Rewire Your Anxious Brain: How to Use the Neuroscience of Fear to End Anxiety, Panic, and Worry
T**A
Great book!
This book was absolutely awesome. It truly helped me get to the bottom of my anxiety. For the first time, I felt like I really understood what anxiety is, where it comes from, and why it shows up the way it does. Examples in the book are great and everything is easy to understand.I feel less overwhelmed and I loved reading it!!
O**O
Highly recommend
This book was so informative and definitely helped me a lot in my journey! I recommend it to anyone who is struggling with anxiety and is unclear what is happening. It a very good place to start to understand our bodies better.
T**Y
An Eye-Opening and Practical Guide to Understanding and Overcoming Anxiety
Rewire Your Anxious Brain by Catherine Pittman and Elizabeth Karle offers an enlightening exploration into the neuropsychology behind anxiety. If you've ever wondered why you feel anxious, panicked, or overwhelmed without understanding why, this book provides the answers through a science-backed, approachable explanation. What sets this book apart is how it explains the roles of two key brain areas: the amygdala, responsible for primal fear responses, and the cortex, which fuels worry and overthinking. By understanding how these pathways contribute to anxiety, the authors empower you to take control of your emotional responses with practical, easy-to-apply strategies. I found the examples and exercises particularly helpful in offering real-world solutions to manage anxiety. This book doesn’t just offer theory; it gives you actionable steps to rewire how your brain reacts to fear and stress, promoting long-term resilience. If you're looking for a deeper understanding of anxiety from a scientific perspective and want practical tools to help manage it, this is a must-read.
C**H
Decent read for professionals and people with anxiety
Decent read..Not only for health care professionals but for regular people who may not access professional help due to personal reasons. Doctor Pittman gives you practicalself-help steps that can help alleviate or eliminate anxiety throughout the book.
L**Z
Mental Health Book
I suffer from Anxiety. I found this book and decided to buy it base on the review. Hope it can helps me to understand anxiety better. Is not a joke to suffer from this and try to live a normal life. I would rate it once I finish it.
C**R
Great for anyone with Anxiety or Panic Disorder
There are books that go into much more detail on specific strategies for dealing with anxiety and panic attacks or avoiding them altogether. They would be a great supplement to this book. What this book does is lay out clearly, in layperson terms, the neuroscience behind anxiety and panic attacks. Once you understand better what's happening biologically, you can find better strategies for dealing with it. They give you a good place to start by covering the basics of exercise, sleep, mindfulness, and CBT strategies, and they include in the resources section other books that go deeper into those topics which is very helpful. This book helped give me perspective and some goals, and I thought it was pretty unique. I cannot recommend enough.
C**R
Soundly based on biology, easy to understand, and full of helpful advice
Though somewhat repetitive, this book is easy to read and clearly explains the basic neurobiology of fear, worry, anxiety, panic, and related conditions such as PTSD and OCD. Drawing on research by Joseph Ledoux and others, the book highlights the central role of the amygdala (the brain's primitive and subconscious 'fear center'), which receives surprisingly scant attention in many other books on this topic. In my opinion, understanding the underlying biology is very helpful, if not essential.The book also provides helpful evidence-based guidance on techniques to prevent or reduce the intensity of anxiety and related conditions. The key techniques are:- Get good sleep, aerobically exercise daily, and eat a healthy diet.- Breathe from the diaphragm/belly, which apparently activates the parasympathetic nervous system and thus counters activation of the sympathetic nervous system resulting from fear.- Remind yourself that thoughts and images are not reality and may be mistaken.- Disrupt problematic thoughts and images via distractions, play, music, and positive thoughts and images.- Mindfully 'defuse' from problematic thoughts, images, and sensations, and instead just 'be' in the present moment, calmly observing all that is happening without any need to interpret or respond in any way.- Meditate, including mindful meditation.- Deliberately and repeatedly expose yourself to the situations which generate unwarranted fear, in order to rewire the amygdala to no longer subconsciously associate those situations with fear. This can be an uncomfortable experience, but accept the discomfort and know that it will pass, and absolutely do not flee from the situations, because doing so will strengthen the fear.I highly recommend this book to anyone dealing with excessive worry, fear, anxiety, and related conditions.
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