Research-based coping strategies that can help you get through it.
Post published by Melanie Greenberg Ph.D. on Jun 28, 2011 in The Mindful Self-Express
We all know the uncomfortable feeling of anxiety. Our hearts race, our fingers sweat, and our breathing gets shallow and labored. We experience racing thoughts about a perceived threat we fear
will be too much to handle. That's because our "fight or flight"
response has kicked in, resulting in sympathetic arousal and a narrowing
of attention and focus on avoiding the threat. We seem to be locked in
that state, unable to focus on our daily chores or longer-term goals. As a cognitive-behavior
therapist with more than 15 years of experience, I have found a variety
of techniques that I can teach my patients with anxiety disorders
such as phobias, panic attacks, or chronic worry. Some are based on
changing thoughts, and others on changing behavior; still others involve
physiological responses. The more aspects of anxiety I can decrease,
the lower the chance of relapse post-therapy.
Below are six strategies that you can use to help relieve your everyday anxiety:
Below are six strategies that you can use to help relieve your everyday anxiety:
- Reevaluate the probability of the threatening event actually happening.
Anxiety makes us feel that a threat is imminent, yet most of the
time what we worry most about never happens. By recording our
worries—and how few actually came true—we can notice how much we
overestimate the prospect of negative events.
- Decatastrophize.
Even if a bad event happened, we may still be able to handle it by
using coping skills and problem-solving abilities or by enlisting
others to help. Although not pleasant, we could still survive
encountering a spider, having a panic attack, or losing money. It's
important to realize that very few things are the end of the world.
- Use deep breathing and relaxation.
By deliberately relaxing our muscles we begin to calm down so we can
think clearly. If you practice this at first without a threat present,
it can start to become automatic and will be easier to use in the moment
when you face a threat. Deep breathing engages the parasympathetic
nervous system to put the brakes on sympathetic arousal.
- Become mindful of your own physical and mental reactions.
The skill of mindfulness
involves calmly observing our own reactions, including fear, without
panic or feeling compelled to act. It can be taught in therapy and
improves with practice.
- Accept fear and commit to living a life based on core values.
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is an approach that
encourages people to accept the inevitability of negative thoughts and
feelings and not try to repress or control them. By directing attention
away from the fear and back onto life tasks and valued goals, we can
live a full life despite the fear.
- Exposure. Exposure is the most powerful technique for anxiety and it involves facing what we fear and staying in the situation long enough for the fear to habituate or go down, as it naturally does. Fear makes us avoid or run away, so our minds and bodies never learn that much of what we fear is not truly dangerous.
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