Starry
Well-known member
LONG story, sorry, please keep with me...
Well, I have agoraphobia, though I feel like a fraud for classing it as such, since I don't believe it's true agoraphobia... In my case it's caused by dizziness, I always have it to some degree or another, but it's definitely made worse by stress, leaving my "safe place" not being able to escape and get somewhere safe etc...
My dizziness started when I was 12. I was on a school trip to France. It was about 4pm on a Saturday, I hadn't had any sleep since I woke up at 7:30am on the Friday. I also hadn't had anything to eat or drink since 8am on Saturday. I was in a small, crowded shop, suddenly my vision went blurry, I went numb and felt like I was floating, half way between consciousness and unconsciousness. The whole place seemed to spin for about 30 seconds. I told the teacher, who told me to go sit outside for a while. I did so and it passed, I put it down to lack of sleep and lack of food and drink...
A few weeks later, while I was walking home from school, the same thing happened, only without the blurry vision. Slowly the attacks became more and more frequent, until I had a permanent low level of dizziness, which was agrivated by having to stand in the open, or in corridors, or in a line....
I became paranoid about having to walk anywhere without having something to hold onto incase I fell, or without being able to run somewhere so I could sit down until I was calm and it eased a little.
This started intefering with school, I started missing lunch so that I wouldn't have to stand in line, I missed assembly every day because I felt stressed having to stand to sing the song, and scared that I'd fall off of my chair or something infront of everyone.
Eventually, what with the dizziness and the social phobia, I couldn't face school anymore. I became an emotional wreck trying to just get out of the door to go. I couldn't do it anymore and stopped going completely.
I eventually got into a non-mainstream school, that I was taken to and from by taxi, I still found it stressful there, but the teachers were understanding at least. Plus it was only small and didn't have endless corridors - I really hate corridors with the dizziness, they make it much worse.
Then I left school at 16. And I haven't left the house since. I only go to doctors appointments when absolutely necesarry, and then only if I'm taken by taxi. (Though it's literally a 15 minute walk away.) I can't even get to the end of my road. (4/5 houses away from mine)
I had an appointment at the hospital in May last year to see an ENT consultant, to do tests on my ears incase it was a physical problem. He was very condescending to me, treated me like a little child. When I fell over he called it an "over-reaction." I spent the whole appointment in tears.
Only to be told it was psychological.
The last time I went to the doctors I fell over there too, and literally crawled into the doctor's office.
You can imagine how embarrassed I was when you add the social phobia onto the top of that. 8O
So now I can't even face the doctors anymore...
Sorry to make this post so long, I thought background information might prove useful...
I was just wondering if anyone else had any experience of psychosomatic/psychogenic dizziness that's continuous to some degree or another. And if anyone knew of any way to overcome it? Because after nearly 9 years of it, I'm just about sick and tired of it and with completely wasting my life. *Sigh*
Any help much appreceiated.
Well, I have agoraphobia, though I feel like a fraud for classing it as such, since I don't believe it's true agoraphobia... In my case it's caused by dizziness, I always have it to some degree or another, but it's definitely made worse by stress, leaving my "safe place" not being able to escape and get somewhere safe etc...
My dizziness started when I was 12. I was on a school trip to France. It was about 4pm on a Saturday, I hadn't had any sleep since I woke up at 7:30am on the Friday. I also hadn't had anything to eat or drink since 8am on Saturday. I was in a small, crowded shop, suddenly my vision went blurry, I went numb and felt like I was floating, half way between consciousness and unconsciousness. The whole place seemed to spin for about 30 seconds. I told the teacher, who told me to go sit outside for a while. I did so and it passed, I put it down to lack of sleep and lack of food and drink...
A few weeks later, while I was walking home from school, the same thing happened, only without the blurry vision. Slowly the attacks became more and more frequent, until I had a permanent low level of dizziness, which was agrivated by having to stand in the open, or in corridors, or in a line....
I became paranoid about having to walk anywhere without having something to hold onto incase I fell, or without being able to run somewhere so I could sit down until I was calm and it eased a little.
This started intefering with school, I started missing lunch so that I wouldn't have to stand in line, I missed assembly every day because I felt stressed having to stand to sing the song, and scared that I'd fall off of my chair or something infront of everyone.
Eventually, what with the dizziness and the social phobia, I couldn't face school anymore. I became an emotional wreck trying to just get out of the door to go. I couldn't do it anymore and stopped going completely.
I eventually got into a non-mainstream school, that I was taken to and from by taxi, I still found it stressful there, but the teachers were understanding at least. Plus it was only small and didn't have endless corridors - I really hate corridors with the dizziness, they make it much worse.
Then I left school at 16. And I haven't left the house since. I only go to doctors appointments when absolutely necesarry, and then only if I'm taken by taxi. (Though it's literally a 15 minute walk away.) I can't even get to the end of my road. (4/5 houses away from mine)
I had an appointment at the hospital in May last year to see an ENT consultant, to do tests on my ears incase it was a physical problem. He was very condescending to me, treated me like a little child. When I fell over he called it an "over-reaction." I spent the whole appointment in tears.
The last time I went to the doctors I fell over there too, and literally crawled into the doctor's office.
Sorry to make this post so long, I thought background information might prove useful...
I was just wondering if anyone else had any experience of psychosomatic/psychogenic dizziness that's continuous to some degree or another. And if anyone knew of any way to overcome it? Because after nearly 9 years of it, I'm just about sick and tired of it and with completely wasting my life. *Sigh*
Any help much appreceiated.