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Under Category: Stress Management, Anxiety Disorder

Stress is a common experience. We may feel stress when we are very busy, have important deadlines to meet, or have too little time to finish all of our tasks.
Your body or your emotions will let you know.
Difficulty in concentrating or remembering Feel tired without any reason

  • Anxious thoughts
  • Have headaches or an unexplained back pain
  • Eat a lot more or a lot less than you usually do
  • Have trouble sleeping
  • Have more colds than usual
  • Suddenly have flashes of anger or fight more with your family members and friends
  • Let little things bother you
  • Feel sad, moody, and lonely
  • Have trouble thinking as clearly as you usually do

Stress can also change outward behaviors. Teeth clenching, hand wringing, pacing, nail biting, and heavy breathing are common signs of stress. If you answered "yes" to any of these questions, you may be stressed out.





Under Category: Depression, Stress Management, Anxiety Disorders


Often many physical & mental changes occur in college student’s life. The life changes that occur during your college years can trigger serious depression. At this vulnerable time, the best thing you can do is to seek help. If your feelings of constant stress and sadness go on for weeks or months, you may be experiencing more than just difficulty adjusting to life’s changes.
Take following simple steps to eliminate depression in college life.

Plan your day Carefully
.
Make time every day to prioritize your work. Prioritizing can give you a sense of control over what you must do and a sense that you can do it.


Don’t expect too much.
Generally While studying in college student expect a lot, when couldn’t accomplish, get depressed. So expect less and accept reality.

Take good sleep.
Too many students defer doing important class work until nighttime, work through much of the night, and start every day feeling exhausted. Constant fatigue can be a critical trigger for depression. Seven or eight hours of sleep a night is important to your well-being.

Participate in extracurricular activity.
Sports, theater, fraternities and sororities, the student newspaper – whatever interests you – can bring opportunities to meet people interested in the same things you are, and these activities provide welcome change from class work.

Listen Music & Other Entertainment.

Listen music, watch movies read novel or other fictions also help you in dealing with depression.

Participate in Social Activities.

This may be a roommate or a friend from class. Friendships can help make a strange place feel more friendly and comfortable. Sharing your emotions reduces isolation and helps you realize that you are not alone.

Try relaxation methods.
These include meditation, deep breathing, warm baths, long walks, exercise – whatever you enjoy that lessens your feelings of stress and discomfort.

Take time for yourself every day.
Make special time for yourself – even if it’s only for 15 minutes a day. Focusing on yourself can be energizing and gives you a feeling of purpose and control over your life.

Work towards recovery.

The most important step in combating depression and reclaiming your college experience is to seek treatment. Your physician should communicate to you that remission of symptoms should be your goal and work with you to determine whether psychological counseling, medication or a combination of both treatments is needed.

Motivate yourself.

Every day motivate and energize yourself, feel fresh, confident & contented. Think in positive way and eliminate negative attitude.



Symptoms usually appear in adolescence and the disorder afflicts men and women equally. Although the disease itself may not be diagnosed for many years afterward.

The primary symptom is an overwhelming feeling of fatigue, together with sleep attacks that may occur with or without warning. Excessive sleepiness: an uncontrollable needs to sleep during the day.

Cataplexy
About 80 percent of narcolepsy cases are accompanied by cataplexy, a loss of muscle control that causes the person to collapse, often following a sudden surge of emotion, such as laughter or rage.

Sleep paralysis
More than 60 percent of narcoleptics experience sleep paralysis, an inability to move for one or two minutes even though fully conscious, which can induce an intense feeling of fear.

Hypnagogic hallucinations
Narcoleptics may also experience hypnagogic hallucinations, usually vivid, emotionally charged, and unpleasant visions, which occur at the onset of sleep or upon awakening.

Under Category: Sleep Disorder




Under Category: Sleep Disorder

People who suffer from a common sleep disorder are much more likely to have a road accident than other drivers, according to a study.A research team from Burgos, Spain, says that people with sleep apnoea - a condition that causes snoring and irregular breathing - are seven times more likely to crash than other drivers. Previous reports have shown that sufferers are only twice or three times as likely to have road accidents. The research comes as a UK poll shows that up to 11% of drivers admit to having fallen asleep at the wheel.
The throat temporarily closing during sleep causes sleep apnoea. The sleeper wakes violently because of a lack of oxygen. The condition, which is more common in overweight people, can cause extreme fatigue because many hours of sleep are lost. It can be identified only through monitoring the way people sleep.Screening The Spanish researchers studied 102 drivers who had been given emergency treatment for traffic accidents between April and December 1995.A random group of 152 patients was chosen as a control. The patients were screened for sleep apnoea at home. Other factors such as alcohol consumption, age, driving experience and use of drugs which cause drowsiness were taken into account.The researchers found that 4% of men and 2% of women in their study suffered from sleep apnoea.Writing in the New England Journal of Medicine, the researchers concluded: "There is a strong association between sleep apnoea...and the risk of traffic accidents."A 1988 study by the US National Commission on Sleep Disorders found that drowsiness was a factor in about half of all traffic accidents and 36% of fatal accidents.Tougher action In an accompanying editorial, Dr Paul Suratt of the University of Virginia Medical Centre and Dr Larry Findley of the Sleep Disorders Center of Northern Colorado call for tougher action on sleep disorders.They argue: "Because of the magnitude of the problem of traffic accidents related to sleep apnoea, all [US] states should enact rules to deal with drivers who have sleep apnoea and sleepiness in general."Pilots are already tested and the US government is considering whether to add sleep disorders to a two-year medical examination required for all interstate commercial drivers.However, few states take action against the average car driver.One that does is California which requires doctors to report anyone with a sleep disorder for assessment as to whether they are fit to drive.In the UK, 20% of road accidents which lead to death and serious injury are caused by drowsiness or sleep disorders, according to the Department of Transport, Environment and the Regions.Each fatal accident is estimated to cost the government �750,000.
A group of sleep disorder specialists are launching the British Sleep Foundation on Tuesday to raise awareness about the problem.They say the US puts around $88m into researching the problem, while the UK spends next to nothing.A recent Gallup survey showed that 11% of people admitted to having fallen asleep when driving.Some 2% of Britons are estimated to suffer from sleep apnoea and 10% from insomnia.Resourcebbc.co.uk

Suicide, intentional, self-inflicted death. It caused often because of hopelessness.
You’ll see Posts & Articles related to Suicide & Hopelessness.

This section contains posts & stories of sufferers. By reading these stories you can relate yourself to them.

Mood Disorders or Affective Disorders, mental illnesses characterized by disturbances in a person’s mood.
This Section contains informative articles.

Schizophrenia is the most chronic and disabling of the severe mental disorders, associated with abnormalities of brain structure and function, disorganized speech and behavior, delusions, and hallucinations. It is sometimes called a psychotic disorder or a psychosis.

This section contains Quiz & Other effective tools for mental health.

Depression or depressive disorders (unipolar depression) are mental illnesses characterized by a profound and persistent feeling of sadness or despair and/or a loss of interest in things that were once pleasurable. Disturbance in sleep, appetite, and mental processes are a common accompaniment.

Read symptoms, Causes, treatment and much more about Depression or depressive disorders.

Anxiety Disorders, mental illnesses in which a person experiences an abnormally high level of anxiety over a long period of time. Read about anxiety symptom, treatments, causes, antianxiety drugs and much more…

Stress (psychology), an unpleasant state of emotional and physiological arousal that people experience in situations that they perceive as dangerous or threatening to their well-being.
Read Tips & Articles to reduce & manage stress.

People who suffer from some mental illness such as stress have difficulty in falling or staying asleep.
This Section Contains Posts & Articles related to Sleep Disorders.

Personality Disorders, a disorder in which one’s personality results in personal distress or significantly impairs social or work functioning.
Here’s posts related to Personality Disorders.

Bipolar Disorder, mental illness in which a person’s mood alternates between extreme mania and depression.
Read Posts & Articles related to Bipolar Disorders.

Grief, emotional response to death or other loss of a loved one.
Read Posts & Tips to overcome Grief of Death and loss of loved ones

Mood Disorders or Affective Disorders, mental illnesses characterized by disturbances in a person’s mood.
This Section contains informative articles.

Eating Disorder, abnormal behavior patterns with regard to food, not including simple overindulgence and resulting obesity. Two serious eating disorders are anorexia nervosa and bulimia.

Read posts & articles to avoid Eating Disorders.

Suicide, intentional, self-inflicted death. It caused often because of hopelessness.
You’ll see Posts & Articles related to Suicide & Hopelessness.

Alzheimer’s Disease, progressive brain disorder that causes a gradual and irreversible decline in memory, language skills, perception of time and space, and, eventually, the ability to care for oneself.
Read Articles & Posts about Alzheimer’s disease.

Drugs introduced in the mid-1950s enabled many people who otherwise would have spent years in mental institutions to return to the community and live productive lives.

Mental Health & illness

This page shows what actually this Blog contains.

Contents of Site

Depression

Anxiety Disorder

Bipolar Disorder

Eating Disorder

Schizophrenia & Paranoia

Stress Management

Mood Disorders

Addiction & Recovery

Grief & Dying

Alzheimer's Disease

Sleep Disorder

Suicide & Hopelessness

Stories of & by Mentally ill People

Anti Depressant

Personality Disorders

Health Tools & Quiz

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