How to Have Panic Attacks (on a plane)

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 76

  • @dr.v_speaks
    @dr.v_speaks 9 месяцев назад +24

    As a therapist and someone with severe anxiety and a fear of flying, this was gold!! I always tell myself in uncomfortable situations, “go ahead, do it…have the panic attack…just have a nice big one to get it out of the way”. And of course, nothing happens! 😂😂 amazing how the mind works! Surrendering to it, frees you from it!

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  8 месяцев назад +2

      This sounds like a wonderful practice. The mind is amazing and hilarious!

  • @jagodakowalczyk498
    @jagodakowalczyk498 Год назад +38

    I had a panic attack on a plane yesterday, it was fun! I'm planning on having another one in a month🎉

  • @virtualanxietytherapy
    @virtualanxietytherapy 7 месяцев назад +4

    I am a therapist who treats OCD and Phobias. I can't believe that it took me this long to find your channel. Thank you so much for this material!

  • @leonski100
    @leonski100 Год назад +6

    11 years ago, I came across your channel and started watching Beat OCD. Being diagnosed with OCD and Autism, I found you channel fantastic, inspiring and most importantly motivating. I want to say Thank You! Thank you for helping me suppress the most of my compulsions and gave me peace with the chaos. I still reflect and return at times when I start loosing my way and the compulsions being to reappear. It’s life long journey!. Keep up the awesome work!

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +2

      Thank you for the kind words. I'm so glad these tools have been useful as you've been exploring the wilderness of life! Congratulations to you on turning this videos into practical action in your own life. Always feel free to stop by the channel to rest and recharge for a bit on the journey :)

  • @wutru20
    @wutru20 Год назад +13

    I'm flying in 12 hours for the first time ever. I have always suffered from dizzyness and am going to do it!

  • @juliadesiree2021
    @juliadesiree2021 5 дней назад +1

    I'll travel today (not by plane but by train) and I'm having all kinds of uncomfortable feelings, from sadness to anxiety to panic. This video calmed me down so much, I don't know what just happened. Apparently, sarcasm helps me.. Thank you ❤

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  2 дня назад

      You're welcome! I hope you had fun taking the brain on that train adventure with all of the feelings! That's very kind of you to take the brain on a trip :)

  • @derekkam1375
    @derekkam1375 10 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you! I haven't laughed for a while when watching self-help videos. This one is rich in content and also fun to watch. Great work!

  • @redbeardsbirds3747
    @redbeardsbirds3747 Год назад +3

    Not so long ago I had a sudden and unexpected panic attack followed by waves of disturbing intrusive thoughts while laying back in the dentist’s chair and undergoing a root canal procedure ( basically tooth surgery) ….and it felt very similar to the panic attack I had on a longish plane trip from Atlanta to California….and I mean all the way to California and the flight back ! 🫨
    The funny and strange thing about this dentist panic attack experience was..after the procedure was finally over I had admitted to the dentist’s assistant that I was very anxious and actually had a panic attack during the procedure..but to my surprise she just laughed and said….oh wow you seemed very calm to me dude.. you were very easy to work on compared to most of the people we see! lol
    That made me feel proud even though I couldn’t believe it was not as obvious to them that I was indeed having a silent panic attack …now I’ll be happy to go back and feel the excitement again ! 😅
    I think the dentist chair panic attack experience is somewhat similar to the plane seat panic attack experience…your strapped in for the ride..no turning back buddy 😳
    New subscriber..enjoying your content ! 👍

  • @eprkya
    @eprkya 4 месяца назад +2

    Watching your videos for the first time after reading your book. You are amazing!! I can't wait to learn more about ROCD & panic attacks through you. Many thanks!

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  4 месяца назад +1

      Thanks for reading the book and watching the videos! As you're applying the skills from the book, feel free to ask any questions on the journey 😁

  • @beatrizwiltenburg5106
    @beatrizwiltenburg5106 Год назад +1

    Mark, I'm not very good with English, so sorry... but watching your videos has been so, so valuable in my OCD recovery process. You speak exactly about the things I feel and am going through and the lessons are so, so valuable! Thank you so much for this!

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад

      Thank you for the kind words, Beatriz :) It's great to hear the videos have been useful!

  • @andresuvz
    @andresuvz Год назад +1

    😄😄 I love this video. This point of view helped me to realize how easily can we get trapped in compulsions
    Thanks Mark. Great video 🙌

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +2

      Thanks! Indeed, it is so easy to get caught up in those compulsions that create even more unwanted experiences to do compulsions around.

  • @Amina-cw1em
    @Amina-cw1em Год назад +1

    Great video! Yes! The halo. The absolute avoidance is critical and key -- avoiding any and all triggering films, ideas, places, and/or conversations, even singular words lol. Even today, just the premise of that new reality hulu documentary, BS High, looked too scary for me lmao. 10/10 would not watch before any trip.

  • @jordanborba
    @jordanborba Год назад +1

    Wow this is FANTASTIC! 😂😂
    Your videos just get more + more hilarious/helpful! The best combination! Thank you for taking time to do this for us all 💛😊 Helps so much!

  • @SerendipityArtandGaming
    @SerendipityArtandGaming 5 месяцев назад

    I’m flying in less then 24 hours and this was a nice change in videos

  • @Ishowconten
    @Ishowconten Год назад +5

    What's the worst that can happen panicking till I black out sounds fun

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +4

      I think we can imagine far worse catastrophes if we ruminate about it for several years.

    • @Ishowconten
      @Ishowconten Год назад +4

      @@everybodyhasabrain that sounds like a fun mindless adventure

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +1

      @@Ishowconten 🤣🙌

  • @falrex7961
    @falrex7961 19 часов назад

    Thank you so much!!!!

  • @mahashrayasundararaman1562
    @mahashrayasundararaman1562 Год назад +1

    Pretty fantastic delivery - it would‘be taken me a bunch of takes to not laugh through the last bit about holding the wine.

  • @catherinelee6964
    @catherinelee6964 Месяц назад +1

    New subscriber, great so see a video that's not all doom and gloom, it really made me laugh 😅 makes the solution so obvious!

  • @smart7bit
    @smart7bit Год назад +1

    😁😁 Entertaining AND very helpful video. And wow, what a view 😍

  • @caroleccles5095
    @caroleccles5095 Год назад +2

    😂 great video!, it really gets the point across. Thank you.

  • @ImMooful
    @ImMooful Год назад

    Getting on a plane in a week, thank you so much for this step by step tutorial ❤️👍

  • @linusolmin9313
    @linusolmin9313 Год назад +1

    This is your best video yet :) 😂

  • @TheDreamTeamProject
    @TheDreamTeamProject Год назад +2

    Great acting Mark 😂😂😂 coming from a proffessional 😂

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад

      Thank you! 😁🙌 that means a lot coming from an actual professional!

  • @kevinmccourt6546
    @kevinmccourt6546 Год назад

    I had a panic attack recently on a flight which lasted the whole duration of the flight (6 hours). For some reason accepting the symptoms and letting them wash through me was not helpful like it usually is and I was in an anxiety hell. I eventually became so desperate to get off the plane that I asked the flight attendant if we could land at the nearest airport. She looked at me like I was insane. It was so traumatising that I now have a phobia of flying

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад

      What do you define as "helpful"?

    • @kevinmccourt6546
      @kevinmccourt6546 Год назад

      In this situation I would say that observing the thoughts and feelings and not getting involved with them would be helpful in teaching the brain that there’s no threat. I thought I was pretty skilled at this, but my confidence has been shattered after this overwhelming experience

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад

      @kevinmccourt6546 Trying to tell ourselves there's no threat when we're panicking, can easily turn into a gas-lighting scenario and just like any cleaning compulsion. The purpose of accepting an experience is not to get rid of it. If we're doing that, then it's natural we don't get rid of it, because we're telling the brain it's a bad thing we should get rid of! What you experienced completely makes sense if you were trying to get rid of the uncomfortable feelings. The brain is working totally normally.

    • @kevinmccourt6546
      @kevinmccourt6546 Год назад

      So next time what should I do differently when this panic inevitably comes over me on my next flight? I know the answer is probably “nothing”, but this recent experience was so intense that I’m not sure how to sit with that again

    • @kevinmccourt6546
      @kevinmccourt6546 Год назад

      @everybodyhasabrain how do you overcome a fear of flying? I’m super uncomfortable with being so high up in the air and I was in extreme distress my last flight.
      I want to travel but the thought of flying again is terrifying so I feel stuck

  • @shawnleong3605
    @shawnleong3605 Год назад

    I don’t really suffer from panic attacks, and thus I don’t experience them on planes. But I have anxiety attacks and gosh the tense feelings arising from ocd when I’m in the plane is not fun at all, especially when they surface in an enclosed environment

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +4

      I don't eat donuts. I just eat dough in ring shapes with stuff on top.

  • @JenniferMeyer84
    @JenniferMeyer84 Год назад +2

    You didn't have to come for me so hard. 😂

  • @rickytiago3892
    @rickytiago3892 Год назад +1

    Mark would it be possible to make a video on overcoming ocd whilst transitioning through abusive circumstances (ie, need the mental health to get a job to eventually move out but get triggered into ocd and have to code switch at home in order to avoid major conflict and abuse, get triggered also in learning new behaviours not learnt in childhood etc)

    • @linus430
      @linus430 Год назад

      My unprofessional opinion is that focusing on getting over ocd is the wrong way. If you need to get rid of a feeling before you can proceed with life you are going to be stuck. Your focus should be on building mental strength to be able to go on even though you are having those feelings. I'm sorry for what you are going through. I'm thinking though, why not get a job and risk being fired.

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +4

      I make all of my videos assuming people are experiencing difficult circumstances and have had or are encountering traumatic experiences. But as Linus mentioned, I'd watch out for the IF X THEN Y patterns you're getting stuck on. Believing that you need a very specific video to start practicing skills, or need some particular feeling or state of mental health before getting a job are classic OCD patterns. It's the same reason somebody with a contamination obsession might feel they need to get a specific clean feeling before leaving the house. What you're mentioning is the same. So no especially unique tips necessary. With cutting out any compulsions and making changes, we're learning new skills and teaching our younger selves new tricks. Enjoy exploring that learning!

    • @rickytiago3892
      @rickytiago3892 Год назад +2

      @linus430 @everybodyhasabrain thank you for the info guys ❤️

  • @Dadaxox
    @Dadaxox Год назад

    Mark, I had a panic attack a while ago that left me in pretty rough shape. My body (muscle spasms, heart racing, and so many more symptoms) and mind are in survival mode. So I am getting so many intrusive and bothersome thoughts that are not me. And this is what I am scared of which is a never ending loop of fear. How do I approach this.

    • @hiya1399
      @hiya1399 Год назад +3

      You are correct when you say, "bothersome thoughts that are not me" Your thoughts aren't you. You're attaching meaning to your thoughts when you have them and that is causing you anxiety. You are not your thoughts. Mark has a few great videos on how to allow your thoughts (whatever they may be) and continuing on with whatever it is that you're doing while learning to not attach meaning to them 💜

    • @linus430
      @linus430 Год назад +2

      I had the exact same loop, I broke it by focus on doing what I want to do. I would get panic attack feel completly broken but keep on going with my life even though I thought I'd never be the same again. It's amazing, the skills I have built from that.

  • @MattLees-Nunan
    @MattLees-Nunan Год назад +1

    Very entertaining😂

  • @Samueltheagent89
    @Samueltheagent89 6 месяцев назад

    Haha love this

  • @JaSh-j7v
    @JaSh-j7v День назад

    Lmao. Best title ever

  • @robinvogt1472
    @robinvogt1472 Год назад

    i had to go on a 5 hour flight doctor gave me medication it was only way im very claustrophobic and i made it

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +3

      I found it useful to take a different approach.

    • @naseemreema90
      @naseemreema90 6 месяцев назад +1

      I am also claustrophobic… what would be the best approach to overcome the fear of feeling enclosed in a plane with no escape.

  • @LadyGodivaish
    @LadyGodivaish 9 дней назад

    Lol 😂