• Menu
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Healing Tao USA logo title 480x83

Medical and Spiritual Qigong (Chi Kung)

  • Home
    • Primordial Tai Chi for Enlightened Love
    • Our Mission
  • Workshops
    • Winn – Current Teaching Schedule
    • Become a Certified Tao Instructor!
  • Products
    • Guide to Best Buy Packages
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 1 & 2
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 3 & 4
      • Fusion of the Five Elements 1, 2, & 3: Emotional & Psychic Alchemy
      • Inner Sexual Alchemy
    • Best Buy Packages Download
    • Video Downloads
    • Audio Downloads
    • DVDs
    • Audio CD Home Study Courses
    • eBooks & Print Books
    • Super Qi Foods & Elixirs
    • Sexual Qigong & Jade Eggs
    • Medical Qigong
    • Chinese Astrology
    • Other Cool Tao Products
      • Tao T-Shirts
      • Joyce Gayheart
        CD’s and Elixirs
      • Qi Weightlifting Equipment
  • Retreats
  • Articles / Blog
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
    • 9 Stages of Alchemy
    • Tao Articles
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Primordial Tai Chi: HOW does it Grow Self-Love?
    • Oct. 2023 Newsletter
  • FAQ / Forum
    • FAQ
    • Forum Online Discussion
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
  • Winn Bio
    • Short Bio
    • Michael Winn: The Long Story
    • Healing Tao USA logo as Musical Cosmology
  • China Trip
    • ••• China Dream Trip: August 2026 DATES •••
    • Photos: Past China Trips
  • Contact
    • Office Manager – Buy Products
    • Find Instructor Near You
    • Links
  • Cart
  • Search
  • Home
    • Primordial Tai Chi for Enlightened Love
    • Our Mission
  • Workshops
    • Winn – Current Teaching Schedule
    • Become a Certified Tao Instructor!
  • Products
    • Guide to Best Buy Packages
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 1 & 2
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 3 & 4
      • Fusion of the Five Elements 1, 2, & 3: Emotional & Psychic Alchemy
      • Inner Sexual Alchemy
    • Best Buy Packages Download
    • Video Downloads
    • Audio Downloads
    • DVDs
    • Audio CD Home Study Courses
    • eBooks & Print Books
    • Super Qi Foods & Elixirs
    • Sexual Qigong & Jade Eggs
    • Medical Qigong
    • Chinese Astrology
    • Other Cool Tao Products
      • Tao T-Shirts
      • Joyce Gayheart
        CD’s and Elixirs
      • Qi Weightlifting Equipment
  • Retreats
  • Articles / Blog
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
    • 9 Stages of Alchemy
    • Tao Articles
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Primordial Tai Chi: HOW does it Grow Self-Love?
    • Oct. 2023 Newsletter
  • FAQ / Forum
    • FAQ
    • Forum Online Discussion
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
  • Winn Bio
    • Short Bio
    • Michael Winn: The Long Story
    • Healing Tao USA logo as Musical Cosmology
  • China Trip
    • ••• China Dream Trip: August 2026 DATES •••
    • Photos: Past China Trips
  • Contact
    • Office Manager – Buy Products
    • Find Instructor Near You
    • Links
  • Cart
  • Search

More and more anxiety diagnoses in modern times (article)

by

Home › Forum Online Discussion › General › More and more anxiety diagnoses in modern times (article)

  • This topic has 22 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 12 years, 10 months ago by bagua.
Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 23 total)
1 2 →
  • Author
    Posts
  • July 15, 2012 at 9:16 am #39480
    Steven
    Moderator

    We are *in* times of change, which I suspect is the
    reason for increased prevalence of anxiety. More
    grounding and connection to inner earth needed, in my opinion . . . S
    —————–
    In the age of anxiety, are we all mentally ill?
    By Sharon Begley
    updated 7/13/2012 5:45:52 PM ET

    When Cynthia Craig was diagnosed with postpartum depression eight years ago, she told her family doctor she felt anxious about motherhood. She wondered whether she had made a catastrophic mistake by quitting her job, whether she could cope with the long, lonely hours stay-at-home mothers face – and even whether she should have had children.

    “Anxiety is something I have always had, especially during times of change,” said Craig, 40, who lives in Scotland, Ontario. “But I was never worried about the level of anxiety, and it never prevented me from leaving the house, driving, socializing or even speaking in front of people.”

    Her doctor referred her to an anxiety clinic, where a nurse asked Craig dozens of yes-or-no questions – are you afraid of snakes? do you hear voices? do you vomit from anxiety? – and made a diagnosis. “She said, ‘Let’s call it Generalized Anxiety Disorder with a touch of social phobia,'” Craig said.

    That didn’t feel right to her, but the clinic’s psychiatrist agreed with the nurse and said Craig’s concerns about motherhood constituted an anxiety disorder, a form of mental illness, and prescribed Pfizer’s Effexor and then GlaxoSmithKline’s Paxil. Craig says the drugs exacerbated the very anxiety that she doubted required medication.

    Craig’s case is one of millions that constitute an extraordinary trend in mental illness: an increase in the prevalence of reported anxiety disorders of more than 1,200 percent since 1980.

    In that year, 2 percent to 4 percent of Americans suffered from an anxiety disorder, according to the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) of Mental Disorders, used by psychiatrists and others worldwide to diagnose mental illness.

    In 1994, a study asking a random sample of thousands of Americans about their mental health reported that 15 percent had ever suffered from anxiety disorders. A 2009 study of people interviewed about their anxiety repeatedly for years raised that estimate to 49.5 percent – which would be 117 million U.S. adults.

    Some psychiatrists say the increase in the prevalence of anxiety from about 4 percent to 50 percent is the result of psychiatrists and others “getting better at diagnosing anxiety,” as Dr. Carolyn Robinowitz, a past president of the APA who is in private practice in Washington, D.C., put it. “People who criticize that are showing their bias,” she said. “When we get better at diagnosing hypertension, we don’t say that’s terrible.”

    Critics, including other leading psychiatrists, disagree. They say the apparent explosion in anxiety shows there is something seriously and dangerously wrong with the DSM. Its next edition, due in May, would lower the threshold for identifying anxiety.

    The criticism rests on three arguments. First, the DSM fails to recognize that anxiety is normal and even beneficial in many situations, so it conflates a properly functioning brain system with a pathology. Second, the DSM’s description of anxiety is more about enforcing social norms than medicine.

    Finally, they say, anxiety is adaptive. Its brain circuitry was honed by evolution for a purpose. Only when that mechanism misfires should a person be diagnosed as mentally ill.

    “No human emotion is more basic than anxiety,” said sociologist Allan Horwitz of Rutgers University. “Many forms of it simply should not be categorized as disorders, because they’re the result of the way people evolved thousands of years ago, rather than something going wrong.”

    Horwitz and other critics recognize that when the brain’s anxiety system misfires it can prevent people from functioning, as when someone is unable to leave home, interact with friends and family or walk past even a leashed dog. But the anxiety system is working properly when it makes someone afraid of heights or wild dogs or threatening strangers.

    “Anxiety or panic symptoms that have been severe, persistent and cause clinically significant distress or impairment need to be diagnosed promptly,” said Dr. Allen Frances, a psychiatrist who led the previous DSM revision and questions some of the new criteria. “Very effective treatments are available.”

    “We don’t oppose people getting treatment,” said Horwitz, co-author of the new book “All We Have to Fear: Psychiatry’s Transformation of Natural Anxieties into Mental Disorders.” “But people are much too willing to think they have a disorder that requires treatment.”

    Many psychiatrists don’t see it that way. Under changes for the DSM-5 proposed by experts convened by the APA, symptoms such as excessive worry, restlessness, feeling on edge, avoiding activities that cause anxiety, and being overly concerned about health or finances or family would have to be present for only three months rather than six to justify a diagnosis of Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD). And people would have to display one physical symptom, not the current three.

    “Because its threshold for GAD is set so ridiculously low, DSM-5 will mislabel as mentally ill many people who are experiencing no more than the normal and expected worries of everyday life,” said Frances.

    Dr. Donna Rockwell, a clinical psychologist who has organized opposition to aspects of the DSM-5 process, warned that “unless come to their senses, GAD will be identical to the existential worries all of us face as part of being human.” That will bring “a bonanza to the drug companies,” she added, opening the floodgates to “more inappropriate, expensive and potentially harmful drug use.”

    Drugmakers reported $661 million in U.S. sales of anti-anxiety drugs last year, according to IMS Health. Most psychiatrists see that as evidence people suffering from mental illness are getting help. On Thursday the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America issued a report touting the many drugs being developed for mental illnesses, including 26 for anxiety.

    “When anxiety symptoms impair a person’s functioning, what’s so bad about helping them get back to a normal state and using medication if appropriate?” asked Robinowitz.

    The message that what used to be considered part of the human condition is pathological is getting through, at least to some people.

    James Heaney, 44, told his family physician in 2000 that he often felt shy or mildly depressed in social situations – “like I saw on the TV commercial” telling viewers to “ask your doctor” about social anxiety. “There was no in-depth evaluation of my symptoms,” said Heaney, then a network administrator for a school district near Rochester, New York. After a 10-minute interview, he had a diagnosis of “mild social anxiety” and a prescription for Paxil. “For such a powerful drug,” he said, “it was remarkably easy to get.”

    Research over the past decade shows that feeling anxious is how the brain’s emotion centers send signals to its thinking centers that something is amiss.

    For instance, it is normal to be anxious over a sick child, a loved one’s illness, unemployment or other setbacks in life, said New York University sociologist Jerome Wakefield, co-author of “All We Have to Fear.”

    “The feeling of anxiety tells you something poses a threat, which can motivate you to stay vigilant” – about, say, a change in a sick child’s symptoms, he said.

    In the Paleolithic era, when our prehistoric ancestors lived in small clans, how people were viewed by strangers and kin could determine survival. So when people fret over going to a party, giving a speech or otherwise subject themselves to judgment, it reflects an adaptive response to the millennia-old need to be attuned to other people’s disapproval, researchers say. Anxiety about public speaking accounts for about half the diagnoses of social anxiety disorder.

    “There is great evolutionary and survival value in anxiety, which makes it difficult to identify as an illness or pathology,” said psychologist Frank Farley of Temple University.

    Anxiety was working properly among survivors of Hurricane Katrina, Wakefield and Horwitz contend. Years after the devastating 2005 storm, schools, housing, policing and other aspects of life in New Orleans had still not returned to normal. Using DSM criteria, a 2007 study concluded that half the surviving residents were “mentally ill” because they experienced anxiety about those lingering effects.

    “If you survived Katrina, anxiety is not a sign of mental illness; it’s the brain working as it should,” said Wakefield. Such emotions can spur survivors to agitate for rebuilding neighborhoods, he said.

    Another concern is that by labeling normal human variation – being more anxious, fearful or worried than the average person – a mental illness, psychiatry is venturing into social control.

    “To suggest that anyone who’s afraid to speak in front of hundreds of strangers has a mental illness creates social pressure to change,” said Wakefield. “And that pushes psychiatry away from medicine and into enforcing social values.”

    In retrospect, Marla Royce (who asked that her real name not be used) thinks her brain’s anxiety system was working as evolution intended. A successful Texas novelist, she was upset about the death of her father in 2004. Her anxiety was compounded when her publisher did not promote her new book, leading Royce to worry that her writing career was over.

    “It was just garden-variety situational anxiety,” she says now about the agitation and disorientation she felt.

    Royce said she went along “trustingly and blithely” when a family physician diagnosed her with GAD. “He said the pharma sales rep had just left some samples, so he gave me Lexapro,” to which a psychiatrist added Paxil, Xanax and Klonopin.

    She became dependent on the drugs, taking ever-higher doses. Her psychiatrist told her that “was proof my anxiety disorder was out of control and that I would have to be medicated for life.” She suffered “steadily declining mental and physical health” until she stopped the meds five years ago and shared her story with the online support group PaxilProgress.

    James Heaney’s shyness turned to numbness on Paxil. “It made me insular and nonresponsive to my friends and family,” he said. “My mood became very variable,” and co-workers told him they felt uncomfortable asking him for computer help as they once did “because they weren’t sure which James they would get.”

    He weaned himself off psychiatric drugs in 2011. The social anxiety he still occasionally feels “is a relatively easy problem to deal with,” he said.

    For Cynthia Craig, the drugs she was prescribed triggered “excruciating anxiety symptoms like I had never experienced in my entire life.”

    “I told my doctor I don’t want to be on anything,” she said. “My anxiety is predictable and something I can handle.”

    July 16, 2012 at 1:13 pm #39481
    frechtling
    Participant

    Chia’s books helped me overcome anxiety starting with the inner smile…a year later I’m a qigong addict…

    July 16, 2012 at 1:13 pm #39483
    frechtling
    Participant

    Chia’s books helped me overcome anxiety starting with the inner smile…a year later I’m a qigong addict…

    July 16, 2012 at 2:25 pm #39485
    bagua
    Participant

    If we look at the long history of the world I am not sure this is true. Go back to egypt, china and roman times and through the dark ages and consider world war 1 and 2. Life had little value to the controllers. Emperors and leaders would kill villages, communities and take young children and rape and murder. Food was scarce. The plaque killed millions, almost half of europe.

    Our society seems to think they are special in comparison to past generations. IMHO this is the root of much of the problem.

    bagua

    July 16, 2012 at 2:25 pm #39487
    bagua
    Participant

    If we look at the long history of the world I am not sure this is true. Go back to egypt, china and roman times and through the dark ages and consider world war 1 and 2. Life had little value to the controllers. Emperors and leaders would kill villages, communities and take young children and rape and murder. Food was scarce. The plaque killed millions, almost half of europe.

    Our society seems to think they are special in comparison to past generations. IMHO this is the root of much of the problem.

    bagua

    July 17, 2012 at 9:33 am #39489
    Steven
    Moderator

    Except that threats back then were actually real,
    and stress was burned off by the hard physical labor
    that people did.

    Today threats are imagined, and with work being
    non-physical, the stress has nowhere to go, except
    to generate anxiety disorders.

    People responding to real threats *are* living in the present,
    people responding to imagined ones are not.

    And this is where we agree.

    S

    July 17, 2012 at 9:33 am #39491
    Steven
    Moderator

    Except that threats back then were actually real,
    and stress was burned off by the hard physical labor
    that people did.

    Today threats are imagined, and with work being
    non-physical, the stress has nowhere to go, except
    to generate anxiety disorders.

    People responding to real threats *are* living in the present,
    people responding to imagined ones are not.

    And this is where we agree.

    S

    July 17, 2012 at 9:34 am #39493
    Steven
    Moderator
    July 17, 2012 at 9:34 am #39495
    Steven
    Moderator
    July 17, 2012 at 5:35 pm #39497
    bagua
    Participant

    Except that threats back then were actually real,
    and stress was burned off by the hard physical labor
    that people did.

    Today threats are imagined, and with work being
    non-physical, the stress has nowhere to go, except
    to generate anxiety disorders.

    People responding to real threats *are* living in the present,
    people responding to imagined ones are not.

    And this is where we agree.
    ****************************
    Thats a lot of assumptions.

    July 17, 2012 at 5:35 pm #39499
    bagua
    Participant

    Except that threats back then were actually real,
    and stress was burned off by the hard physical labor
    that people did.

    Today threats are imagined, and with work being
    non-physical, the stress has nowhere to go, except
    to generate anxiety disorders.

    People responding to real threats *are* living in the present,
    people responding to imagined ones are not.

    And this is where we agree.
    ****************************
    Thats a lot of assumptions.

    July 17, 2012 at 6:04 pm #39501
    Steven
    Moderator

    >>>People responding to real threats *are* living in the present,
    >>>people responding to imagined ones are not.

    Please explain to me how you disagree with this statement.

    S

    July 17, 2012 at 6:04 pm #39503
    Steven
    Moderator

    >>>People responding to real threats *are* living in the present,
    >>>people responding to imagined ones are not.

    Please explain to me how you disagree with this statement.

    S

    July 18, 2012 at 12:03 am #39505
    bagua
    Participant

    Except that threats back then were actually real, and stress was burned off by the hard physical labor
    that people did.
    ************************
    I don’t know stress was burned off. I find it hard to believe during world War 1 and 2 they stress, fear, terror was burned off.

    Same goes for slaves and peasants during dark ages. Starvation, fear of death. Slavery in the use, daily terror. On and On.

    Today threats are imagined, and with work being non-physical, the stress has nowhere to go, except
    to generate anxiety disorders.
    *******************
    Not affording health care, suffering from no health care. Not having money to pay for children’s care. Very high unemployment rate, if we consider the real rate, no the fake rate they use, so many with no or little money. Their stress is real.

    People responding to real threats *are* living in the present, people responding to imagined ones are not.
    **************************
    I don’t think it really matters. Ask a child if the terror they feel from their belief in the boogeyman is not real.

    In a way, the pain from imagination is worse than reality.

    A few observations of life and history.

    Our modern culture just allows for the complaining, its acceptable.

    July 18, 2012 at 12:03 am #39507
    bagua
    Participant

    Except that threats back then were actually real, and stress was burned off by the hard physical labor
    that people did.
    ************************
    I don’t know stress was burned off. I find it hard to believe during world War 1 and 2 they stress, fear, terror was burned off.

    Same goes for slaves and peasants during dark ages. Starvation, fear of death. Slavery in the use, daily terror. On and On.

    Today threats are imagined, and with work being non-physical, the stress has nowhere to go, except
    to generate anxiety disorders.
    *******************
    Not affording health care, suffering from no health care. Not having money to pay for children’s care. Very high unemployment rate, if we consider the real rate, no the fake rate they use, so many with no or little money. Their stress is real.

    People responding to real threats *are* living in the present, people responding to imagined ones are not.
    **************************
    I don’t think it really matters. Ask a child if the terror they feel from their belief in the boogeyman is not real.

    In a way, the pain from imagination is worse than reality.

    A few observations of life and history.

    Our modern culture just allows for the complaining, its acceptable.

  • Author
    Posts
Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 23 total)
1 2 →
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Log In

Primary Sidebar

Signup for FREE eBook – $20 value

Inner Smile free eBook with Signup to Newsletter

Way of the Inner Smile
130 page eBook

+ Qi Flows Naturally news

+ Loving the Tao of Now blog

Enter Email Only - Privacy Protected

Qigong Benefits – Michael Winn

Michael Winn Qi Products:

Best Buy Packages »
  1. Qigong Fundamentals 1 & 2
  2. Qigong Fundamentals 3 & 4
  3. Fusion of Five Elements 1, 2, 3
  4. Sexual Energy Cultivation
  5. Primordial Tai Chi / Primordial Qigong
  6. Inner Sexual Alchemy Kan & Li
  7. Sun-Moon Alchemy Kan & Li
  8. Inner Smile Gift
Individual Products
  1. Qigong Fundamentals 1
  2. Qigong Fundamentals 2
  3. Qigong Fundamentals 3
  4. Qigong Fundamentals 4
  5. Fusion of Five Elements 1
  6. Fusion of Five Elements 2 & 3
  7. Sexual Energy Cultivation
  8. Tao Dream Practice
  9. Primordial Tai Chi / Primordial Qigong
  10. Deep Healing Qigong
  11. Internal Alchemy (Kan & Li Series)
Michael Winn, President, Healing Tao USA Michael Winn, President, Healing Tao USA

Michael Winn, Pres.
Healing Tao USA

Use Michael Winn's Qi Gong products for one whole year — I guarantee you'll be 100% delighted and satisfied with the great Qi results. Return my product in good condition for immediate refund.

Guarantee Details

OUR PROMISE: Every Michael Winn Qi gong & meditation product will empower you to be more relaxed, smiling, joyful, and flowing in harmony with the Life Force.

yin-yang

Each Qigong video, book, or audio course will assist your authentic Self to fulfill worldly needs and relations; feel the profound sexual pleasure of being a radiant, healthy body; express your unique virtues; complete your soul destiny; realize peace – experience eternal life flowing in this human body Now.

© 2025 Healing Tao USA · Log in · built by mojomonger