Three million Australians suffer from anxiety, but many of them have no idea.
There’s a 1 in 4 chance that you will suffer from an anxiety disorder throughout your life. 26%, to be precise. And according to Beyond Blue, you might not know you have it. A new study says that thousands of people don’t seek treatment for anxiety because they fob off their symptoms as personality flaws, stress, or a normal amount of worry.
It can be very difficult to spot and capture a mental illness. But just like sadness isn’t depression, worrying isn’t an anxiety disorder. There’s an important difference.
Let me try and demonstrate.
Picture the last time you panicked. Not just a fleeting worry; I mean real, palpable panic.
Maybe you slumped onto cold bathroom tiles and sobbed. Maybe you pulled over at the side of the road, banged your head on the steering wheel, and filled the inside of your car with weird screams. Hell, maybe you locked yourself in the stationary cupboard at work and blasted Blink 182 music to muffle the sound of your yelling.
Whatever the setting, I bet you were alone. We tend to isolate ourselves when we’re in panic.
Now, try and remember the reason you panicked. Could have been anything: work stress, impending deadlines, tamtruming children, a fight with someone you love, bad traffic, major life decisions, total exhaustion.
Whatever the reason, there’s great relief in having one. Once you put panic in context, it’s not so lonely – there are bosses and co-workers and screaming children who can legitimise your feeling of anxiety. There’s a clear link between an event and a feeling, and that’s comforting.