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If someone seems like they're never calm, do they most likely have an anxiety disorder?


If someone seems like they're never calm, do they most likely have an anxiety disorder?

Just because someone is never calm does not necessarily mean they have an anxiety disorder (but it is an indicator). The main thing to look for is whether they are always anxious. If they can't stop worrying (especially when there is nothing to worry about), and they suffer from fatigue, muscle aches, muscle tension, headaches, twitching, trembling, or other symptoms, they probably do have an anxiety disorder. They should consult with their doctor to receive a more conclusive diagnosis if this is the case since most anxiety disorders can be treated relatively easily.

One needs a little more info-before saying someone has an anxiety disorder.
I use to have an anxiety disorder- I did not like the name "anxiety" because it sounded like I was anxious...worried...
what it felt like...I felt like I was running at break neck speed, into a dark tunnel- and there wasn't an end in sight.
My heart would race-RACE-my mind would not calm down- I could sit still-but my mind could not...

Anxiety is caused by a chemical imbalance. Too much phenylalanine in your brain, whereas Depression is too little...

It is a chemical imbalance-

I had to take meds for the imbalance. And YES they helped me to calm down and not "freak" out all the time.

I felt like I was having a heart attack from the pain in my chest-but it was just panic attacks-

the hard part was I could not put a finger on what caused the panic- it just happened.

Chemical imbalance can be cured.

"Bernardino Ramazzini (1633- 1714) made an accurate recording of the signs and symptoms of mercury poisoning, the same description one finds in a modern toxicology text. Interestingly enough, he also recorded psychic irritability, restlessness, and psychosis鈥攕ymptoms that modern physicians not acquainted with the properties of industrial poisoning and heavy metals still mistakenly assign to psychological diseases."

The reason I bring this up is that today, many of the people who have been poisoned with modern industrial chemicals present with many of the same symptoms.

They are often dismissed as being "crack pots," or "nuts," rather than being correctly diagnosed with chemical intoxication.

In the 1840s rubber manufacture began. The solvent used in the manufacture of rubber using natural rubber is benzene.

In the 1840s there were reports of problems caused by benzene. These persisted in the 1900s in Baltimore, where there were reports of cancers of the lymphatic system. In 1921, the United States Public Health Service published a warning of changes in the circulating blood system that portended serious consequences.

Tetraethyl lead is another example of a probelmatic industrial compound. The reason it was introduced was that it made it possible to use one third less of the most expensive petroleum materials to produce a gallon of gasoline with sufficient octane to be used in automobiles. Tetraethyl lead turned out to be so toxic that it brought about the first instance of a closed manufacturing process, to spare workers the consequences of exposure to organic lead.

In 1942, during World War II, the United States lost access to natural rubber and began manufacturing artificial rubber, using butediene and benzene, together so potent that a closed system of manufacture was again required.

At the same time, the United States developed war gases. And they assigned this job to the United States Chemical Corps who became known affectionately as the "Comical Corps." They produced organophosphates, similar to and not a whole lot different than the nerve gasses the Germans produced. Those chemical warheads, with these particularly noxious gases, have been stored in many places.

During World War II, Hercules Powder was producing propellants for the United States military. The workers at Hercules Powder would come home on the weekend and feel terrible. When they went back to work they felt great. Nitrates are the major component of a propellant, and it turned out that exposure to nitrates was causing their coronary arteries to increase in size, and thicken. With the nitrates in their systems the arteries were relaxed. But when they came home, they didn鈥檛 have the nitrates. The internal bore of the artery would get smaller and they would suffer angina.

In the 1970s, two researchers at Mt. Sinai Hospital, Irving Selicoff and Ruth Lilis, published several papers on toxicology. These papers were some of the first to examine specific public health consequences of the unprecedented accumulation of toxic by-products of industrialization in human tissues.

Many people have such symptoms of industrial chemicals in their body as you have described. It is best to consult a professional pratictioner who is familiar with the process of detoxifying the body.

Not exactly. I mean so many things can make people hyper. Soda,caffiene,chocolate,candy, and much much more. But dont rule that out all together. But remember that allergies and such can do that also. Medicines they are taking (if any)can make you hyper also.

What is calm in your eyes, may not be tha same in the eyes of another. The person you're trying to label/ diagnose, may look at your "calmness" as being a zombie..

no if you dont look at it the way you dont

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