Sign In   New User? Sign Up

Psychology Forums Click here for more information

  Behavioral  Biological  Body Language  Cognitive  Disorders  Dreams  Emotion  Freud  Memory  Personality  Sleep  Stress  Tests  Sign Up

  Psychologist World

Home

Sign In

Sign Up

  Browse by Category:

Behavioral Psychology
Approach, Aversion Therapy, Conditioning, Flooding, more...

Biological Approach
Approach, Brain Explorer, Biology & Behavior, Lobotomy, Narcotics, more...

Body Language
Reading Body Language, Truth Signals, Non-Verbal Signals, Self Image, more...

Cognitive Psychology
Cognitive Approach, more...

Developmental Psychology

Developmental Overview, Attachments

Disorders (Mental)
Depression, OCD, Narcolepsy, Phobias, PTSD, Schizophrenia, Synesthesia, more...

Dreams
Interpret Your Dreams Guide, Dream Symbols, Nightmares, Why do we dream?, more...

Emotion

Attraction, Emotion Guide, Love, Types of Love, Anxiety, Jealousy, Narcissism, Pride Emotion, Self Pity Emotion, Vanity Emotion, more...

Freud
Sigmund Freud, Evaluation, Free Association, Personality Type Test, Psychosexual theory, more...

Humanistic Approach
Approach Overview

Memory
Association, Conditioning, Rehersal, Levels of Processing, Flashbulb Memory, Forgetting, Memory Improvement, Working Memory Model, more...

Personality
Conforming in Groups, Authority, Brainwashing, Influence of Language, Social Influence, more...

Sleep
Sleep Deprivation, Sleeping Disorders, Stages of Sleep, more...

Stress
What is Stress?, Anger Test, Fight or Flight Response, Karoshi, Stress Management, Stress Test, more...

Personality Tests
Are you Fixated?, Personality Type TestAnger Test, Stress, Depression & Anxiety Test, more...

View all articles...


  Site Information:

Link to this Page

About this Site

Revision Articles

Support

Site Map

Privacy Statement

Psychology Forums

Sign Up

 

Home Element Emotions Element Anxiety Emotion Element
Emotion - Psychologist World

Emotions: Anxiety

Anxiety = (fear + vanity)

 

Anxiety is a cerebral emotion: when it is intense it ‘fogs’ the mind, producing mental tiredness and the incapacity for intellectual work. I feel it most in my eyes as a regular ache, which generates a sensitivity to bright light. When I am writing or typing under a bright light I control the eye-ache by regularly splashing my eyes with cold water, perhaps every half hour or so. Both the mental tiredness and the ache are intensified when combined with any mode of self-pity.

 

In social company, anxiety (in vanity mode) stimulates a compulsive need to speak (I get embarrassed by my silence) or compulsive behaviour (such as smoking, drinking alcohol, nail-biting, over-eating). When I have this fuzzy head at home I usually relax on the settee and doze. The cessation of anxiety can be quite sudden and produces an immediate clearing of the head – I ‘wake up’ from my semi-consciousness. The need for a long sleep time each night is usually due to the presence of anxiety or to a mode of self-pity.

 

Anxiety keeps the person focused on negative emotions ; if I am absorbed in narcissistic joy or jealous love, then if anxiety arises I usually switch out of them into self-pity modes or even hostile feelings.

 

The fear mode of anxiety is generated by a dictatorial conscience, or the ‘voice of authority’. This voice has two origins.


It can originate from the family setting: the parents’ commands become internalised into an oppressive conscience – ‘do as you are told’. The voice of authority also comes from one’s soul: the soul directs oneself to practise self-control (here the ‘voice’ is not a clear verbal one but more like an intuitive prompting). If I do something that my soul does not like, then I immediately feel a burst of anxiety in my eyes. However, this ‘voice’ is a subtle one and is unlikely to be noticed by a person who has not developed sensitivity.

 

In general, narcissism and jealousy are the two avenues to power, the two ways to express and achieve power. Pride and guilt are the two avenues to ethics. Resentment arises when the person’s sense of idealism is restricted by guilt ; bitterness arises when idealism is restricted by pride.

 

What needs to be accepted is that emotions are not good or bad in themselves, but that the goodness or the badness lies in the context that we experience them and view them. However, since it is common practice to value things rather than contexts, I prefer to label emotions as either positive or negative, rather than as either good or bad.


 

 

Copyright © 2002 Ian Heath All Rights Reserved

 


Tags: anxiety


Self Hypnosis CD's from Hypnotic World:

Confidence Building

Quit Smoking

Fear Of Flying

Alcohol Cessation

Anxiety Release

Relaxation

Keep Up-to-Date:

Email New Articles via Email:

RSS New Psychology Articles via RSS

Twitter Follow Psychologist World on Twitter

Sign Up for Full Access:

Access hundreds of theories, approaches, study and experiment overviews, plus a range of psychology guides. Sign Up

 

 
 

More in Emotions:

 
 

Behavioral Psychology
Biological Psychology
Body Language Reading
Cognitive Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Dreams
Emotions
Freudian Psychology
Influence & Personality Psychology
Memory
Personality Tests
Psychology Issues
Sleep Psychology
Stress Management

 
 




     
 

Browse Areas:

Behavior
Biological Psychology
Body Language
Cognitive Approach
Dream Interpretation
Freudian Psychology
Influence & Personality
Mental Disorders
Memory Psychology
Psychology Tests
Sleep Psychology
Stress Management

 
     

 

     
 

By Approach:
Biological Approach
Behavioral Approach
Cognitive Approach
Humanistic Approach

 
     

 

     
 

By Psychology Study:

Studies Index

 
     

 

     
 

Issue Reference:
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
General Anxiety Disorder
Seasonal Affective Disorder
more...

 
     

 

     
 

Self Help Psychology:
Succeed in Exams
Memory Improvement

 
     



 

 

Click here for more information

 


Psychologist World:

Home Page

Psychology Articles
Personality Tests
Freudian Psychology
Psychology Forums
Memory Improvement

Free Newsletter Email
More...


Psychology Areas:

Behavioral

Biological

Body Language

Cognitive

Developmental

Disorders

Dream Interpretation

Emotions

Areas (Continued):

Emotion

Freud

Humanistic

Memory

Personality

Sleep

Stress

Personality Tests

Site Stuff:

About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Statement 
Support 
Site Map

What's New Email
Link to this Page

Sign Up

Most Read in October:

Behavioral Approach
Eye Reading

Stress Test
Cognitive Approach
Fight-or-Flight Response
Neuroticism Test
Memory
Stanford Prison Experiment

© 2006-2011 Psychologist World and partners. Parts licensed under GNU FDL. Terms of Use