Social Phobias Center

Understanding and Overcoming Social Phobia

My doctor prescribed me Vyvanse for my ADHD (inattentive type).
I believe I have hypomania, social anxiety disorder, and occasional depression also. I’m not to the point where I will ask a doctor about it, but I’m looking into OTC treatments. social phobia is usually treated with SSRI antidepressants. Hypomania is usually treated with lithium or mood stabilizers. SSRIs will make Hypomania worse.

I am considering starting myself on some lithium orotate and st. john’s wort extract. The lithium orotate is an OTC version of what they give bipolar and hypomania people. (Some say lithium orotate helps ADHD) St. John’s Wort will give me more serotonin which should help with the social phobia. Anti-anxiety medications sometimes are prescribed for social anxiety disorder people too, so I could substitute l-theanine or kava for that.

Your thoughts?

Also, I believe I also have a condition (i forget the name) where I believe I have a bunch of other mental conditions. That too is treated with SSRIs.

Hypomania/depression cycles are known as Cyclothymic Disorder. I’m wondering why you’re not being honest to your prescribing doctor about the full range of your symptoms.

My thoughts:

Yes, SSRIs can turn your highs into mania, but so can St. John’s Wort! I wouldn’t touch it if I were you. I’m sure you don’t want all your productive time turning into a psychotic episode.

Lithium can be highly toxic at levels barely beyond the therapeutic level, so be very careful about self-medicating with any form of it. How are you going to know what your blood levels are? Kava can be dangerous to the liver in the form it is commonly available in. You probably know all this already.

If you believe you have all these mental conditions, why are you not talking with a professional about them?

I have applied for disability 3 months ago for bipolar 1, PTSD, panic disorder with agoraphobia and social phobia, and avoidant personality disorder, and just got a letter yesterday that they want me to see one of their doctors for an exam. I already see my psychiatrist once a month and my psyD therapist twice a week, but I have only been diagnosed fully for a year by a GP and only being seeing specialists for about 3-4 months (though I have been struggling all my life and misdiagnosed severe depression and total loser for 15 years)….I just want to know what kind of exam/testing to expect, as I am VERY nervous.

Get a job lazy.

This is a video about the mental diseases i have had or dealt with in the past. Again, the main one im dealing with currently is social phobia so its obviously the most apparent one in the video. The song is Breathe me by Sia. Feel free to comment, rate, and subscribe :)

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i have been diagnosed with epilepsy, borderline personality disorder, bipolar, social and agora phobia. was wondering how phenobarbital would react with these problems especially the bipolar?

First of all you say nothing about what medications you are taking for all your other conditions, but the first line of defense is making sure that IF you are going to more than one doctor, that you TELL ALL YOUR DOCTORS exactly what you are taking and how much. The next thing you NEED to do is have ALL your prescriptions filled at one pharmacist. The pharmacist is the best person to monitor drug interactions. By far the pharmacist is most aware of what drugs together have the likely hood of being dangerous or even possibly could be dangerous. Any time you are on multiple medications it is very important to stay very informed and talk to both your doctors and pharmacist about what you are taking and for what. also it is vital to stay on the prescriptions as prescribed and at the right times. God Bless Reggie

My first time opening up about my struggle with bipolar disorder.

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I have been struggling with depression and anxiety issues for as long as I can remember, only I never received treatment until recently. These issues have become so great within the past 2 years that I have been unable to work a steady job or to be able to work at all. The only reason I never sought treatment before was because, when I was underage and was covered by my mother/father’s insurance, they didn’t believe I had any kind of depression issues, just wrote it off as teenage hormones. Once they finally realized that in fact, it wasn’t just hormones, and that I was really having these problems; their insurance no longer covered me (I was over 18 at that point). Ever since, I haven’t had any other kind of insurance and thought, "Well, without insurance I’m just shit out of luck." Until my friend told me about a clinic that would help me – free of charge. But that was only recently.
So anyways, point being – I was diagnosed (finally) with severe social anxiety/phobia and bipolar depression (manic episodes) and I was wondering if that would qualify enough to get approved for disability, with my clinic testimony?

you can try, but alot of times mental disabilities get rejected most of the time. i was lucky with mine…i got approved in less than 3 months. (adhd, schizo-affective, anxiety, depression). they’ll send you to see their psych for an eval since you don’t have a great medical history with it, and if you don’t "Seem" mentally ill, they say you are fine. (quotes because their definition of that is skewed…) good luck if you do…oooh, and,if you do qualify, you’d only get SSI since you haven’t worked the requirement…it’s money, but not enough to ever live on.

On Tuesday, November 18th my mother passed away leaving me with high depression levels. I don’t know how I’m going to be able to cope with this.

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well i have a best friend
she has social phobia and Bipolar Disorder
shes scared of going outside, because of all the bad memories she had.
Also she does not go to school, she use to love going to school, shes a very smart girl
but for some reason she just to fed up and stopped.
She sees as doctor and a therapist every week
and she tells me they don’t help her at all
the medicine she takes doesn’t help her.
i love my best friend and i don’t want to loose her in any way.
i talk to her every night just to make sure if shes ok and
well actually shes not getting any better.

How can i help my friend over come Social Phobia and Bipolar Disorder with a friends help??
well i have a best friend
she has Social Phobia and Bipolar Disorder
shes scared of going outside, because of all the bad memories she had.
Also she does not go to school, she use to love going to school, shes a very smart girl
but for some reason she just to fed up and stopped.
She sees as doctor and a therapist every week
and she tells me they don’t help her at all
the medicine she takes doesn’t help her.
i love my best friend and i don’t want to loose her in any way.
and she wants help from me and everyone els
i talk to her every night just to make sure if shes ok and
well actually shes not getting any better.

How can i help my friend over come Social Phobia and Bipolar Disorder with a friends help??

I just want to say you are the best friend she could ever wish for. I admire your concern for her.

I think you should help her find a different psychologist/psychiatrist. Some people take years to find the right one, so remember that they’re not all the same.

Good luck, keep up the good work, and i hope your friend recovers.

I have bipolar disorder and for those that have it….alot of other things come along with it such as personality disorders and other sometimes phobias. On the weekend I find myself trapped inside my bedroom till night fall and unable to leave because I’m scared of people. I don’t like being in public areas and is always concerned with what other people think. I want to find a new job but afraid I will fail because I’m not good at what I do. I know its all in my head but any techniques or personal techniques I can do to lower the anxiety I have.

I also have biplar disorder and have been through exactly what you are talking about—for a long time—and I know lots of biplars who have been through the same. The first thing you need to do is to find a competent psychiatrist who does have experience specific to bipolar and other mood disorders, because this illness is extremely complicated and now there are so many medications to choose from and other kinds of treatment opportunities that you want to make sure you are getting the absolute best care possible. The first thing, regarding the anxiety component, is to discuss and determine with your psychiatrist whether your anxiety is emotionally and perceptually based (we b/p do have a lot of that, because our illness makes our self-esteem go through lots of changes depending on whether we are baseline, going up, or going down, and since we are very often discriminated against and sometimes even harassed at jobs, etc., we often—with good cause—end up feeling like we are freaks, unworthy of love or life, or just plain trash. In their ideal forms, anxiety/fear/terror/flight-flight are life-saving, necessary tools of the mind and body if circumstances in the environment warrant their activity. Obviously, if you were standing in the road and suddenly a car comes down that road at one-hundred miles per hour and you don’t perceive any indication that it is going to stop or swerve out of your way—then the sudden abject terror that you feel will compel you to jump and run as fast as possible to get you out of danger’s way. However, if you are experiencing that same feeling but there is no car to run from and no other cause that can be dealt with—thus creating the conditions for the anxiety to stop—then it can be a living hell. Usually, that kind of sustained anxiety is from a biological cause, which is the next issue you and the psychiatrist must question. In bipolars anxiety can be part of a manic or depressive episode, a carry-over or solitary symptom between episodes, or result plainly from the same brain location and disorder development that causes the separate illness called anxiety disorder (or panic disorder). Unfortunately, bipolar disorder is so complex and yet so poorly understood, that it can affect many different areas of the brain simultaneously or from one to the other. Another possibility, going back to the emotional component, is that many bipolars come from families in which there are other mental illnesses that are evident—from clinical depression to alcohol/drug abuse, battering, emotional abuse, etc. That is often both the genetic and psychological heritage we are dealing with, so we often carry the behaviors and our emotional reactions to them in our minds and hearts and that distorts either our self-image and/or makes us mistrust the world because if our own families could be so cruel to us, then how could the world treat us any better?

A few years ago I developed a symptom of anxiety that was on the verge of terror and which affected me every minute of the day, every day, for about a year. This was, in that case, a pre-dromal symptom indicating that a clinically-diagnosable episode of bipolar depression was beginning to develop. When I eventually became so depressed and terrified of everything around me (leading to a suicide attempt) I was hospitalized and my prophylactic medication for depression was changed to a much more powerful antidepressant (while retaining my lithium and other meds as normally). As soon as the med got into my system and started working, the biting anxiety dissolved into nothing but an ugly memory. I would not wish that previous year on my worst enemy, and I am still surprised that I am alive to tell about it. Anyway, my reaction to the new med showed conclusively that the anxiety was from a biological basis, and happily I was now already on an effective treatment for it and the other symptoms of the depression.

There is a somewhat new talk therapy technique that seem to be the hot thing of the moment among psychiatrists and shrinks, called “Cognitive Therapy”. It is very popular right now as the talk-therapy component for bipolars and borderline personality disorder patients. It basically retrains the patient to investigate their perceptions, thoughts, and feelings (emotional reactions, whether to a real or simply perceived issue) about themselves, their relationships, and the world around them so that they can end up with a truly clear perception of what is going on inside and around them so that they don’t stay caught up in thinking that people are against them because their mother was during childhood or their father was always working and never around to say he loved them, and even to much more painful and devastating experiences and events. At the very least, staying calmer and being more content and “happy” by not driving ourselves crazy with unfounded fantasies and emotional reactions to people around us, fears for the future, etc., will help to avoid our inadvertently triggering ourselves into episodic symptoms and also help us stay away from things like alcohol, pot, narcotics, etc., that can and do have a profoundly devastating effect on our brain chemistry since we are already dealing with over- and under production of the same chemicals that are stimulated by those as well as make us act in ways that are not in our best interests emotionally or materially.

When I was young I could barely buy a doughnut. I would sit in the car for an hour rehearsing what I was going to ask for, recounting the money I planned to use (and it had better be very close to how much it cost so they wouldn’t have to make a lot of change), and when I finally did work-up the nerve to get out of the car and walk into the donought store I was so terrified I could barely walk, and when it was my turn at the counter I could barely say loud enough what I wanted and I was stammering so much that I had to repeat what I wanted about four times anyway. Looking back, I am aware that such fear and anxiety was due to a combination of biological and emotional causes, but I would not let myself become a hermit—and god knows I needed to have my donought. So, I pushed myself over and over and over again, often in tears and wishing I were dead, etc., because it was just so painful.

In your case, along with determing the actual cause(s) with a good psychiatrist, I would recommend a daily activity that shows to your subconscious and waking mind that you won’t settle for anything less than a rich, full, happy life, and that nothing is going to stand in the way of that. For example, for a week every day get dressed and hang out in front of your house or in a nearby, safe location if you are in an apartment building where it would make you look creepy to be just standing in front of. Then the next week every day go down the corner and walk back home. Then the next week every day walk a couple of blocks then walk back home. Extend your distance each week, repeating that every day of that week, until you can go out for a nice stroll every day and be very clear with yourself that you will, unless because of very bizarre circumstances, be just fine, have a good time, get some fresh air, and just plain feel good.

Regarding looking for work, you need to honestly and completely assess your true skills and your true shortcomings and decide where and what kind of job you want to look for. A lot of agencies have job-training, on-the-job development, housing help, life skill training, etc., that can be very helpful and even the “missing link” for a lot of us, since they know at least by education what we are going through and what we really need in order to grow and thrive. Find what you can in that aspect and make sure you take full advantage. Look up NAMI and other mental health websites to determine what is in your area. If you still don’t get enough info from that, call up local hospitals and ask to speak with a social worker or someone who can tell you what is being offered in your area and how to go about getting what you need from it.

Above all, be kind to yourself. Who you are is not determined by any illness, you have as much right to a good, fun life as anyone else, and even if you have to work much harder for it than some, you do have what it takes to do that, and in the long run

GOOD LUCK! HANG IN THERE!!!

Me living with Social Anxiety. I have a tendency to talk quiet so you may need to turn your volume up.

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