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Chionophobia

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Chionophobia is a fear of snow. It is derived from the Greek words chiōn and phobos, meaning "snow" and "fear", respectively.

Causes[edit]

The cause of this phobia often goes back to childhood, e.g. sledding accident. For adults, this fear is often caused by traffic accident when driving through snow.[1] Another, more physiological cause is looking at brightwhite snow causing eye pain.[2] Chionophobia can even be developed from other phobia — aquaphobia (fear of water),[3] since snow is frozen water.

Symptoms[edit]

Common symptoms of chionophobia include sweating, trembling, dread or panic, fast heartrate, difficulty breathing, crying, screaming, fainting, sensing mind loss, and urging to flee or hide. Claustrophobia and taphophobia, fear of being trapped or buried alive, are phobia symptoms of chionophobia because people can get trapped in the car during the accident or buried in the snow[1] caused by avalanche or even deliberately buried by playmates. Other phobias associated with chionophobia are fear of falling down, fear of injury, and frigophobia (fear of cold).[3]

Effects[edit]

Sufferers of chionophobia would try to stay indoors at all times throughout the winter,[1] let alone avoid driving, sledding, skiing, building snowman and snowcastle, and snowfight. Some would even avoid seeing snow falling or on the ground by having their window shades closed. Many sufferers would check the weather forecast for any upcoming snowstorm.

Treatment[edit]

Chionophobia can be treated by themselves by realizing that snow is water, a common winter occurrence and is part of the life, and often beautiful and not scary to see. If a person couldn't conquer fear themselves, they should seek professional help.[1]

In popular culture[edit]

In the 2006 film First Snow, Jimmy Starks (Guy Pearce) got chionophobia after learning that a fortune teller can only predict his future until the first snowfall of winter. As a result, he panicked after prediction was right and was killed soon after death anxiety kicked in.[2]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Fear of Snow". FearOfStuff.com. Retrieved 28 June 2014.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Chionophobia, the fear of snow". all-phobias.com. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Fritscher, Lisa (December 30, 2012). "Chionophobia - Understanding the Fear of Snow". about.com. Retrieved 28 June 2014.


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