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Oct 19, 2016 20:12:54 GMT -5
Post by 🍁Searipple101🍁 on Oct 19, 2016 20:12:54 GMT -5
stuff, and I will give the most scientific answer I can. Because science.
Example:
Q- What causes anxiety?
A- Anxiety is caused by stress - whether physical, mental, or emotional - that causes the brain to release adrenaline into the blood stream. Because of this, your veins constrict while your heart beats faster. As a result, your hands and feet may become tingly feeling as blood has a harder time reaching them while it instead goes to the heart. Your breathing will also become more rapid to enrich all of that blood with oxygen so it may be delivered to the brain. Finally, blood is also diverted from the digestive system, as it is not needed at this time, which may cause nausea. Basically, anxiety is your brain reacting to stress in a way to prepare your body to fight or flee by supplying extra oxygen enriched blood to your heart and brain.
Note: Not all answers will be this long, or will possibly be longer.
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Oct 19, 2016 20:14:10 GMT -5
Post by Sour Candy on Oct 19, 2016 20:14:10 GMT -5
This is probably a dumb question but why the nugget do I even have an anxiety disorder (assuming science can tell me)
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Post by 🍁Searipple101🍁 on Oct 19, 2016 20:48:05 GMT -5
This is probably a dumb question but why the nugget do I even have an anxiety disorder (assuming science can tell me) Well my little candy corn, science cannot explain definitively why one person in particular has any sort of disorder, but it may happen to be due to a chemical imbalance in one's brain. This may be the case, allowing your brain to release adrenaline when it is not needed. Like, it is overreacting to a situation and finding it much more stressful than it needs to be. Another possibility is that you simply had an experience or experiences that your mind, probably on a subconscious level, found to be traumatic in a way, thus leaving room for your brain to rewire itself or develop in such a way that anxiety became a part of it, like, it found this(anxiety) to be the best way to handle certain situations for the safety of your body.
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Oct 19, 2016 20:49:27 GMT -5
Post by 🍁Searipple101🍁 on Oct 19, 2016 20:49:27 GMT -5
Hello, Mr. Kevin. It seems you fail to even comprehend the aspect of asking a question, though, I must say that what you have stated is pretty correct. Good show.
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Oct 19, 2016 20:57:08 GMT -5
Post by 🍁Searipple101🍁 on Oct 19, 2016 20:57:08 GMT -5
How does depression affect individuals? I'm depressed, and so is my sister. Thankfully, I'm not on meds, but she is. Does this mean I can handle fox-dung better than she? I'm curious to see your answer. Well, this is a tough one as depression tends to be quite different for whoever has it. It mostly depends on the type of character the person is naturally, behind the depression. If you're a particularly stubborn person then you may not be affected by it all that much, simply refusing to accept that you have it or to let it keep you down, for example. As an average person, depression affects people in a way to make them not only sad, but lacking in motivation to do even the smallest of tasks, irritable, or to feel nothing at all. Really, it depends on the individual, as everyone feels things in a different way and handles them differently. As for the second question, it's simply the same thing. it depends.
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Bleak
RN does not stand for Refreshments and Narcotics
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Post by Bleak on Oct 19, 2016 21:12:40 GMT -5
How does depression affect individuals? I'm depressed, and so is my sister. Thankfully, I'm not on meds, but she is. Does this mean I can handle fox-dung better than she? I'm curious to see your answer. Well, this is a tough one as depression tends to be quite different for whoever has it. It mostly depends on the type of character the person is naturally, behind the depression. If you're a particularly stubborn person then you may not be affected by it all that much, simply refusing to accept that you have it or to let it keep you down, for example. As an average person, depression affects people in a way to make them not only sad, but lacking in motivation to do even the smallest of tasks, irritable, or to feel nothing at all. Really, it depends on the individual, as everyone feels things in a different way and handles them differently. As for the second question, it's simply the same thing. it depends. You see, my sister is very, very stubborn when someone tells her to do something (she's 25) she flies off the hook and rants and raves....when someone asks her something simple. I think she might be bipolar? Because she is every changing in her moods (and I know there are more symptoms to bipolar , but I'm tired). She's irreatied by a lot of little things, whereas I tend to bottle everything up and then pop under the pressure. I hope all of that makes sense
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Oct 19, 2016 21:17:34 GMT -5
Post by 🍁Searipple101🍁 on Oct 19, 2016 21:17:34 GMT -5
It's possible she's bipolar, Bleak, or that's just her personality. Everything still depends. No one will ever truly understand how a mental disorder affects one person specifically, because they have their own unique way to handle it and of thinking, and there will never be a way to fully explain any of it. All we can do is get bits and pieces and pieces to try and understand and speculate.
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Oct 20, 2016 13:31:37 GMT -5
Post by 🍁Searipple101🍁 on Oct 20, 2016 13:31:37 GMT -5
bump
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