What anxiety techniques work for you?

What with Christmas coming up - (major stress here we come!!) - I thought it might be helpful to share anxiety tips/tricks and hacks which we can then come back to on this thread if we need to once the Christmas misery begins!

Nothing works 100% for me, but I've had a lot of success with the ABC cognitive behavior therapy model. Find a quiet place with a pencil and paper, then write down the following:

  • Activating Event: This is the real-world event triggered your anxious thoughts (e.g. someone cut you off in traffic, your boss yelled at you, etc.).

  • Beliefs About Event: What are your impulsive thoughts concerning the activating event. try to identify the absolutes, so things that start with "I must", "I can't", "I don't", etc.

  • Consequences of your beliefs: How are these beliefs influencing your actions and emotions. What are you doing as a result of these actions and what further activating events are being triggered as a result. How are you feeling right now? This is an important metric for review later on.

  • Dispute your beliefs: This one is important. Take each belief you wrote down earlier and cross examine your self. Use logic over emotion. Contest absolutes, and try to pretend you are cross examining someone else stating your beliefs. The farther you can remove yourself from the situation, the better.

  • Effect: Write down how you feel after the exercise. This is a good metric to evaluate how successful the treatment is. You can then go back and look at your most successful cases and try an emulate/improve on that success.

I've found this technique can help you "rewire" some of the bad patterns in your thinking and help you react in a more rational fashion.

What are your anxiety techniques? I've tried yoga in the past, it can help sometimes but it depends on how severe the anxiety is at the time.

It might help you or it might not but it's definitely worth a try.

Parents
  • I'm really passionate about mental health and techniques that can help. Tha ks for making this post!

    I've also recently started yoga and I'm really feeling the benifit not jsut mentally but physically, I'm noticing so much more when I'm tensing up etc. Also in terms of practical things I have started cold water swimming. I'm lucky enough to live not too far from the coast. It's definitely a challenge but especially if your feeling anxious, low or anything overwhelming, dipping into the cold water has a "reset" effect that can just bring your brain back, even jsut for a second, to a middle ground.

    I also find journaling helpful. There's soany techniques within journaling, the one you've mentioned is one of them. When I am in a really heightened state of anxiety I like to use "brain dump" journaling (or "stream of consciousness" journaling if you want a fancier name). Basically I jsut write down every thought as it comes up, unedited, doesn't need punctuation, doesn't need to be neat, doesn't need to make sense (anxious thoughts rarely do). For me, doing this jsut lessens the pressure in my head of all the thoughts. After a while the sheer waterfall of thoughts starts to become a steady stream as I continue to write, and it makes it feel more manageable.

    Different techniques work for different people, and at different times, but these ones have helped me! 

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  • I'm really passionate about mental health and techniques that can help. Tha ks for making this post!

    I've also recently started yoga and I'm really feeling the benifit not jsut mentally but physically, I'm noticing so much more when I'm tensing up etc. Also in terms of practical things I have started cold water swimming. I'm lucky enough to live not too far from the coast. It's definitely a challenge but especially if your feeling anxious, low or anything overwhelming, dipping into the cold water has a "reset" effect that can just bring your brain back, even jsut for a second, to a middle ground.

    I also find journaling helpful. There's soany techniques within journaling, the one you've mentioned is one of them. When I am in a really heightened state of anxiety I like to use "brain dump" journaling (or "stream of consciousness" journaling if you want a fancier name). Basically I jsut write down every thought as it comes up, unedited, doesn't need punctuation, doesn't need to be neat, doesn't need to make sense (anxious thoughts rarely do). For me, doing this jsut lessens the pressure in my head of all the thoughts. After a while the sheer waterfall of thoughts starts to become a steady stream as I continue to write, and it makes it feel more manageable.

    Different techniques work for different people, and at different times, but these ones have helped me! 

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