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Why Did I Hyperventilate After Be Screamed At

Why did I hyperventilate after be screamed at?

When you get really upset and start crying, it disturbs your normal breathing pattern, and you actually start overbreathing. Meaning you are pulling in oxygen faster than your body can use it and get rid of carbon dioxide like it should.
It does sound like you are having panic attacks, because usually just crying does not make you hyperventilate. My advice would be to realize what you're going before you get so far that you do this to yourself and really try to take slow deep breaths. If you do end up hyperventilating, that whole paper bag trick really does work, because it makes it so that you're not taking in as much oxygen to help restore the balance in your body.

Why did I cry, scream, and hyperventilate during my first pap smear?

As far as I know you should not have a pap until you are sexually active, secondly were you abused as a child? This could cause the panic attack. And once you acted like that she should have stopped the procedure... I got it when i was 18, it was easy no big deal. Which means something is emotionally wrong with you? Not in a bad way!!!! It depends on your age, but that sounds like abuse from the panic attack but I am not sure. And do not know your age. Good Luck! And feel better~!

Can a baby hyperventilate from crying so much?

They will/can hyperventilate from crying like that. But they will not die or get sick. It's normal. I know that as an adult I have been so upset I was hyperventilating. Hopefully she will soon learn to self calm. A good tip I have is to make sure she doesn't see or hear you when you check on her. If she does she will become upset anew once you leave again.

Have her try a baby monitor instead of going into the room. This will work much better. And remember, if she is crying she is breathing, which means she is fine. She will not choke on her tongue either. I wish your friend luck. This period in raising a baby is no fun.

My 5-year-old hyperventilates when I don’t let her watch TV. How do I stop this?

My mom was a nurse. Her first posting was at a TB hospital for children. She used to say that if you could successfully deal with 40+ children under 12, all with life threatening illness, you could deal with anything.NOTHING ever phased my mom. Not when my second oldest brother almost completely severed his pinky, and not when the cops came to the door looking to speak with my oldest brother about his motorcycle accident (brother wasn’t home and no one had heard about his accident yet).Once, when I was very young, I tried a rather dramatic tantrum. She looked at me and with one eyebrow raised began a lengthy critique of my technique telling me exactly why it wasn’t believable. She knew I wasn’t REALLY in the level of physical distress I was portraying and she called me on it. I stood there blinking, realizing that I really couldn’t pull one over on her and never tried it again. (I tried other stuff but never a tantrum).Not everyone can pull it off but you might try calling your 5 year old on it and see how it goes. Mom always said the trick is in the follow through. She never said something and then relented. Punishments stuck in our house. They were mercifully rare but when she said something she stuck to it. Kids will manipulate you if you let them and this hyperventilating is your 5 year old’s attempt to manipulate you.Tell her she has pulled that stunt too many times and you know it isn’t real and she isn’t going to get to watch TV for a week if she continues. (Or start with a day and keep adding on days until she stops).If she realizes you aren’t buying the routine and won’t back down she will stop.

Yelling and hyperventilating when angry?

I hate to say this, but maybe you're turning into your dad, that is, you are using your anger the same way he uses his; inappropriately.

There is a rage that is insane in nature, and I think you experienced it since you have memory lapses with this past episode. And because of your violent behavior. This is not healthy for you and will alienate people you love.

Hyperventilation or overbreathing is breathing faster and deeper than normal usually from panic, stress and anxiety. (It can occur as a result of lung disease, diabetic ketoacidosis, head injury or stroke - but in your case, probably the stress). You can recover from long, deep breaths which help the blood recover it's acidity..

Anger management classes and counseling can help. So can talking to people about the resentment and anger toward your dad (which sounds completely justified, by the way). This is not a healthy situation for you, so please, take positive steps for yourself. Good luck and God Bless.

Episodes of hyperventilation, fear, chest pains?

Hello. So since I could remember, I've been having these out of the blue "episodes" where I feel like I HAVE to scream (usually just scream into a pillow or bite my hand), my heart races, I hyperventilate really badly, my chest hurts, and I get really, REALLY scared for no reason and it makes me feel the need to run away (I've run out of my house before, I didn't even know where I wanted to go but nothing was going through my head except raw fear and it was the worst feeling in the world so now I just suppress the urge) It usually takes me about 20 minutes to an hour to calm down. There's no obvious cause I can pinpoint...I just feel it building up and then it happens at any given time and I just feel this incredible fear of absolutely nothing and it really messes with my daily life. It's been happening since I could remember and I've never told anyone and I'm just now seeking help because these episodes have become much more frequent lately. What could this be? Is it just me being a wuss?

What causes someone to cry and hyperventilate when explaining how they feel (physically and /or mentally)?

(Disclaimer regarding the below images, proceed if you are ok with blood and gore)“Emotional Attachment or Fear” is the answer to your question.Crying and hyperventilation is caused by having an extreme emotional attachment.It could be the case of 2 lovers breaking up after a LTR or death of a loved one or being exposed to a gruesome accident or any occident that causes trauma to the individual.Let's take an example of Carrie. Ofcourse, most of us have watched this Stephen King's debut book on the screen. There are 2 versions of it, both equally horrifying.Not going to get into the movie details, but let's see cases where there was crying and hyperventilation involvedWhen Carrie defies her mother and goes ahead with trying on her prom dress. While her mother shakes uncontrollablly about the 'devil'The initial scene where Carrie is teased by her teenage classmates about her Period blood. When they brutally start to tape the video, you can see her shivering, scared about being bullied.The scene where Carrie's mother tries to kill her but is thrown into the wall by Carrie's kinetic energy gift. This is an emotional scene between mother and daughter as Carrie thinks she is not allowed to enjoy life owing to her mother's religious fanatics.Most importantly, the scene where the pig's blood falls on Carrie while she is crowned Prom queen. She is hyperventilating and is crying from all the embarrassment faced.(Source: google images)Also, it is human nature to cry and hyperventilate when you realise you lose something close to heart and there is no way of getting it back. Could be love, could be a person, or sometimes could be memories..

Hyperventilating screaming and crying while pregnant?

Me and my boyfriend just got in a huge fight and he broke up with me so he could go sleep with whoever he wants. I'm currently 18 weeks and didn't take this very well I was screaming at the top of my lungs crying and hyperventilating and it got so bad that I ended up hitting myself repeatedly in the head, and it's not just today I cry almost every day because of him but I can't seem to leave. Will my baby be okay??

How do I stop my mother from screaming at me?

Your mother's behavior is abusive. Yes, I know, she can also be very wonderful and loving, but most abusers are loving some of the time.As a therapist, I have been helping people with your type of problem for years. Honestly, the only way I have seen to deal with this kind of behavior is to refuse to be around it. Since she refuses to set limits on her own unacceptable behavior, you must set limits and boundaries of what you are willing/not willing to accept. Therefore, when she starts yelling, calling names, cursing, etc. you can say, "I will not stay and listen as long as you are being (disrespectful, yelling, abusive, etc)." And then you must leave- leave the room, go outside, leave the house, whatever works in the situation. Or you can say nothing, and just go. It sends a clear message that you will not tolerate that behavior. It will not change her behavior- in fact, it will make her very angry. But it is crucial that you set boundaries of what is unacceptable and follow through with it. Remember, you are not trying to change her behavior, because that never works. You are trying to change your own mindset and behavior, to being the kind of person who refuses to stand for being abused. In the past, you have probably tried to be understanding and reasonable, to try to help her calm down or stop treating you that way. It hasn't worked; and it likely never will. The ONLY way to deal with this type of person is to stop tolerating the behavior and remove yourself from their presence. And remember, as you leave- end of discussion, no more arguments, don't say a thing. If you try to discuss or argue, she keeps you in her trap. Just leave.

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