shot-button
Ganesh Chaturthi Ganesh Chaturthi
Home > News > India News > Article > Fear fundas

Fear fundas

Updated on: 26 July,2009 11:42 AM IST  | 
Janaki Viswanathan |

Psychiatrist Ashit Sheth decodes the fright factor

Fear fundas

Psychiatrist Ashit Sheth decodes the fright factor

In a no-frills clinic on the first floor of Maker Bhavan 3, off-white walls overlook nearly-brown-nearly-black chairs and side tables strewn with several health magazines which the patients in waiting ignore.

Dr Ashit Seth, MD, DPM, is waiting to talk fear, darkness and spirits (the last word makes him smile). According to the psychiatrist who also practices at the next door Bombay Hospital, there are two kinds of fear: temporary or calculative and unexplained. The first, he says, is when you put yourself knowingly into a particular situation.


These include sitting on a roller-coaster ride, reading a supernatural novel or watching a horror movie... late at night. "Most people even tend to enjoy the fear," smiles Devanshi Jalan, a clinical psychologist who works with Sheth.




But while most fears come from memory (reliving a scene from a book or a movie, remembering a scary story), some of them are pointers to mental illnesses. "Depending on the symptoms, it's possible that a person suffers from bipolar disorder, chronic grief reaction and paranoid schizophrenia."

How about times when it's hard to shake off a nightmare or an illusion because one is unable to speak or even open the eyes? Dr Sheth explains, "The mind wakes up first; the body takes a little longer. So it's not a ghost or spirit that isn't allowing you to call for help or move, it's your own body."

How about those of us who seem to get rattled by the slightest provocation? Dr Sheth doesn't see it as anything to worry about. It only means your amygdala works overtime. The amygdala, he explains, is a gland situated close to the temporal lobe the seat of fear. When the eye processes what it sees and interprets a particular image (fluttering white dupatta = ghost), the amygdala swells and warns the brain. Which in turn sets off reactions like increased heart-beat, clammy hands, goosebumps and a need to relieve yourself. "Your body is telling you to either run for cover, scream for help, fight back or simply freeze on the spot," explains Dr Sheth. He formulates a key letter code for it too:

P psychological fear
A alimentary (stomach symptoms)
N neurological (numbness)
I inspiratory (breathing fast)
C cardiovascular (rapid heartbeat)

Panic, he explains, is the mind's way of warning and protecting the body.

Sheth claims to have never had a supernatural experience. All the same, he is anything but dismissive of the unknown: "We don't have solid proof to whether ghosts exist or not." The doctor also sighs about how horror films fail to hold his interest, except for The Sixth Sense and Psycho both of which were "very enjoyable".

Phillip says that whenever she watches a horror flick, she mentally tests the symptoms shown by the victim (the possessed character) rather than concentrating on the actual 'bhoot' element.

Speaking of fear trends, Dr Sheth reveals that quite a high ratio of women do suffer from fear and fear-related disturbances but hardly venture out of home to get themselves treated. Children too, are severely affected by whatever they see and create for themselves. "Children live in their own worlds of fantasy and after a point, find it difficult to return to the real world," he explains. Phillip recalls a case in which a girl studying in the sixth standard had to undergo psychiatric treatment. She had watched Bhool Bhulaiyya after being forced by friends, and was so traumatised by it, she hadn't stepped out of home for two weeks.

"She had stopped attending school and would spend every waking minute with her grandmother who she was extremely close to. She had even stopped speaking out loud, she was so scared." The child's treatment took quite a few months. Dr Sheth explains how they took it up in phases: sending her back to school, helping her sleep alone at night, and encouraging her to get back to extra-curricular activities. "She had a great gift for acting but after this movie, she was too scared to speak up. We made her audition for a class play. Then on, it was smooth sailing," smiles Phillip.

Finally, Dr Sheth asks if I've ever walked through Sonapur at night. "It's a cemetery but the only road connecting to the station. It's crowded even at midnight. And not by spirits," he grins. Brr! I already know what movie will play in my head tonight.

"Exciting news! Mid-day is now on WhatsApp Channels Subscribe today by clicking the link and stay updated with the latest news!" Click here!


Mid-Day Web Stories

Mid-Day Web Stories

This website uses cookie or similar technologies, to enhance your browsing experience and provide personalised recommendations. By continuing to use our website, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy. OK