Patti's
Panic Place

My
Personal Story:
I always remember being anxious.
Growing up, everyone would simply say, "you are just a nervous
child." So life went on. 
I was raised, as many, in a
"dysfunctional" family. I had scary thoughts and bad
dreams. My father's alcoholism created chaos and additional feelings
of insecurities. As a teenager, I suffered from eating disorders,
bleeding stomach ulcer, irritable bowel problems. I began avoiding
situations where I could not come and go as I pleased; situations
where I couldn't be in control. High school was extremely hard. I
was absent a lot and I became very good at making excuses.
By age nineteen, I was out on my
own, controlling my anxious feelings with alcohol. I learned to cope
with everyday situations, working and socializing, by drinking.
I was working in a disco, when I was
21 and met my first husband, David. I got married, had my first
daughter, Lindsey, and moved into my home.
The marriage was not a good one. My
husband was very irresponsible and didn't like the "tied
down" feelings of being married and being a father. I was very
insecure. David lost it one night and punched me once and I ended up
in the hospital with a fractured nose. I had to have plastic surgery
to replace the bones in my nose. We divorced when I was 26.
As a single mother I felt more
insecure than ever before. Not only did I have myself to deal with,
but I had a child. I was scared and lost.
My World Becomes Smaller:
By this time in my life, I started
to avoid more-and-more places. I would wake up in the morning and
get Lindsey up and go to my parents. I only went places with my mom.
I'd go to the store and begin to feel dizzy and would leave and go
sit in the car. I stayed at my parent's house all day and,
reluctantly, would come home at night.
I increasingly started feeling more
out of control. I had my first full-blown panic attack while
shopping for asparagus with my parents and my daughter. I was in the
car and all of a sudden I felt this overwhelming urge to find my
parents and leave. When I got home, I felt better.
At this point, I stopped going to my
parent's house. I stayed home and for a period of time. I didn't
even leave my bedroom. My mom would come to my house and pick-up
Lindsey and take her to her house. I was so alone and frightened.
I saw programs about panic disorder.
I listened intently. They were describing what happened to me. There
was a name for what I had: "Agoraphobia".
However, I soon discovered that
knowing about the disorder didn't make it go away. And since I
didn't know where to turn for help, things didn't get any better. I
found doctors that prescribed a variety of tranquilizers, but they
made things worse. As a result, I decided to live with the anxiety
rather than the zombie fog of the tranquilizers.
Then I met my second husband, Clay.
He was a very needy person. Since I couldn't help myself, helping
him was my new project. It kept my mind off my problem.
I got pregnant with my second child.
Now being completely housebound, I searched for a way to have my
baby without leaving the house. I found a midwife and she came to
the house for pre-natal visits.
We planned for a home birth. It
didn't happen that way. Problems arose with the pregnancy. I had to
go the hospital to try and have the baby turned. It didn't work. On
the way home, I went into labor and my water broke. The ambulance
was called, the babies heart wasn't beating, I had a prolapsed cord.
At the hospital, they did a emergency C-section and my daughter,
Kaydee, was born. It was a miracle, she was in the intensive care
unit for sometime. She was premature, but healthy. Thank-GOD.
I wasn't in very good shape, physically or mentally. I wanted out of
the hospital, NOW!.
I came home with my new baby. Clay
was sinking into drugs and alcohol. He was a very controlling,
physically abusive man. He actually found pleasure in the fact that
I was agoraphobic. The situation worsened, the arguments, constant
upheaval, beatings-- my life was at the lowest point.
My daughters were suffering. Lindsey
was a teenager and resented Clay and his sickness. I was losing her.
Kaydee was scared and didn't understand what was going on. Things
had to change. But how?
I got a computer for Lindsey, and
soon found a library at my fingertips. I read everything I could
find on panic disorders. I found support groups, other people to
talk to. I wasn't alone anymore.
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