Fourteen-year-old Kathleen is learning to conquer her fear of flying. It surfaced after she had a bad experience.
“There was sweating, heart racing, it was a complete sense of panic,” she recalls.
Her mother, Kimberly Berman, remembers it, too. “The doors were closing and the plane was about to pull away from the gate; Kathleen ran off the plane.”
Now Kathleen is in therapy. But it is far from traditional therapy. With the aid of a simulator and coaching from a therapist, she practices flying in a virtual airplane.
“And what it actually does is it reminds them of how they feel in that situation so it can evoke the same kind of anxiety that they feel in the real situation,” explains Dr. Elana Zimand, Kathleen’s psychologist. “It doesn’t work for everybody because it takes a bit of a suspension in disbelief. But when it works, it can be really powerful.”
Anxiety disorders affect about 25 million people. The typical treatment is medication, along with psychological therapy.
“Virtual realitytherapy” isn’t mainstream yet, but Kathleen says it’s helped her.
“I still feel so anxious,” she says, “but I’ve learned to manage that. And so I stay calm. And I know that I can do it.”
She manages her fear first by talking about it, and then by controlling her breathing.
After several sessions, Kathleen decided to try boarding a real plane.
“And that day she was very nervous,” says her mother, “but somehow she gained confidence over her fears and over the physical manifestation that came with those fears. And she boarded the flight, and we were off!” |