Posts Tagged ‘ Social Anxiety ’

When facing anxiety disorders a person can have all of its activities, both social and individual, affected in a negative way. And if no treatment is undertaken such disorders usually tend to become even more severe.

Anxiety disorders are usually associated with the feeling of uncertainty and uncontrollable fear, experienced by adults beyond the age of 18. Of course, feeling a bit worried or nervous every now and then is what most of us have to deal with, and that’s OK. Clinical anxiety disorders are characterized by their recurrent nature, inability of the person to control their emotions and dominance of manifestation. If you have more days in the week having experienced anxiety than those without it for at least half a year then you definitely have a clinical anxiety disorder that requires immediate treatment. In most cases anxiety disorders take place along with other psychological or physiological issues, such as mental illnesses, depression, substance abuse or other similar conditions. Different anxiety disorders have different symptoms through which they are classified, however all disorders share a dominant trait – illogical and uncontrollable fear.

The most commonly treated types of anxiety disorders include separation and social anxiety, panic disorders, selective mutism, posttraumatic stress disorder (PST), generalized anxiety disorder, and specific phobia.

Separation anxiety is the feeling of fear and agitation caused by separating oneself from a certain place or people you are related to. The most common symptoms of this anxiety disorder is the strong fear of being away from a person or object your are strongly attached to, and may be manifested through physical conditions such as headache, chest pain, and nausea.

Social anxiety (or social phobia) is characterized by strong and recurrent fear connected to social activities. People suffering from this disorder have a constant fear of being observed and evaluated by other people, and thus making them feel embarrassed. The feeling of dread and fear can manifest itself days before the actual situation is supposed to happen, affecting all other activities of the person.

Panic disorder can have the same physical symptoms as separation anxiety, only that there is usually no cause or external factor initiating fear. The condition can be triggered without any sign and at any moment.

Selective mutism is the inability to speak in certain situations while being able to communicate perfectly in other circumstances. Many specialists make a link between selective mutism and social anxiety, believing they are closely related.

PTS is usually associated with a traumatic event that the person had gone through. This type of anxiety disorder is characterized by recurrent thoughts and memories about the tragic event and being emotionally cold even with the closest persons. PTS disorder may take up to three months after the actual event before showing any signs.

Most anxiety disorders are treatable and controllable, as there are medications like Xanax that can help relieve symptoms of most types of such disorders. However, don’t haste to buy Xanax or any other anti-anxiety medication on your own, because such substances require professional supervision and dosage adjustment. The earlier you go to a doctor the better, for if you will refuse to undergo treatment at an earlier stage it may turn out that no generic Xanax will help you and you will require more serious measures to relieve the condition.

In the new Patton Oswalt book Zombie Spaceship Wasteland, there’s an amazing chapter that is fake script notes for a comedy rewrite, and it is one of the angriest, most lacerating looks at what passes for studio comedy that I’ve ever seen.  Furious.  By the end of it, you get the feeling that Patton’s read every one of these scripts, and he knows exactly how bankrupt it all is, and he knows there’s nothing you can do to change it.  He has embraced the essential surreality of our industry, and that’s why he’s a success as a rewriter and a script doctor.  The fake movie he describes in that chapter feels an awful lot like “Little Fockers,” and I know what bothers me most about these films.  I don’t know anyone in my real life who behaves the way these characters do.  In the first film, there’s a very real social anxiety about meeting the parents of your potential partner that we can all relate to, and they just exaggerated things for effect.  At this point, these people have done that typical studio comedy thing where they’ve had to turn up the aggression in each film, creating an entire movie full of sociopaths who no one recognizes in their own family anymore.  These people tell each other elaborate lies and engage in stupid subterfuge and make incredibly stupid choices that make me question their basic moral make-up.  As a result, by the time the labored set pieces reach the big finish and you’ve got someone stabbing someone else in the boner with a needle or throwing up in someone’s face or in some other way humiliating or hurting someone for cheap laughs, it’s hard to find any of it funny because it’s all just frantic and fake.

Owen Wilson is insufferable, Blythe Danner looks like she knows better (she definitely deserves better), and quick cameos by Streisand and Hoffman add nothing to the movie.  There’s not really much of a through-line this time, and I doubt the idea of trying to become “the GodFocker” (don’t ask) is as universal as the core premise of the first two films.  So they just turn it up and hope no one notices how empty all the grotesquerie really is.  I like outrageous comedy.  Really.  But it’s hard for me to see Paul Weitz directing and De Niro and Stiller starring and then reconcile that with a scene where a crazed Jessica Alba kicks a man 20 feet into an empty pool before jumping on him and blacking out.  Really, gentlemen?

Universal Pictures released this funny new trailer for the upcoming comedy “Little Fockers” by director Paul Weitz (Cirque du Freak: The Vampire’s Assistant) and starring Ben Stiller (Greenberg), Jessica Alba (The Killer Inside Me, Valentine’s Day), Robert De Niro, Owen Wilson and Dustin Hoffman.

Watch movie online free: Little Fockers movie Online Free 2010

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