PHun PHobia PHacts The Varieties of Fear
Phobias take many forms. Some people are terrified of dogs, even tiny dogs with wagging tails. Some people stiffen with fright at the mere thought of talking in front of a group. Some can't fly. Some tremble and hide at the crack of thunder. Some can't ride an escalator. Some are struck by panic attacks for no apparent reason. And some never leave their homes. Fears such as these are very common. Millions of Americans are afflicted with phobias or panic disorder. They suffer intensely. To escape fear, they go to great lengths to avoid the object, place, or situation that provokes it. They change jobs merely to avoid an elevator ride, for example, or cut back their social life. Some wear down their families with their clinging dependency. Nearly all lose out on much of life.
The following is a list of phobias that I thought were unusual and educational. After the list of phobias are types of treatment one can receive for a phobia. See if you identify with any of them.
Also, if you know of a phobia that is not listed here, please send it and I will post it!
Thank you.
TECHNOPHOBIA:
Fear of technology.SCIOPHOBIA:
Fear of shadows.
DECIDOPHOBIA:
Fear of making decisions.
NYCTOPHOBIA:
Fear of the night.
ELECTROPHOBIA:
Fear of electricity.
TOPOPHOBIA:
Fear of performing (stage fright).
TRISKAIDEKAPHOBIA:
Fear of the number 13.
GEPHYROPHOBIA:
Fear of crossing bridges.
OPHIDIOPHOBIA:
Fear of snakes.
GATOPHOBIA:
Fear of cats.
HYDROPHOBIA:
Fear of water.
BATRACHOPHOBIA:
Fear of reptiles.
PYROPHOBIA:
Fear of fire.
ASTRAPOPHOBIA:
Fear of lightning.
SPERMOPHOBIA:
Fear of germs.
PNIGEROPHOBIA:
Fear of smothering.
CYNOPHOBIA:
Fear of dogs.
ARACHIBUTYROPHOBIA:
The fear of having peanut butter stuck to the roof of your mouth.
AEROPHOBIA:
Fear of flying.
OCHLOPHOBIA:
Fear of crowds.
BLENNOPHOBIA:
Fear of slime.
KATAGELOPHOBIA:
Fear of ridicule.
SPHEKSOPHOBIA:
Fear of wasps.
THALASSOPHOBIA:
Fear of the ocean.
KAKORRAPHIAPHOBIA:
Fear of failure.
GYNOPHOBIA:
Fear of women.
AGORAPHOBIA:
Fear of open spaces.
CLAUSTROPHOBIA:
Fear of closed places.
EREMOPHOBIA:
Fear of being alone.
ACROPHOBIA:
Fear of heights.
MUSOPHOBIA:
Fear of mice.
APIPHOBIA:
Fear of bees.
GAMOPHOBIA:
Fear of marriage.
SCHOLIONOPHOBIA:
Fear of school.
ODYNEPHOBIA:
Fear of pain.
TROPOPHOBIA:
Fear of moving or making changes.
KERAUNOPHOBIA:
Fear of thunder.
AMATHOPHOBIA:
Fear of dust.
TREATMENT FOR PHOBIAS Simple or specific phobias have been quite effectively treated with behavior therapy (Marks, 1987). The behaviorists involved in classical conditioning techniques believe that the response of phobic fear is a reflex acquired to non-dangerous stimuli. The normal fear to a dangerous stimulus, such as a poisonous snake, has unfortunately been generalized over to non-poisonous ones as well.If the person were to be exposed to the non-dangerous stimulus time after time without any harm being experienced, the phobic response would gradually extinguish itself. Also, this assumes that the person does not also experience the dangerous stimulus during that same extended period of time. In other words, one would have to come across ONLY non-poisonous snakes for a prolonged period of time for such extinction to occur. This is not likely to occur naturally, so behavior therapy sets up phobic treatment involving exposure to the phobic stimulus in a safe and controlled setting. Foa and Kozak (1986) call this exposure treatment, so called because the patient is exposed to the phobic stimulus as part of the therapeutic process. One simple form of exposure treatment is that of flooding, where the person is immersed in the fear reflex until the fear itself fades away. Some phobic reactions are so strong that flooding must be done through one's imagining the phobic stimulus, rather than engaging the phobic stimulus itself.
Some patients cannot handle flooding in any form, so an alternative classical conditioning technique is used called counter-conditioning (Watson, 1924). In this form, one is trained to substitute a relaxation response for the fear response in the presence of the phobic stimulus. Relaxation is incompatible with feeling fearful or having anxiety, so it is said that the relaxation response counters the fear response. This counter-conditioning is most often used in a systematic way to very gradually introduce the feared stimulus in a step-by-step fashion known as systematic desensitization, first used by Joseph Wolpe (1958). This desensitization involves three steps: (1) training the patient to physically relax, (2) establishing an anxiety hierarchy of the stimuli involved, and (3) counter-conditioning relaxation as a response to each feared stimulus beginning first with the least anxiety-provoking stimulus and moving then to the next least anxiety-provoking stimulus until all of the items listed in the anxiety hierarchy have been dealt with successfully.
Biofeedback instrumentation has often been used to ensure that the patient is truly well-relaxed before going the next higher item in the anxiety hierarchy. Several indexes have been used in this adjunctive approach, including pulse rate, respiration rate, and electrodermal responses.
Also, systematic desensitization can be paired with modeling, an application suggested by social learning theorists. In modeling, the patient observes others (the "models") in the presence of the phobic stimulus who are responding with relaxation rather than fear. In this way, the patient is encouraged to imitate the model(s) and thereby relieve their phobia. Combininglive modeling with personal imitation is sometimes called participant modeling (Bernstein, 1997).
Rothbaum et. al. (1995) reports using a virtual-reality helmet being worn by the patient which then displays a phobic situation which is controlled and monitored by the therapist. The scene might be one of driving a car over a high bridge, while pulse rate is being monitored by the therapist. When the pulse rate gets too high, the scene is either shut down or frozen in frame to allow the therapist to counter-condition relaxation to replace the fear and anxiety response.
Systematic desensitization in a variety of forms has been commonly used to treat specific phobias and, in some cases, can be achieved in a single therapeutic session (Ost, 1989; Zinbarg & others, 1992).
REFERENCES Foa, E. B, & Kozak, M.J. (1986). Emotional processing of fear; Exposure to corrective information. Psychological Bulletin, 99, 20-35.
Bernstein, D. A., Clarke-Stewart, A., Roy, E. J., & Wickens, C. D. (1997). Psychology, 4th ed. New York: Houghton Mifflin.
Marks, I. M. (1987). Fears, phobias, and rituals: Panic, anxiety, and their disorders. New York: Oxford University Press.
Ost, L. G. (1989). One-session treatment for specific phobias. Behavioral Research and Therapy, 27, 1-7. In Gray, P. (1994). Psychology, 2nd. ed. New York: Worth.
Rothbaum, B. O., Hodges, L.F., Kooper, R., Opdyke, D., Williford, J.S., & North, M. (1995). Effectiveness of computer-generated (virtual reality) graded exposure in the treatment of acrophobia. American Journal of Psychiatry, 152, 626-628.
Watson, J. B. (1924). Behaviorism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Wolpe, J. (1958). Psychotherapy by reciprocal inhibition. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Zinbarg, R. E., Barlow, D. H., Brown, T. A., & Hertz, R. M. (1992). Cognitive-behavioral approaches to the nature and treatment of anxiety disorders. Annual Review of Psychology, 43, 235-267. In Gray, P. (1994). Psychology, 2nd ed. New York: Worth.
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