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@lisalucier

Hi, @eric65 - welcome to Mayo Clinic Connect. These are all excellent ideas. Sounds like you are being very proactive in planning activities, and trying to replicate some of your normal routine. I've been getting out walking in the neighborhood or a nearby lake with my mom for walks, since her gym closed, and I think the physical activity is good and that the cardio in addition to the outside time is refreshing for the soul. I am not at all a doomsday type personality, but when I've been out to get some groceries or the like lately it is feeling more empty of people and activity, and kind of dark to me. I think we all could use a lift in any constructive ways we can.

I wanted to let you know that we have a Connect Neuropathy group you might check out for discussions that might be relevant for you https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/neuropathy/

If you've not yet checked out other discussions in the Connect group this thread is a part of, do look at the threads in the whole Depression & Anxiety group https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/depression-anxiety/

How long have you had an anxiety disorder diagnosis, eric65? You mentioned you are doing fairly well right now. What would you say is making the biggest difference for keeping your anxiety reasonably well-managed at this time with the COVID-19 pandemic?

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Replies to "Hi, @eric65 - welcome to Mayo Clinic Connect. These are all excellent ideas. Sounds like you..."

Thanks for links, Lisa. I guess "doing fairly well" is a relative thing. It's still a major struggle.

I had my first anxiety attack at 19, and struggled through most of my 20s. At around 30 or 31, I met a psychiatrist through an anxiety self-help group. He convinced me it was a brain chemistry issue, and put me on a Prozac and Clonazapam. It kicked right in and I would say that my anxiety was under control — often not even a factor — for 35 years. I would have setbacks occasionally, but was able to work through them. I retired from full-time work in late 2018, and everything was bliss. I had a nice freelance writing business. We were all set to travel, get out of Florida in the summer. Then early last July, shortly after returning from a three-day trip to a resort in Pennsylvania for a travel writing assignment, I got hit with a massive case of itching. That quickly transitioned into tingling in my hands. I was having nights with only intermittent sleep. On advice of a neurologist, I increased my low dose of Clonazepam.

My anxiety spiked way up and stayed after the neuropathy took hold. Switching to LexaPro helped. But I'm still struggling. Probably worst of all, my neuropathy has worsened so that my toes and fingertips are numb, my feet often burn, usually at night, and the tinging in my hands is more like stinging. It ebbs and flows in intensity, but it's never gone.

My biggest fear at the moment is the potential for continuing spread of my neuropathy. I really don't have health anxiety. I'm not consciously afraid of catching the coronavirus. I know I'm doing all that I can. I am concerned about a continued stretch of isolation, although my wife and I get along great. Now and again, my mind wanders into: Am I going to be able to handle this for two, three months? Will I end up a basket case in a rubber room? Ultimately, I know that's not what happens with anxiety disorder, that the spikes always recede.

I recommend to all folks who have anxiety disorder a book and app called "The Dare Response," started and written by an Irishman named Barry McDonagh. https://dareresponse.com

Also, for pain, an app called Curable that takes a mind-body approach is effective. https://www.curablehealth.com

And finally, as very good program by a psychologist in California named Alan Gordon. He has a free 21-day program that takes a different approach to managing or eliminating pain. https://www.tmswiki.org/forum/painrecovery/

While the program has not improved my PN symptoms, it has helped me cope and given me new insights.

I've just written a memoir. I'll stop now. Thanks for responding. I just did 90 minutes in a dentist chair w/o anxiety to speak of. We're supposed to acknowledge our victories, however small they may seem to others. So, yipeee. OK, I'm really going to stop now 🙂 — Eric