reply to post by BohemianBrim
Some of those fears result from early experiences, like somoene who almost drowned as a kid.
Some of them are developed through the images and and ideas they recieve early on (movies like "Jaws"!)
Some of them are actually expressions of deeper fears in the psyche- like water often is a symbol of emotions; people who have nightmares of tidal
waves might fear being overcome by emotion which they can't control and that takes over their ability to think or act.
Some of them are physical fears - like the fear of not being able to percieve yourself in relation to the space you are in..... not knowing where
up,and down are, and determining your position in relation to objects in the exterior world.
I would make a guess that your fear of being underwater, in the way you described it, sounds like that last one?
Claustrophobia is the anxiety of not being able to control or change your position in space. Either way you get trapped and unable to choose your
movement in relation to what is exterior.
That is probably somewhat instinctive, and we all sort of learn to either accept such a situation of powerlessness, or to fear it as something
dangerous, depending upon our early experiences.
I recently started scuba diving and found breathing underwater very stressful and a little water in my mask tipped me over the edge almost into panic
once. But being in a state where I could not tell where the bottom was, where the surface was, or anything at all didn't bother me. I feel trusting
of that state, for some reason.
I think it is possible to re-train your body. I think it is exactly like with animal training. With horses, we "sack them out" make them experience
what they fear, more or less progressively, until they can get to actually having an experience where they can stay in that position for longer and
longer periods of time and have their body make the association that nothing bad happens to them. Horses being prey animals that are programmed to
flee danger usually have an instinct to panic in areas which are enclosed, like a hall. We start of having them walk through it as quickly as they
need, then again and again, until they start to slow down, and then can actually stop and stand there for a few seconds. Each time pushes them to
overcome their anxiety just a bit more, and soon it registers in their body that this place is okay.
If such fears are a hindrance to you and limit you from doing some things you'd like to do, a sort of program like this can help. If it isn't a
problem for you, well it isn't a problem then!