What does a panic attack feel like? Here’s an example of some common panic attack symptoms. Imagine going about your business in the supermarket, filling your cart up with items from your shopping list. Then you proceed to the registers and wait your turn in line. All of a sudden, you start feeling funny. The feeling comes on suddenly and washes over you like a wave. You feel like the blood is draining down the back of your neck, you feel dizzy and clammy and your breathing becomes very rapid and shallow. Your heart is pounding, you feel queasy, and you’ve got the chills. You feel helplessly out of control, and like you’re being pulled from where you are and isolated. You feel terror and the intense fear of losing control of your mind. This is a panic attack.

Headaches in any form are always very painful for the sufferer. However, some headaches, like migraines, for example, can cause even more problems than just a headache. These problems could be sickness, light sensitivity and a banging pain in the head. Sometimes the headache is felt on one side of the head, although at other times you can feel the pain on both sides of your head at the same time.

Pulling out hair might seem like a weird habit, but the truth is that around two percent of the population also do this. Pulling your hair from any area of the body is known as trichotillomania (or trich), which is a disorder causing you to pull out your own hair.

We all have to deal with a certain level of anxiety in our life. In a way, minor anxiety is not a bad thing. However, when anxiety levels reach a significant level, there will be physical manifestations of this psychological problem. The most common (and severe) physical reaction is that of a panic attack.

Are you desperate to get a good night’s sleep but finding it impossible? Do you find yourself tossing and turning all night and when you do drift off, you wake up soon afterwards again? Is this something you’ve been experience for a few months, or do you experience these bouts every once in a while? Perhaps you’ve been having these bouts for year already but because they tend to come and go, you’ve always just battle your way through them. Well, if any of this sounds familiar, then I’m afraid that anxiety may very well be the cause of the insomnia.

Panic Attacks are more common now than before because the world we live in is so pressurized. Many people are currently struggling financially, and if that was not enough, they are also concerned as to whether or not they will have a job in the coming months. This in turn creates pressure at home, a place which should be a haven from the trials and tribulations of the outside world.

The question ‘why am I always pulling my hair out?’ is actually pretty common. If you pull your hair from your head, your eyelashes, your eyebrows or anywhere else on your body then you are probably asking whether this is normal and whether other people do it too.

If you have ever given a speech or maybe had to give a presentation at work, you will no doubt remember the feelings just beforehand. You probably felt a little nervous, just with the thought of it. As the moment drew closer you probably had thoughts of running away, that you had forgotten everything you wanted to say, the sick feeling in your stomach, the weakening of the knees, a dry mouth or sudden perspiration. These are all anxiety attack symptoms that occur for many people often on a daily basis.

Headaches of any kind are always very painful to the sufferer. However, some headaches, like migraines, for example, can cause even more problems than just a headache. These problems could be nausea, light sensitivity and a banging pain in the head. Sometimes the headache is felt on one side of the head, and other times you can feel the pain on both sides of your head at the same time.

Many people are looking for a solution to panic attacks. In some cases, they believe they have tried everything and wonder if a cure exists. They feel let down by the medical profession who prescribe symptom masking drugs, or useless psychiatric therapies. A different approach is needed.