How To Cure Anxiety
something you can do absolutely anywhere
at anytime
so subtle that no one around you will
even notice you doing
and you might be wondering just like I
did how can something so simple
really work and will that work for
anybody will work for you
as Anna revealed to me not only is the
secret behind her unique 62nd panic
solution based on cutting-edge science
it's been known to each in Chinese
medicine Buddhist monks
Indian yogis for thousands of years
because
as she explained there's a powerful
connection between your mind and body
specifically your thumb and index finger
and the most primitive part of your
brain that triggers your survival
instinct
people who practice body mind exercises
like
aged yogis have known this amazing
connection has existed for a long time
Anna said now scientific research is
catching up
in fact in a combined recent scientific
breakthroughs in fields such as embodied
cognition
and neurophysiology to create the core
principle behind the 62nd panic solution
a principal she calls neural activation
therapy
and what this means for you is that anna
has taken the best research
tested and proven in peer-reviewed
journals and turned it into practical
methods you don't need a scientist or
lab or a PhD to use for yourself today
because what Anna revealed is a simple
way to use your fingers
and the creative power up your mind to
literally d
activate certain parts of your brain
that are not needed at specific times
in this case the lizard brain that's
causing your panic attacks and high
levels of anxiety
the result I can tell you is almost
instead
you can literally switch off a scary
panic or anxiety attack in sixty Seconds
before it strikes in overpowers
the best part is the only thing you need
to make this technique work for you with
two fingers
and the ability to use your mind to
visualize the specific scenario that and
it will teach you
it's as simple as the imagination behind
a child's drawing
and when you combine these two parts and
as Nero activation therapy together
your mind and your body leaving your
panic or anxiety symptom seems
practically as easy as breathing
again you might say that neural
activation therapy is both
ancient and ahead of its time based on
principles known for thousands of years
been proven by the latest scientific
research and that's why
as Anna and I kept talking me in my
pajamas Anna thousands of miles away in
six hours ahead in our office in
Limerick Ireland
one thought kept coming back to me again
and again
if I could only share what I'm hearing
here with anyone else suffering with
panic and anxiety attacks
anyone who is as confused frightened and
frustrated as I
and that desire only grew stronger as
and I went beyond his 62nd technique and
showed me a simple step-by-step method
to completely eliminate panic and
anxiety for your life
for good in just 21 days so just to
recap
that sixty Seconds to stop your next
panic or anxiety attack in its tracks
before it starts
and three short weeks into you don't
even need to use the 62nd trick anymore
because your symptoms are gone forever
now if you've been suffering from panic
attacks or persistent anxiety
and nothing is work for you up until now
I wouldn't blame you a bit if you were
skeptical something
this simple could be anything more than
hocus-pocus yet the entire reason I put
this presentation together so I can
vouch for everything and a shared with
me on that late night phone call
and in the days and weeks after because
not only did I find myself
almost effortlessly banishing every
panic attack that came my way before it
to crush my self-confidence and ruin my
day
by the end of my first three weeks
following and his advice
it was as though my entire experience
with panic attacks had just been a bad
dream
just imagine this no matter how long you
felt the shadow of panic hanging over
you
ready to strike terror into your soul
like a bolt of lightning and leave you
powerless to do anything but let the
storm run its course
suddenly like being released from a
prison fear
you have freedom once again freedom from
stress and worry pain
an emotional suffering freedom to leave
your home and socialize with your
friends and family
freedom to go where you want and do what
you wish feeling safe and confident
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srzaf2o76UE
Michelle: On NYPD's response to nonviolent psychotic episode
Hi, my name's Michelle and I'm a social worker,
a licensed Masters social worker, graduated
from Columbia University. My family has mental
illness on both sides; my mother was a paranoid
schizophrenic and also suffered from alcoholism,
my grandmother on my dad's side also suffered
from mental illness. I myself suffer from
clinical depression. When I'm in a psychotic
moment it's called andquot;major depression with
psychotic features,andquot; and I had a crisis in
2011 on January 25th after not having taken
my medication for some time. I had a panic
attack and believed that my son had been wounded
and needed to get to the hospital, so I went
to the hospital in a cab, panicked that something
had happened to him. I was asked to leave
my cab but I told my cab driver that I was
waiting for someone to pay the cab fare for me
'cause I believed that someone was coming
to pay the cab fare-- didn't happen. The cab
driver called the police, the police responded.
We were standing in front of a hospital;
It was obvious that I was, for lack of better
words, delusional, and their response was
to arrest me, as opposed to--without reading
me my rights--rather than taking me in to
the emergency room to seek treatment; they
decided to take me to the precinct. They shackled
my hands...they put handcuffs on my hands,
and leg shackles on my feet, dragged me from
the police car into the precinct, they did
a search-and-frisk--what is it?--and frisked
me in front of the sergeant who was in front
of several men. Then they put me in a holding cell
kept me there for a couple of hours.
When I refused to have myself fingerprinted
and told them that they would have to do a
background check--again, a delusional moment,
because post-9/11 everybody has to go into
the computer once you're arrested, this is
my understanding now--and they decided that
they were going to take me to East Elmhurst
Hospital, as opposed to the hospital that
was just around the corner that they just
arrested me in front of. Why? Because I worked
at that hospital, so I guess they presumed
that the hospital would be biased in my favor... As opposed to taking me to the hospital,
they took me to the hospital that they felt
would give them, I believe--I'm speculating--a favorable or an unbiased report. This was
one of the most humiliating experiences of
my life. One, because I have always worked
well with police officers, I've always respected
their profession, my father himself was a
former police officer in his country, which
is kind of ironic...I just really think it's
sad that I was held in shackles for 36 hours
without any thought of how my mental illness
had impacted this whole situation. The fact
that, I speculate, in the NYPD's computers,
every time my name was in the computer for
responding to an incident where I was ill,
there were two suicide attempts where they
had come to my home, that they believed that
I was what they call andquot;730,andquot; which is the code
for a mentally ill person or an emotionally
disturbed person, they came there because
they wanted to assist me; in this situation,
they wanted to penalize me for being ill.
I think that the officers that I initially
encountered were more professional and had
some type of dealing with the situation in
the past, at least they were more sensitive,
or at least I was not in a state where I could
not function. I think that the combination
is dangerous not only for the mentally/emotionally
disturbed person, but for the police officers
also. I think that they need to have some
type of clinical training...there needs to
be a mobile crisis team where they, if necessary,
have to arrest, but that treatment should
be the emerging issue.
A suicide is no different than a psychotic incident in that an emerging
issue is something that puts life and limb
in danger. If a police officer were to respond,
it shouldn't be with a gun, 'cause a psychotic
person can't kill you unless they're armed.
The psychosis is killing them; it's a chemical
imbalance. And I think that the indignity
is that there are youth officers who respond
to youth and do youth interventions, you have
domestic violence officers who respond to
domestic violence incidents, and those incidents
have gone down because of their training and
because of their specialization, so if we
were to have mental health police officers
responding to mental health or what they call
andquot;730andquot;s or emotionally disturbed persons' episodes,
I think that there would be a greater response
in favor of the mentally ill person and there
would be a decrease in the violence that affects
not only the police officers, but the person
who's ill.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ZQ61VXnx2U
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