Are you afraid to fly? Do needles make you nervous? Do you avoid dental appointments, elevators, or contact with spiders because you are scared? If so, you may have a phobia. Phobias are intense fears about specific places, situations or things. Phobias can make it hard for you to go to places that you would like to go, make it hard to be effective at work, and put a strain on relationships. This is because people will do whatever they can to avoid the uncomfortable and often terrifying feelings associated with their phobia. If you have a phobia, you are not alone.
Are you afraid to fly? Do needles make you nervous? Do you avoid dental appointments, elevators, or contact with spiders because you are scared? If so, you may have a phobia. Phobias are intense fears about specific places, situations or things. Phobias can make it hard for you to go to places you would like to go to, hard to be effective at work, and put a strain on relationships. These difficulties arise because people will do whatever they can to avoid the uncomfortable and often terrifying feelings associated with their phobia. If you have a phobia, you are not alone.
Adults with phobias realize their fears are irrational, but often facing, or even thinking about facing, the feared object or situation brings on severe anxiety. This intense fear reaction leads people to dread confronting common, everyday situations, or avoid them altogether.
- Animal (e.g. fear of spiders, snakes, dogs)
- Natural environment (e.g. fear of heights, fear of lightning and thunderstorms)
- Blood-injection injury (e.g. fear of medical procedures including injections, fear of needles, fear of blood)
- Situational (e.g. fear of confined spaces, fear of the dark)
- Other (e.g. fear of vomiting, choking, illness)
For a comprehensive list of specific phobias, click here.
If you have a phobia, you may feel a wide range of intense emotions, from mild anxiety to very severe panic and terror. In more severe cases, you may even feel that you are going mad, losing control, or are about to die when facing the feared object or situation. The fear is usually expressed physically by an increased heart rate, sweating, trembling, feeling faint, nausea, feeling of choking, and/or increased blood pressure. Some people will even have a full-blown panic attack (click here to read more about panic attacks). Most of all, you will feel an overpowering urge to 'escape' from the very thing you fear.
Avoidance is the most common reaction because it helps you to feel better and less afraid. This is because avoidance works.in the short-term. But, avoidance tends to make your fear stronger in the long run, because it prevents you from learning new information (e.g., not all dogs are dangerous). Also, if you avoid something once, you are probably going to keep avoiding it every time you see it. The fear can worsen very rapidly as a result. This is why phobias can be such a big problem. To overcome your phobia, you need to face your fears rather than avoid them!
Many people with an anxiety disorder are afraid of specific places, situations, or things, and often avoid them. However, this does not necessarily mean that they have a specific phobia. The following are some suggestions on how to tell the difference between a specific phobia and other anxiety disorders.
- A person with Panic Disorder may fear and avoid several types of situations, such as elevators, driving, or flying. However, the person's main fear is about having a panic attack in the situation and being trapped. Adults with Panic Disorder report that if they do not have panic attacks, they would not be afraid of being in these situations. On the other hand, a person with a specific phobia is afraid of the situation itself, for example, being in a plane crash, or getting in an accident, not the panic attack.
- A person with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) may avoid certain situations, but the situations are related to a trauma that they have experienced. For example, a person with PTSD resulting from a serious car accident may avoid driving, because it reminds them of the crash, not because they have suddenly developed a phobia of cars or driving. Also, people with PTSD have symptoms of reliving the trauma, which don't occur in specific phobia.
- People with Social Anxiety Disorder can fear several situations, such as parties, going to the mall, or talking to strangers. However, people with social anxiety disorder are afraid of being embarrassed or saying something "stupid" in social situations; they are not afraid of the situation itself, but rather the social interaction with others when they are in that situation. For example, a person with social anxiety may fear doctor appointments, but it is because of the social interaction involved rather than the medical procedures or injections.
TIP: Remember, a person may have more than one of these disorders at the same time. For example, you may have a specific phobia of choking and also experience a lot of social anxiety when eating in public.
There are many theories about the cause of specific phobias.
- Research suggests that phobias can run in families, and that both genetic and environmental factors (nature and nurture) can contribute to developing a phobia.
- Some people develop a phobia after being exposed to a traumatic or frightening event. For example, you can develop a fear of water after nearly drowning.
- People can develop a phobia after receiving frightening information about something, or being instructed to stay away from an object or situation (especially when young). This is often done inadvertently, but not always. For example, some children may develop a phobia of an animal after a trusted adult repeatedly warns them the animal is dangerous and might bite them.
- Finally, a person may develop a phobia by observing the anxious response of others to objects or situations. For example, a child may develop a spider phobia after watching an older sibling scream and run after being in contact with a spider. These 'childhood' phobias sometimes continue into adulthood.
Generally speaking, most people find that their phobia develops gradually over time, or comes and goes over a long period. Many people find that no particular cause or trigger is involved in the development of their phobia. Regardless, it is less helpful to spend a lot of time and energy 'rooting out the cause'. The point is to learn how to manage the phobia.
- Phobias are the most common type of anxiety disorder: Approximately 12.5% of the population will have a specific phobia in their lifetime.
- Some common phobias are: fear of heights (acrophobia), fear of spiders (arachnophobia), and fear of enclosed spaces (claustrophobia).
- Adult phobias start suddenly and tend to be more persistent than childhood phobias; only about 20% of adult phobias vanish on their own.
Information from: Anxiety BC