Over one-tenth of Australians suffer from an anxiety-related condition. Elisa Black is one of them - and her story could make life better for those millions of other people just like her.
Since journalist Elisa Black wrote an article about her lifelong struggle with anxiety in March 2015, it has been read by hundreds of thousands of people. Clearly, what Elisa had to say found a readership far bigger than she could have expected - and with millions of Australians suffering from anxiety, it's little wonder.
There is far more to Elisa's story, though, than one article can cover. In this book, weaving memoir with science, Elisa uses the stages of her own life to relate to stages in everyone's lives and the types of anxiety that may be experienced during each phase. She includes the latest in research and other scientific information about anxiety, its causes and treatment.
Elisa's story will inspire fellow anxiety sufferers to believe that there is a way to manage their condition and live more freely. From her own experience she also offers hope that anxiety does not have to dominate a life, or even dent it - it can be managed and conquered.
It was only following a misguided spell in a German girl band that Elisa Black finally settled on a career in journalism a decade ago. After post-grad study at the University of South Australia, she moved to Brisbane where she spent her first weeks in newspapers covering the sports round, rapidly learning there is, in fact, no such thing as a handball in rugby.A stint in magazines and feature writing followed before she returned to Adelaide to work first as an entertainment reporter and then as health and family reporter for a weekend newspaper.She vacillates between hoping desperately for a resurgence in the popularity of the written word, and terror that, one day, her boys will read exactly what she has been writing about them.
The Anxiety Book
Hachette Australia
Author: Elisa Black
ISBN: 9780733635335
RRP: $32.99
Question: What inspired you to write The Anxiety Book?
Elisa Black: I was always anxious - my first memories are of being scared for absolutely no good reason - but I didn't realise it was anxiety until I was in my 20s and a long period of intense and almost-constant panic attacks left me very unwell. It would have been enormously helpful to know what was going on, rather than my imagination convincing me I was about to die and go crazy at the same time.
I think it also helps to know you are not alone. Sometimes the thoughts that go through your mind when you are anxious become even scarier because they feel so specific and real and personal - like they must be true. Hearing the same fears from others takes the sting out of them.
Question: Was it difficult reliving your own experiences, when writing The Anxiety Book?
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