Worry and panic

I was chatting with someone the other day about this issue. In came up in regards to someone they know is who dealing with an overwhelming change in their life. The constant worry and fear of what’s going to happen has overwhelmed them to the point where they don’t eat, sleep or do much of anything. It sounded so familiar and the answer seems so obvious, but it can be one of the hardest things to learn to do.

Of course, the answer is similar to the way you handle a huge project at work. You work on, and worry about, one piece at a time. You don’t finish all the various parts of a project at once, you work on part, finish it, work on another part, etc. Yet, when it comes to our personal lives, this is exactly what we try to do.


We drive ourselves to distraction worrying about things that we have no power to work on! When I was suffering from depression, this is exactly what I did. I spent so much mental energy worrying, and being afraid of everything, that eventually I didn’t have the energy to get out of bed, go to work, or take care of myself in any way. That is the sickness.

It took years of therapy and anti-depressants, but eventually I learned to live life the way I approach work. When I’m faced with major changes, or just every day fears, I do what I can do, and don’t worry about what I can’t. The trick is to identify what you can do.

So, when you’re faced with being unemployed, for example, you do what you can do. You come up with a plan to look for a new job. You read books on job search techniques and get in contact with anyone who might be able to help you find a job. You start budgeting your money better and eliminating unnecessary expenses. You don’t spend a lot of time worrying about the national unemployment rate, the state of the economy or what your neighbors are thinking about you. That’s wasted energy, because you can’t do anything about those things. They are what they are, and they are going to be what they’re going to be, whether you worry about them or not. So why bother?

Remember your goal is to find a new job. That is the part you have to work on, so work on it. Don’t try to take on the big picture of how this might affect your plans to buy a house in “X” years, or start a family, or save for your kid’s college. Until you find a job, none of those things can be worked on. When it’s time to work on those things, you’ll work on them, but until then, don’t.

This might seem a bit cold, and calculated, for some of you, and to some degree it is. I’m not advocating a non-emotional state of Mr. Spock-like logical living. That’s not healthy either. What I am advocating is living in the now, dealing with today’s problems. When you are faced with climbing a flight of stairs, you don’t worry about climbing all 10 steps. You step on the first step, then the second, and so on. Eventually, you get to the top, but not without working on each step on the way, one at a time.

Similar Posts

  • Quick Thought #13 – More Trauma Makes More Problems More Likely, and This is Trauma

    All of the caveats aside about ACE scores that I’ve written about before, (tl;dr – Yes the more childhood traumas you’ve had, the more likely you will deal with various issues as an adult, but it’s not a set fate for everyone.) I think we can, however, accept that children who dealt with more traumatic…

  • Description of depression

    Natalie wrote about the way depression affects her on her blog the other day. As I was reading it, well it was all too familiar, ya’ know? This part, in particular: “In my depressions (and I’m only talking about myself here – want to get that disclaimer out there so as to avoid offending anyone…

  • Conversion Disorder

    I was just listening to the latest In The Trenches podcast. It’s normally a techie podcast but today Kevin had a nice interview with David Newberger, who spent quite a bit of time dealing with health issues that the doctor’s couldn’t diagnose. Turns out he was suffering from Conversion Disorder, which is where he developed…

  • |

    Why I Took Part in the AFSP Virtual Overnight Event

    It was the stories. It was all of those people doing this in memory of someone they lost. Or, like me, in memory of the fact that we are still here instead of leaving others to tell our stories. In our day to day lives, it’s too easy to forget how many people are impacted by suicide each and every year across the country, and the world. The further in time I get away from that time in my own life, the easier it can be to put it behind me and forget about it. But, that is something I never want to do. As painful as it is, I want to remember what it was like to no longer want to be alive. When someone is in that place, I want to be able to say, “I’ve been where you are”, to recall all of the details, and be able to sit and understand. Because that is how we save people. Not by talking in hushed tones about depression, or mental illness, but by sharing the stories of people who survived and healed, and of those we’ve lost.

    Let’s face it, if you spend much time considering those losses, and listening to those stories, it is impossible to walk away without realizing that we have lost a devastating number of people to this disease. Many more than some of the diseases we all gladly talk openly about every day. Yet somehow, maybe because we don’t understand it, or are afraid of it, we keep silent. After all, it might make someone uncomfortable. Even I have, at times, kept the details to myself in fear of making other people uncomfortable, or risk having them worry about me. The more I read and heard these stories though, the more I realized that I needed to share my story, if only so that anyone who reads it would know, and maybe even understand a little bit, what it’s like to be so far down into the darkness of depression, that you don’t want to live any longer. So, with that said, let me share my experience with you, now that it’s been some 25 years, and maybe now people won’t worry so much about me. (Warning, this is about to get dark, and we will talk a bit about suicide, though I will keep those exact details out)

  • The One Constant

    I wrote this in an email the other day and after reading it again in the reply something about it struck me. I didn’t mean for it to be a deep philosophical statement, but it sort of is. (I’m blaming the lack of caffeine). “The one constant in life is change” I realized in reading…

  • Ways to Reduce Stress

    One of the causes of depression can be a either an unhealthy amount of, or an inability to cope with, stress. So, naturally when I spotted a post on LifeHacker about reducing stress, I had to click over through to the full article on 52 ways to reduce stress. There are some very good ideas…

One Comment

  1. Good advice..

    Not many of us realize this, but its recently been discovered that living with constant uncontrollable stress damages your brain permanently. (the hippocampus, to be specific)

    This is caused by cortisol, a stress hormone.

    This can have the effect of ruining your short term memory, causing depression.. and causing dementia to occur much earlier in life..

    See http://www.workhealth.org/2005%20ICOH/ICOH%20final%20program.html

    and more generally
    http://www.workhealth.org

    for some of the latest findings on this..

    We need to reduce our stress levels, or it will hurt us – seriously..

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)