Agoraphobia in chemistry to describe chemical aversions e g.
Phobia of floors caving in.
Phobia refers to an extreme or irrational fear of certain situations objects place thing or people.
As with all other phobias the symptoms of arachibutyrophobia involve panic dread terror anxiety rapid heartbeat and shortness of breath when the peanut butter is wedged on the roof of one s mouth.
Phobia is getting terribly scared of particular objects people or situation without any sensible explanation.
I have this love hate relationship with this game as i have a nigh crippling phobia of deep open water.
Neither of these situations however are any sort of indication that the floor is going to collapse.
I m sorry i had to laugh at your comment.
I am constantly examining cracks in plaster in walls and ceiling through fear it will collapse.
My husband and i.
I tried with the seamoth and once the vessel started spinning and the floor vanished into darkness i chickened out.
Mentioned below is the list of phobias with their common triggers and symptoms.
Floors creak for two reasons.
I think it started when i was little and read in the newspaper that truck had been under a bridge that collapsed.
It s very normal for wood to bend when pressure is applied to it.
In fact it seems like human beings can get scared of almost anything in this world.
One is that nails rub against the wood and the other is that wood rubs against wood.
For as long as i can remember i have had a fear of floor collapse.
A proper design includes th.
The extremely hard to pronounce phobia is also an extremely inexplicable one the fear of peanut butter sticking to the roof of the mouth.
If the floor is designed properly it s designed with a fudge factor for weight and movement such that reasonable weights and movement are within the structural design criteria.
Phobias are disturbing and occur when you least expect to.
It s gotten much better since i start playing this game i no longer break into a cold sweat everytime i go up for air but i still can t get myself to go down into the caves.
Phobias fall into three different groupings.
What you are describing is a type of agoraphobia.
To find out that something you ve trusted can fail at a young age can be somewhat traumatizing.
While having a building collapse while you are in it sounds like a specific phobia it is actually a type of agoraphobia because by definition you re in a place situation where escape might be difficult.
The english suffixes phobia phobic phobe from greek φόβος phobos fear occur in technical usage in psychiatry to construct words that describe irrational abnormal unwarranted persistent or disabling fear as a mental disorder e g.
They are much more than normal fear and around 50 million people in the us have a phobia.
Hydrophobic in biology to describe organisms that dislike certain conditions e g.
I am constantly paranoid where i know there isn t brick underneath supporting the floor but a steel joist this makes it even worse.
That seemed to introduce me to the possibility.
What s making the noise depends on the composition of the floor.
Agoraphobia social phobias and specific phobias.