Anxiety: must be a cure?

I have had anxiety for most of my life, but it did not become disabling until around the age of 14/15. The anxiety takes the form of OCD (checking oven/lights and other appliances to make sure they are off, washing hands, fears around getting ill, and losing control); hypochondria (over-preoccupation with the body, interpreting tiny aches as signs of serious disease, which then brings on panic, hyperventilation, tension, and a feeling of dread, hyper-vigilance and a need to escape. The anxiety and bodily tension always disappears when I reach my home; mild agorophobia, brought on by the aforementioned hypochondria and panic  -it is easier to stay at home and not to venture too far away from familiar places.

I also have specific phobias: thunderstorms, dogs, lifts, crowds etc.

I am fed up with the anxiety. It stops me sleeping and relaxing, living life to the full, venturing too far from home, and generally prevents me from enjoying life.

I have tried CBT - it has not worked. I see a support worker 15 hours a week, and she has been invaluable in helping me to become more flexible with what I eat (due to contamination fears), and helping me to shop and cope better with crowds. But the extreme inner anxiety is still there, and it is making me unhappy. I have had CBT two times, to no avail. Is there no hope? What do I do? I have tried a short course of physiotherapy, which helped a bit, but the effects did not last.

I do not smoke, and  I eat a very healthy/balanced diet.

Parents
  • Have those that have administered your CBT, physio, and other therapies, had a good working understanding of Asperger's and other Autistic Spectrum Conditions?

    From what I've heard and read, this is really important, because therapies aimed at neurotypicals often don't work for those on the spectrum, and instead have to be tailored to cater for our different ways of processing sensory, psychological, and intellectual information.

Reply
  • Have those that have administered your CBT, physio, and other therapies, had a good working understanding of Asperger's and other Autistic Spectrum Conditions?

    From what I've heard and read, this is really important, because therapies aimed at neurotypicals often don't work for those on the spectrum, and instead have to be tailored to cater for our different ways of processing sensory, psychological, and intellectual information.

Children
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