How to Overcome Agoraphobia

How to Overcome Agoraphobia

Agoraphobia is a type of anxiety disorder and involves being afraid of certain places and situations that make you feel trapped. Along with a fear of feeling or being trapped, agoraphobia includes a fear of helplessness and embarrassment in public situations when a panic attack may occur. If you would like to know how to overcome agoraphobia this article should provide some valuable information.

How to Overcome Agoraphobia

How to overcome your agoraphobia

While it can vary for everyone, triggers of agoraphobia include airplanes or the use of public transportation, being in closed or open spaces, being in a line at a store, and crowds.

Agoraphobia is not necessarily the fear of the specific place but rather the fear that if something were to happen, escape would be difficult. People with agoraphobia frequently experience anxiety about the potential of having a panic attack in public.

Coping with agoraphobia can be difficult. It often leads people to avoid going in public at all, especially in areas where there are crowds. Learning how to overcome agoraphobia can also be a challenging process because it usually requires confronting fears.

While people may look for how to overcome agoraphobia fast, it’s not an overnight process. With a combination of medication and psychotherapy, it’s possible to improve your quality of life when you have this anxiety-related disorder.

Tips on how to overcome agoraphobia

1. Practice Systemic Desensitization

Systemic desensitization for agoraphobia is one option that may help you. Systemic sensitization therapy involves being less sensitive to stimuli that produce anxiety. You work toward your goals in a step-by-step process.

Someone doing desensitization therapy might begin with one tiny step and then they gradually move toward confronting situations that cause greater levels of anxiety.

As someone is doing systemic desensitization, it’s recommended they remember the five Rs:

  • React
  • Retreat
  • Relax
  • Recover
  • Repeat

Doing desensitization therapy will typically include relying on someone else for support. As it is a gradual process, it’s important to be patient with yourself.

2. Implement Coping Skills

There are various other coping skills for agoraphobia that you can practice. It may take some experimenting to find the coping strategies that work best for you.

You can create a formalized anxiety plan that indicates how to cope with agoraphobia and outlines how you’ll deal with specific situations as they arise. Some ways people successfully cope with agoraphobia include:

  • Breathing exercises, which is a specific example in which you work on slowing your breathing when you’re in situations where you experience panic or anxiety
  • Progressive muscle relaxation, which is a systemic way to physically release tension in your body
  • Helpful thinking, which focuses on changing how you talk to yourself

It’s important not to turn to unhealthy coping mechanisms if you have agoraphobia. This could include using substances like alcohol or isolating yourself from society.

How to Overcome Agoraphobia

3. Stress-Management Relaxation Techniques

Some of the stress-management relaxation techniques you might consider are similar to the coping mechanisms named above, and there are others as well.

Making a plan for handling anxiety-evoking situations can help. Your plan can outline the specific relaxation techniques you will use in different possible scenarios. Some people also find that meditation and mindfulness help them manage their stress and relax when they are in distressing or uncomfortable situations. Being physically active can be beneficial, as can busying your hands with something such as crafting.

4. Address Underlying Issues

Even when you practice ways to deal with the symptoms of agoraphobia, it’s still important to recognize and deal with the underlying factors that contribute to it. The underlying causes of agoraphobia can stem from a variety of factors. Some of the possible agoraphobia causes include:

  • Environmental stress
  • Having a panic disorder or other phobias
  • Childhood and learning experiences
  • Trauma, abuse or stressful life events
  • Having an anxious temperament
  • Having a close relative with agoraphobia
  • Differences in parts of the brain that control anxiety and fear responses

So, what triggers agoraphobia? The answer is that agoraphobia can manifest differently for every person. As you go through therapy for agoraphobia, you are likely to work on the underlying issues that lead to the condition. With appropriate treatment, if you do encounter triggers, you will have more control over your response.

5. Seek Professional Help

Agoraphobia is a serious mental health condition, and it can significantly impact a person’s life without treatment. Without agoraphobia treatment, complications can include:

  • Depression
  • Substance abuse
  • The development of other mental health disorders
  • Problems at school or work
  • Difficulty with relationships
  • The inability to leave home

Even though there are measures you can take on your own, seeking agoraphobia help from a professional can create significant improvements in symptoms and overall quality of life.

Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is one of the most common forms of psychotherapy used to treat agoraphobia. One specific type of CBT, exposure therapy, is especially helpful in treating phobias. Along with therapy, medications such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), may be used as part of a comprehensive treatment plan.

If you’re struggling with agoraphobia or other anxiety disorders, contact me now to learn more about treatment programmes in London.

author avatar
Jason Demant Clinical Hypnotherapist
London hypnotherapist, seeing clients in King's Cross and online. Diploma in clinical hypnotherapy, counselling and Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) from Life Matters Training College, based on Harley Street, London. Fully insured and a validated practitioner of the General Hypnotherapy Standards Council and member of the General Hypnotherapy Register.

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