09
Sun, Feb

Stephen Colbert Gets Honest about Anxiety and What Helps Him Cope

HEALTH

WELLNESS--CBS Photo Archive via Getty Images Stephen Colbert opened up about anxiety and panic to Rolling Stone.

For Stephen Colbert performing in front of an audience isn’t a source of anxiety ― it’s his escape from it.

The “Late Show with Stephen Colbert” host, 54, opened up to Rolling Stone this week about living with anxiety when he was younger. He discussed the behaviors it provoked and the different methods he tried to manage it.

“I had a bit of a nervous breakdown after I got married — kind of panic attacks,” he told the publication. “My wife would go off to work and she’d come home — because I worked at night — and I’d be walking around the couch. And she’s like, ‘How was your day?’ And I’d say, ‘You’re looking at it.’ Just tight circles around the couch.”

Colbert said back then he took medication for his anxiety for a few days, which he said helped. But he ultimately decided that treatment plan wasn’t right for him.

“I realized that the gears were still smoking. I just couldn’t hear them anymore,” he said. “But I could feelthem, I could feel the gearbox heating up and smoke pouring out of me.”

Eventually he noticed that his anxiety would dissipate when he performed with the improv troupe Second City in Chicago.

Nobody ever asked me what was wrong! It went on for months. Stephen Colbert

“I would go to the show, and I would curl up in a ball on the couch backstage and I would wait to hear my cue lines. Then I would uncurl and go onstage and I’d feel fine,” he said. “Which occurred to me at the time: Like, ‘Oh, you feel fine when you’re out here.’ And then as soon as I got offstage, I’d just crumble into a ball again. Nobody ever asked me what was wrong! It went on for months.”

Colbert’s experience is far from uncommon. The widespread stigma and misunderstanding surrounding mental health issues keeps those living with mental illness from speaking up or asking for help, and discourages everybody else from talking about it.

An estimated 40 million American adults, or 18 percent of the adult population, are affected by anxiety each year. In addition to panic and excessive stress, it can cause headaches, stomach issues, rapid breathing, heart palpitations and more. But the good news is that anxiety is highly treatable: Therapy, medication, coping techniques or a combination of methods can help people manage anxiety and live well.

Colbert told Rolling Stone that his work continues to be a lifeline for him.

“Creating something is what helped me from just spinning apart like an unweighted flywheel,” he said. “And I haven’t stopped since. Even when I was a writer, I always had to be in front of a camera a little bit. I have to perform.”

(Lindsey Holmes writes for HuffPost  … where this piece originated.)

-cw

Sound Baths – An Ancient Tradition Finally Makes it into the Mainstream

WELLNESS--You may be familiar with the term “Sound Bath” as it has become more and more popular, especially within the spiritual, yoga, and meditation communities. Although it has nothing to do with getting wet, many would liken it to being cleansed from the inside out. 

Read more ...

Great News! An Affordable Human Growth Hormone Product!

WELLNESS--Over the past few months I have been using an FDA approved, homeopathic, transdermal, Human Growth Hormone (HGH) gel. Like many people, I am always on the lookout for the next breakthrough product that will help me  remain healthy, young, and vital. 

Read more ...

Anti-Social Media  

WELLNESS--I’ve been taking a social media vacation. I needed a break. The more people I speak with, it seems that I am not alone.

Read more ...

Life’s Lessons Make Us Stronger

WELLNESS--Have you ever noticed that even when you’re doing well, life seems to test you?

Read more ...

Six Ways to Stay Cool … and Alive

WELLNESS--We have been having record breaking heat in Southern California and with the planet continuing to warm up, there’s a good chance we have not seen the end of it.

This past week Los Angeles and San Diego have felt more like Arizona with temperatures reaching 117 in some places. Heat records all over southern California were toppled and at one point in Los Angeles alone there were over 32,000 residents without power. 

Read more ...

5 Secrets to Making Exercise Easy!

WELLNESS--For starters, the all or nothing attitude towards exercise is not the mindset we want to hold.

Read more ...

What YOU Can Do to Reduce the 50,000 Deaths by Suicide

WELLNESS--Last week two high profile celebrities Kate Spade and Anthony Bourdain took their own lives.

Read more ...

Ketamine Has Taken the Psychiatric World by Storm. That’s Good … and Bad … News!

WELLNESS--There is a drug that has taken the psychiatric world by storm and it’s called Ketamine.

Read more ...