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Panick attack after meditation?

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  • #51637
    Don
    Participant

    Hello!

    I need some advice 🙂 I am a very relaxed, happy person in general. Some years ago, meditation helped me move over my ex. It was so wonderful.
    Some moths after that I stopped and when I was practicing meditation again I felt a bit sad… depressed even. So I stopped once again. Than I felt
    better again. Recently I did some very deep meditation out of the blue; I just sat there and I decided to do this again. I sleep very late at night and I have all these
    crazy dialogues with myself. So I just needed to do ‘something’. Ever since that week, my anxiety got WORSE! Last night I experienced my first panic attack. I did let it pass- accept my emotions and all. The next morning some hours ago) I still felt very weird, so I called for that feeling again so I could deal with it.

    Now I feel relaxed. My question is: does this have to do with negative energy inside my body that is leaving? This is how it feels.

    Do you have any advice for me?

    Thank you

    #51641
    Matt
    Participant

    Don,

    Sometimes when we begin a meditation practice, we begin to see and feel just how unkempt our mind really is. This can be disroienting, scary, and produce a feeling of panic. Its fine, normal, and usual, and just breathing slowly helps it fade. After all, its just a feeling, just some chemicals in the body, and fades within a few minutes usually. The next morning when you were feeling weird, “calling up the same feeling” was perhaps unskillful. Much like if we burn our hand on a stove, the next day our hand feels weird, but we don’t go to the stove again for another round of sensations.

    Consider looking into a local sangha for some help with meditation, there are often low cost or free classes, plus others with experience in working with the mind in that way. Buddha taught that the sangha was one of the pillars of development, much like one of the legs of a three legged stool. This doesn’t mean you have to go find a Buddhist temple, but it does help to have a community that you connect with, can rely on, and bounce ideas off of. Tinybuddha does a little of that, but if you’re peeling away layers of your mind, it may help a lot to connect more directly with like minded people.

    Finally, consider spending a little time doing metta meditation. Peeling back layers can be disorienting if you’re not also helping the mind become more smooth. When we spend time wishing for happiness for ourselves and others (the root of metta practice), the mind becomes more peaceful. This helps a lot when we are doing breath meditation, because the ripples in the mind become less distracting, less potent, and relax. Much like a hot tub can increase the blood flow to our muscles, so when we are on the massage table, the knots work out with less trouble, less pain… metta helps the space open up in the mind, so the ripples settle without panic.

    With warmth,
    Matt

    #51717
    Will
    Participant

    I agree with what Matt said, finding a teacher or a community of meditators may be helpful. And Metta is always good.

    I don’t agree with Mr Slickback. I have thought my way out of panic attacks before, it’s not just a physiological event, it’s mental, too. I used to get them, I don’t anymore, and I didn’t take medication. I just learned how to handle my stress better (and got out of my horrible position in work).

    Anyway, it seems to me that you’re experiencing a lot of anxiety, and you’re meditating, but I’m not convinced the first is caused by the second.

    I wonder what kind of meditation you’re doing: not all meditation is calming, and some of it isn’t meant to be calming. I found plain old mindfulness on the breath to be really helpful when I had a lot of anxiety rattling around, but it’s not a one time fix. You need to do it regularly, train yourself every day, again and again, train your mind to be calm and non-judgemental and accepting.

    It did me a lot of good, maybe it’ll work for you.

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