Caffeine panic – about 10 years ago now I cut caffeine from my diet.
Apart from a three day headache there seemed little effect at the time but I did it because I believed it would make things calmer in the long run, and on reflection, it did.
Although I can’t remember the hour or the day things felt different, they do.
It’s conspicuous by its absence caffeine.
Most people ingest a couple of hundred milligrams of this stimulant each day. The jury is out on what are the best levels, but as with many things, I think it depends on the individual.
For the anxious, it can make things a lot worse, and the anxious individual’s sensitivity is heightened.
This happens because caffeine mimics panic symptoms, it can make you jittery, nervous, filled with dread, irritable and restless. Caffeine can actually induce panic attacks.
Caffeine panic – It was this feeling of empty uneasiness and restlessness that I wondered about, and what had been causing it.
That’s the feeling that years later I no longer carry around with me.
Some symptoms of a Panic Attack include sweating, fast or irregular heartbeat, difficulty breathing, digestive issues. Also, it can bring on a feeling of dread, unreality, pins and needles, even chest pain. (APA, 2014)
Guess what? Caffeine can cause fast or irregular heartbeat, diarrhoea, racing thoughts, fast breathing, nausea, sweating… you get the picture, I’m sure.
Caffeine stimulates the central nervous system, the most commonly used psychoactive drug in the world. This is why we pay so much for it in Starbucks. It makes you alert, keeps you awake.
It can be natural or synthetic and is found in some unlikely foods and drinks, so if you are worried about caffeine panic and are anxious, then perhaps look at your consumption of chocolate, coffee, cola, tea and medicines and start to see where it is (Lucozade anyone?).
Are you struggling with anxiety, panic or stress levels?
Maybe have a look at whether that pick-me-up little helper is actually a part of the issue