Infatuation Rules
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Divorce anxiety is the term given to the intense feelings of worry experienced when going through a divorce. As with any anxiety, it will include negative thoughts about the future, and an unpleasant physiological response.
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Read More »Divorce anxiety is the term given to the intense feelings of worry experienced when going through a divorce. As with any anxiety, it will include negative thoughts about the future, and an unpleasant physiological response. The words ‘negative’ and ‘unpleasant’ can sound a little trivial, and fail to capture the intensity of the experience. Divorce can be so uprooting, and leave someone feeling so unsafe and uncertain, that the body is in a constant state of high alert: tense muscles, quicker heartbeat, headaches, lump in the throat, faster breathing etc. Being in a constant state of threat leaves us unable to experience joy, as we feel overwhelmed by stress. We might find ourselves also irritable and snappy, with small things triggering an outburst of tears or anger. Our sleep and appetite might also be affected as the stream of worries prevent us from relaxing, and that lump in the throat means that the last thing we want is a big meal. Divorce anxiety is not a clinical term in itself; it is a term someone has come up with to capture the experience of going through a divorce. If you feel overwhelmed with your anxiety for a period of several weeks, and feel that you aren’t coping anymore, then you might be diagnosed with an anxiety disorder. By ‘not coping’, this might mean when you stop seeing people, stop going to work, have panic attacks or simply feel that there is a possibility of having a breakdown. If this is the case, your GP might offer you therapy or medication. My advice is definitely to take the therapy. Medication can be useful if you are having so much anxiety that you can’t do the things you need to. The therapy will help you mentally process the end of your relationship, the medication helps by possibly reducing the anxiety enough for this to happen.
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Read More »The reason why we focus so much on the moment is that it can help stop you from becoming overwhelmed by any situation. "Rather than thinking into the future about all that needs to get done, or judging yourself for past mistakes, you are simply focused on trying to make the present moment that little better. This approach is commonly known as mindfulness." Improving your present will also start to help bring into focus how you want your future to look. You might even draw or visualise what you want the future to look like. Once you have established what you want, and how to get there, you can start to feel a sense of purpose again, as we act towards a shared goal. Other research has shown that trying new things, or things you used to love and have given up (perhaps your visualising might have thrown up a few suggestions) is also a helpful way out of grief and into a better life. Finally, therapy is important, even if it is done in a group. There is so much to reflect on at the end of a marriage. You need to think about how you went from loving someone to the marriage ending. What you brought to the relationship (the good and the bad), as well as your partner. And if you are reading thinking that it is all their fault (even if they have had an affair), then I am afraid you still have some work to do. Divorce anxiety is difficult to bear. But, if you can avoid trying to shut it down, you will, one day, have benefitted from having used it as an opportunity to look at your life and make great changes.
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