then I get a knotted stomach from worry, and I can't concentrate, and I make myself ill over it. I try to distract myself with music or TV (which I hate normally) or a book or going for a coffee with a friend or something, but it never works. I just try and get things over quickly so they can't panic me for too long these days. It's the anxieties without a finite time limit that are the worst - if you've no idea when they'll spring up and when they'll end it's just horrible.

I find myself more and more worried about life in general these days. Just a generalised anxiety. It's rough.


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21 Sep 2008, 7:26 pm

I find myself constantly having to check the door to the cat room so the cats don't escape.