What is Generalised Anxiety Disorder?
- Rose
- Mar 28
- 2 min read
Updated: Jun 6

GAD is a long, diffused, constant and chronic worry about everything and nothing. GAD is mentally and physically exhausting due to its impact on the individual daily life. GAD affects individuals’ ability to enjoy life at its potential.
Symptoms you have noticed or people have noticed.
Emotion
Persistent worries about everything
Intrusive and unwanted thoughts
Difficulty to manage uncertainty
Feeling of uncontrollable anxiety
Behaviour
Withdraw or isolated yourself from a situation that creates anxiety
Difficulty to relax and concentrating
Avoiding doing things because you feel overwhelmed
Body response
Muscle tensions
Sleep disturbance
Stomach pain
For more information see NHS, DSM-V and NICE guideline
How I can help?
My work is to help you gain skills that would allow you to develop a new way of thinking in order not only to reduce the level of anxiety but also, improve your quality of life.
In CBT and with evidence-based, we believe that our thoughts have an impact on our feelings, behaviour and body response. Therefore, if we change our thoughts we will necessarily change our behaviour and our body response.
Help with thoughts
In order to help you change your thoughts, I will use cognitive restructuring intervention. It aims to help you identify:
The situation that creates anxiety
The thoughts that went in your mind at that time
The feelings that thoughts have generated
How did you react and your body response?
Help with the Behaviour
In order to help with the behaviour, I will use Behaviour Experiments (BE) technique. Its purpose is to help you to reduce your safety behaviour and to adopt more healthy behaviour.
Summary
It is possible to treat GAD with therapy or a combination of medicines such as Buspirone, Benzodiazepines and antidepressants.
If this information is related to you, please, feel free to contact me by phone 07884778541 or click here to contact me for help.
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