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‘Really, Really Terrifying': Emma Stone Opens Up About Lifelong Struggle With Anxiety and Panic Attacks

The "La La Land" actress described her first attack when she was just 7 years old

Emma Stone is pulling back the curtain on her lifelong struggle with anxiety.

During an interview with Dr. Harold S. Koplewicz for the Child Mind Institute, Stone discussed having her first panic attack and how that "terrifying" moment repeated itself over the next few years.

The "La La Land" actress described her first attack when she was just 7-years-old. "After first grade before I went into second grade, I had my first panic attack. It was really, really terrifying and overwhelming," she told Dr. Koplewicz. "I was at a friend's house, and all of a sudden I was convinced the house was on fire and it was burning down. I was just sitting in her bedroom and obviously the house wasn't on fire, but there was nothing in me that didn't think we were going to die."

These occurrences happened constantly over the next two years for Stone. It made going to school really difficult for her. She explained that she went to the nurse's office every day in second grade and feigned sickness so she could call her mother and go home.

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Stone continued to describe her separation anxiety from her mother, who was present in the audience. "I couldn't go to friends' houses," she told Dr. Koplewicz.

She joked, "As you can see, it's gotten better. I swear!"

Later on after her first panic attack, the "Maniac" star began attending therapy, where she was diagnosed with generalized anxiety and panic disorder. Her therapist, however, never told her that's what she was diagnosed with and Stone says she is thankful for that. She confirmed Dr. Koplewicz's assessment that being in therapy was "embarrassing or shameful" for her.

"I am very grateful I didn't know that I had a disorder," she said. "I wanted to be an actor and there weren't a lot of actors who spoke about having panic attacks."

She kept most of those experiences within the confines of her home and discussed them mostly with her family. When she was in therapy, she wrote a staple-bound book called I Am More Than My Anxiety, where she could draw pictures and recalled it being "helpful." Her mother still suffers from it.

Stone also discussed how acting and improv helps her cope with anxiety. She said improv is "presence. It's meditative." Plus, the anxiety can sometimes assist Stone in her acting. She said, "I also believe there is a lot of empathy when you struggled a lot internally. There is a tendency to want to understand how people around you work or what's going on internally with them which is great for characters."

She added, "You don't have to be actor to overcome anxiety, you don't have to be a writer to overcome it. You just have to find that thing within you that you are drawn to."

Panic attacks haven't abandoned the Oscar winner. She told Dr. Koplewicz she had one earlier that day, but manages her anxiety by seeing a therapist, meditating and reaching out to her friends and loved ones when she feels the most isolated.

Stone admitted that "sharing" and "making mistakes is a big trigger of fear for me."

Copyright E! Online
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