RLR
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Okay, Martin. Part of the process is to utilize introspection and stand up to yourself regarding your true feelings. By example:
"I'm scared something is wrong now that I had that attack out of the blue and I'm having palps everyday. ARGH!!"
That statement is a true characterization. By contrast, the following and subsequent statement by you is not:
"I KNOW they won't hurt me."
It's very natural to practice denial, but it does little if anything to induce progress from where you presently exist to where you wish to be in respect to the matter. Listen, my friend; I'm in my 88th year of life and I've spent most of those years as a physician and specialist, albeit retired at this point in my journey. I've observed the full spectrum of strategies employed by persons afflicted with the difficulty that you and others on this forum are plagued by with relentless unpredictability. Methods of distraction, avoidance, denial, compensation and a host of other practices unfortunately all fall back to earth, defeated with a resounding thud, no pun intended.
The point is that I'm expressing the direction needed to proceed in order to actually overcome the circumstances, but it is seldom heeded because it requires a change in patterns that are largely habitual in nature and regardless of the negative consequences being produced, is avoided for fear of irreversibly making matters worse.
You must unavoidably come to the realization that the sentiments being expressed in your postings are very recognizable as the very same patterns in others who suffer with palpitations and other bothersome physiological manifestations that arise pursuant to anxiety and stress. None of these events pose a risk to your heart or health in general. You are misinterpreting these physiological manifestations as symptoms of an underlying physical problem and the subsequent fear that such a belief induces, is the actual cause for the problem. It's akin to continuously spraying yourself with a water hose and developing a belief that at some point, you'll become dry.
Your failure to understand the actual problem, moreover coming to believe and trust in the actual source of the problem, is actually the very source of your difficulty. Hating the fact that the problem exists does very little, if anything to instrument change in your favor. By example, many people hate traffic jams with a vengence, yet they follow suit each and every day by entering the highway at the same point in time, using the same route and habits in order to reach their destination. They continue to complain, while seldomly examining the causal factors for the predicament and how to instrument change.
The very same patterns exist here. Surely you realize that the approach you are employing not only holds no positive influence or change, but rather constitutes the very same caliber of strategy and thought patterns which likely have induced the original problem.
I'm here to tell you that the palpitations indeed frighten you very much and there is a momentary pause by you when they occur in efforts to anticipate any imminent event, or the question of whether they are going to subside or grow worse. You believe that they hold the capacity to induce interference with the heart's performance, very possibly to the extent of a sudden cardiac event. Your frustration and even anger is intensifying because it is steadily stripping you of your normal state of self-confidence and making you feel vulnerable with no ability to avoid or resolve the circumstances. Those beliefs are structured in an irrational framework. It is the fear being produced by erroneous conjecture that is establishing their firm presence in your life.
Now you can continue to confront the matter in your own way as long as you choose to do so. My presence here is merely to light the pathway for you to realize the error you are committing and the resistance to facts that can't be ignored. It is your choice, but I might suggest that you seek out several members who once stood at the very point you now experience and have subsequently moved on with their lives without even the slightest negative consequence.
There are just as many others who have taken positive steps in this direction as well. Again, I'm merely here to point the direction and offer insight with respect to the problem. It is your responsibility to develop and employ the necessary introspection to recognize and acknowledge the errors in your presumptions in order to produce the desired change.
Best regards,
Rutheford Rane, MD (ret.)
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