Phobia Sentence Examples

phobia
  • I should have realized you had a phobia about snakes.

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  • Alex had a phobia about serpents.

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  • She might get over the phobia about adoption – if that was actually the problem.

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  • Her phobia didn't go unnoticed by Alex.

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  • Why Alex, I do believe you have a phobia about snakes.

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  • This phobia about snakes was thwarting her attempts at independence.

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  • A phobia is a strong but irrational fear.

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  • School phobia often reflects other problems in the child's family, such as parental alcoholism, marital conflict, anxiety, or depression.

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  • Paruresis (also known as ' bashful bladder ' syndrome) is another type of social phobia.

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  • A simple, easy to follow step by step guide to overcoming a phobia.

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  • Older woman with flying phobia I am immensely grateful.

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  • The site contains information ranging from the basic driving theory test for learner drivers to advanced techniques, road rage and driving phobia.

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  • I too developed a motorway phobia some years back.

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  • There is a website for dental phobia which some people might find useful.

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  • They probably won't be taking my social phobia into account, for a start.

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  • The volunteers were then asked to face their specific phobia by either giving a speech in public or coming into contact with a spider.

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  • The doctor will also need to distinguish between anorexia and other psychiatric disorders, including depression, schizophrenia, social phobia, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and body dysmorphic disorder.

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  • Other psychiatric problems that often coexist with tics and tic disorders include learning disorders, impulse control disorders, school phobia, sensory hypersensitivity, and rage attacks.

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  • School phobia in young children has been connected to separation anxiety.

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  • Typically, children who experience this type of irrational fear, or phobia, should get treatment from a psychologist.

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  • The most popular and effective treatment for phobias is behavior therapy, which approaches the phobia as an undesirable behavior to be unlearned.

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  • Medication is especially helpful for social phobia, where it can help the child overcome her aversion to social interaction sufficiently to work with a therapist.

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  • The term school phobia was first used in 1941 to identify children who fail to attend school because attendance causes emotional distress and anxiety.

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  • Current thinking defines school phobia or school refusal as an anxiety disorder related to separation anxiety.

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  • Unlike school phobia, truancy often occurs with other antisocial behaviors such as shoplifting, lying, and drug and alcohol use.

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  • School phobia is highest in children ages five to seven and 11 to 14.

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  • There appears to be a genetic component to all anxiety disorders, including school phobia.

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  • School phobia is often associated with other anxiety disorders such as agoraphobia or other mental health disorders such as depression.

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  • Truancy is different from school phobia, in which a child fails to attend school because of anxiety.

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  • Bangs are the perfect way to dip your feet into change without long term commitment phobia.

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  • Trust is a key ingredient to love and if you're making fun of him, whether it's a phobia or a mistake, then his trust may be damaged.

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  • Hypnosis revealed that her phobia stemmed from a previous life experience when her parents would shut her in a closet for misbehavior.

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  • Since Carmen had been the one to initiate that adoption, it was safe to assume she was over her adoption phobia.

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  • She might get over the phobia about adoption – if that was actually the problem.

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  • At other times (e.g. agoraphobia, social phobia) avoiding the feared situation limits their life severely.

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  • Young men can often be affected by social phobia, with at least two in one hundred men being affected by it.

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  • An exposure program for someone with a severe phobia about snakes should start with thinking about what exactly makes them feel frightened.

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  • One of my female friends told me she thinks I have a commitment phobia and I think she is right.

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  • However there is no reliable data on the duration of illness phobia where there is no depressive problem.

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  • Computer ' phobia ' exists in a variety of shades, from the mildly reticent student to the absolutely terrified.

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  • This hypervigilence can be a sign that you have developed some fear or phobia of certain situations or places as well.

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  • Aretha Franklin - The legendary songstress is said to have a fear of flying, a phobia she shares with fellow artist Cher.

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  • This phobia is something she shares with another famous blonde, Daryl Hannah.

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  • Bob Hope, Sir Laurence Olivier, Farrah Fawcett - Each of these iconic figures had social phobia, a fear of being humiliated in front of others.

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  • If you have a phobia about playing in front of people in a guitar lesson, be it one-on-one or a group class, online lessons remove this prospect from the equation.

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  • School phobia can be a type of separation anxiety disorder.

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  • A phobia is an intense and unrealistic fear brought on by an object, event, or situation, which can interfere with the ability to socialize, work, or go about everyday life.

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  • When the child is afraid of something past the age at which it is normal, when the fear interferes with the child's ability to function normally, then the fear ranks as a phobia.

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  • As its name suggests, a specific phobia is the fear of a particular situation or object, for example, flying on an airplane or going to the dentist.

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  • If the person rarely encounters the feared object, the phobia does not cause much harm.

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  • People with social phobia have deep fears of being watched or judged by others and being embarrassed in public.

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  • More rarely, people with social phobia may have trouble using a public restroom, eating in a restaurant, or signing their name in front of others.

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  • Social phobia is not the same as shyness.

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  • On the other hand, people with social phobia may not be shy; they may feel perfectly comfortable with people except in specific situations.

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  • It is not unusual for people with social phobia to turn down job offers or avoid relationships because of their fears.

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  • Almost all children experience some specific fears at some point, but not many rise to the level of phobia or require professional treatment.

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  • While experts believe the tendency to develop phobias runs in families and may be hereditary, a specific stressful event usually triggers the development of a specific phobia or agoraphobia.

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  • For example, someone predisposed to develop phobias who experiences severe turbulence during a flight might go on to develop a phobia about flying.

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  • What scientists do not understand is why some people who experience a frightening or stressful event develop a phobia and others do not.

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  • Social phobia typically appears in childhood or adolescence, sometimes following an upsetting or humiliating experience.

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  • Social phobia is often associated with other anxiety disorders, depression, or substance abuse.

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  • People who have a specific phobia that is easy to avoid (such as snakes) and that does not interfere with their lives may not need to get help.

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  • Phobias are among the most treatable mental health problems; depending on the severity of the condition and the type of phobia, most properly treated people can go on to lead normal lives.

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  • Research suggests that once a person overcomes the phobia, the problem may not return for many years, if it returns at all.

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  • Unless a phobia involves fear of eating a needed food, there are no nutritional concerns associated with phobias.

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  • It is, therefore, often considered a type of social phobia.

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  • Over 90 percent of children with mutism also have social phobia or social anxiety, and some experts view mutism as a symptom of social anxiety.

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  • School phobia and separation anxiety affects 3-5 percent of school-age children.

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  • The child with school phobia becomes anxious even at the thought of leaving home for school.

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  • Sometimes children develop school phobia from bullying at school, an excessively critical teacher, and rejection by peers.

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  • School phobia occurs most often at the start of school for children who are three to five years of age.

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  • A specific phobia is the fear of a particular situation or object, including anything from airplane travel to dentists.

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  • People with social phobia have deep fears of being watched or judged by others and of being embarrassed in public.

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  • On the other hand, people with social phobia may not be shy; they may feel perfectly comfortable with people except in a public place.

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  • School phobia is a complex syndrome that can be influenced by the child's temperament, the situation at school, and the family situation.

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  • School phobia is an international problem, with an estimated rate of 2.4 percent of all school-age children worldwide refusing to attend classes.

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  • In this instance the phobia is fear of disease germs present on commonly handled objects.

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  • Kathy Edstrom, a Bach flower therapy practitioner and animal trainer, reports success using a blend prepared by a holistic veterinarian for her dog to treat thunder phobia.

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  • A phobia can even include not talking or thinking about anything that has any relation to the event.

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  • This enlargement constricts the urethra so the flow of urine is reduced Are you suffering from CV phobia?

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  • Young children often have a fear of strangers that is quite normal; social phobia is not usually diagnosed until a child reaches adolescence and has crippling fears that interfere with normal function.

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  • Underlying conditions that might affect recovery from school phobia include Tourette syndrome, attention deficit disorder (ADD), depression, bipolar mental illness, panic disorder, or other anxiety disorders and phobias.

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