Sandra Bullock is slated to star with Brad Pitt in the upcoming movie Bullet Train after recently finding success in the action comedy The Lost City opposite Channing Tatum. The movie’s trailer was just made public. Outside of the movie industry, 57-year-old Bullock has talked about a time in her life when she was under a lot of stress and began to develop anxiety and alopecia.
The “tonic” stage and the “clonic” stage are two stages that these kinds of seizures frequently go through. People typically lose consciousness in the initial stage. People may become rigid and drop to the ground.
Some people link an epileptic fit with a grand mal seizure, sometimes called a tonic-clonic seizure. This sort of seizure can occasionally be brought on by other medical conditions, such as:
Bullock was anxious about her young son’s horrific experience. She was bitten by a toxic spider a few days later, and things only got worse from there as her hair began to fall out in clumps.
“My hair begins to thinning. Everywhere I look, I have alopecia spots. I’m laying out my hair by the bathtub and counting to three.
Bullock’s house invasion while she was hiding in the closet led to the development of “severe anxiety” and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), in addition to her alopecia.
“Our nanny said, “Let me simply take him to my apartment, which is up the street, because you’re going to be out late,” on the one occasion when she did this. If he had been home, I would have hurried to the closet—which is now officially my but was once his bedroom—and it would have permanently altered our course.”
With the use of side-to-side eye movements and talk therapy, EMDR helps people deal with the pictures, feelings, beliefs, and physical sensations connected to traumatic memories that can lead to a variety of mental health issues.
“Using EMDR can jump-start your body’s natural healing and recovery process after a trauma. As you recover from the inside out, your therapist is at your side.
Bullock found this kind of therapy to be effective in helping her deal with her PTSD and reduce the tremendous stress that was causing her alopecia.
The biological reaction of those with PTSD to high stress or terror is long-lasting as opposed to a quick reaction to an instant threat or fear.