Stay
cool. Our feel-good adviser is in.
Q:
Last semester, during a final, I suddenly felt nauseous, dizzy and short of
breath. For a second, I felt like I might die! Finals are coming up again—then
the bar. I’m scared. What can I do?
A:
Law school exams, like the Spanish Inquisition, are designed to dispatch a
significant percentage of examinees to perdition. Given this, Dr. of Law would
be more concerned if you weren’t anxious. On the positive front,
studies have shown that a little anxiety is actually a valuable ally in spurring
peak performance in everything from sports to cognition. On the other hand, if
your heebie-jeebies progress too far past the butterflies stage—and it sounds
like yours have—the problem can definitely impair your performance. It also
could be a sign of more serious trouble.
What’s Going On?
The immediate causes of the physical and mental perturbation you experienced are
the same bouillabaisse of hormones and neurotransmitters responsible for the
fight-or-flight response. Whenever your life is truly, or conceptually,
imperiled, you experience physiological effects intended to turbocharge your
body to respond. Among other things, your digestive system shuts down to direct
blood to your muscles (hence the nausea you experienced); your heart beats
faster, and you gulp in air to supply muscles with additional oxygen (hence your
dizziness and shortness of breath); and you may experience psychological
“hyperarousal” (“My heart’s beating so fast it’s going to explode! But
first I will go insane!”). Hence, your feelings of panic and even impending
death.
Calm Yourself
To prevent your symptoms from recurring, first practice the common-sense
strategies advocated by moms everywhere: Leading up to your exam, eat well,
exercise, get plenty of sleep and don’t cram. As simple as such tactics sound,
they pack a powerful one-two punch: They keep you on an even physiological keel,
and they give you a sense of psychological control. Doing a moderate physical
workout prior to the exam can burn off stress hormones and serve as a
distraction, as well.
If symptoms return during your next test, force yourself to breathe slowly and
repeat a calming thought like this one: “Relax, take it easy, and do your
best.” Striving for perfection is a fool’s errand. (Know anyone who’s
perfect? No, besides Dr. of Law.) Cutting yourself some slack will itself remove
pressure and, paradoxically, free you up to perform better.
The Big Guns
If such first-line defense strategies don’t provide relief, you may need to
seek professional help. Don’t worry: Even serious anxiety disorders are often
highly responsive to treatment. For test anxiety, three forms of behavior
therapy have proved effective. Relaxation training teaches you how to slow your
breathing and heart rate. Systematic desensitization allows you to face and
control your fears. And cognitive behavior therapy teaches you to counter the
negative thoughts (“I’m a pathetic idiot failure!”) that would make
anybody miserable. Medications such as Valium, Ativan and Xanax can help control
anxiety (though they can muddle thinking). And beta blockers (“stage-fright”
drugs) can treat physical symptoms.
If you find you’re having anxiety attacks out of the blue (as opposed to those
caused by specific frightening events like torts finals), you may be facing a
more serious problem. Again, effective treatments exist. Check the Web site for
the Anxiety Disorders Association of America (www.adaa.org) for more information
and a list of local specialists.
Finally, if none of this works, you can always put your legal training to work
and sue your school under the Americans With Disabilities Act. One former
University of New Mexico student suffering test anxiety did just that. He lost,
but Dr. of Law sees it this way: At least he dished out a little revenge anxiety
in the process.
Send questions for Dr. of Law to droflaw@jdjungle.com.