Anxiety happens when you think you have to figure out everything all at once. Breathe. Youâre strong. You got this. Take it day by day.
Search Results for "anxiety" — 1353 posts
How to Beat Anxiety So You Can Live Life to the Fullest

âEverything you want is on the other side of fear.â ~Jack Canfield
When I was in my twenties, I was confident and fearless, and I lived life to the fullest.
I remember going on vacation, and one of my friends was terrified to get on the plane. We had a four-hour flight ahead of us, and I thought her anxiety and fear of flying were ridiculous.
I thought she was being pathetic and selfish, and spoiling it for everyone else. I remember having a âquiet wordâ with her and berating her for talking absolute nonsense. I had no empathy or …
The Truth About Social Anxiety and 5 Ways to Relieve It

âPerfectionism is a twenty-ton shield that we lug around thinking it will protect us, when in fact, itâs the thing thatâs really preventing us from being seen and taking flight.â ~BrenĂ© Brown
About fifteen million adults suffer from social anxiety according to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America. Fifteen million. And weâre not just talking about what youâd call shyness. Weâre talking about big fears of judgment and scrutinization from others.
When we hear statistics it can be difficult to remember the humanness of those numbers. These are people who want to find love, who want to make …
What Anxiety Can Do to Your Body & How to Calm Your Mind

âOur bodies communicate to us clearly and specifically, if we are willing to listen.â ~Shakti Gawain
I woke up screamingânot just any scream, but a blood-curdling sound that could have woken the dead.
My throat was searing with pain, and my pajamas were stuck to me from being so damp. After a minute or two, my heartbeat slowed and I lay back down, still shaking. It wasnât a nightmare; I couldnât even remember what I had dreamt.
This behavior sounds weird, but it was not an infrequent episode in our house. The week prior Iâd woken up in the bathtub.…
How Using Your Hands Creatively Can Reduce Stress and Anxiety

âMaking something, even imperfectly is empowering because itâs an expression of the self.â ~Alton & Carrie Barron MD
Do you ever suffer from stress or anxiety?
If so, youâve probably tried to find relief, but finding something that works for you can be quite hard. We all react differently to different remedies, and what works for one person may not be the best remedy for you.
I used to suffer from stress and anxiety a lot. After trying lots of different remedies, I finally found relief in an activity I never considered would help.
I was locked into a life …
4 Life-Changing Lessons for People Who Struggle with Anxiety

âThere is only one way to happiness and that is to cease worrying about things which are beyond the power of our will.â ~Epictetus
Sweaty. Hot. Shallow breathing.
Thoughts barreled through my mind like a never-ending freight train. I couldnât keep up. It was everything all at once, blurred into nothing in particular.
I felt like I was about to jump off a cliff, nervous anticipation building into panic. My head was spinning. My hands trembled.
Choking down a gulp, I forced the tears back that wanted to cascade down my cheeks in sobs. There would be time for that …
How to Make Anxiety Work for You, Not Against You

âGrowth begins when we start to accept our own weakness.â âš~Jean Vanier
I got fired from my job, my boyfriend left me, and my father died in one day.
In reality, my career was going super well, I didnât have a boyfriend, and my father was amazingly healthy, but what I did have was something I call an ultra amazing imagination, where I would make up fascinating stories about things that could happen and worry about them. (Or as other people call it, general anxiety disorder.)
I met my now BFF anxiety when I was about ten years old. Initially, …
3 Lessons That Help Me Overcome Anxiety and Depression

âHistory, despite its wrenching pain, cannot be unlived, but if faced with courage, need not be lived again.â ~Maya Angelou
Iâve suffered from anxiety and recurrent major depression for more than twenty years. Over that time, Iâve learned a number of lessons about living life and dealing with these diseases.
Two equally meaningful and powerful days from that time stand out to me.
My wedding day, fifteen years ago now, was a happy day when I was more confident and sure about what I was doing than any other.
The day that rivals my wedding day in terms of my …
How Accepting Anxiety Can Lead to Peace

âPeople have a hard time letting go of their suffering. Out of a fear of the unknown, they prefer suffering that is familiar.â ~Thich Nhat Hanh
My unwillingness to accept my anxiety disorder (there, I said it, I have a disorder) results in panic.
It results in waking up at night, heart racing, body tingling and trembling.
It results in driving down the road in a thunderstorm thinking I am having a heart attackâbut I just keep driving and talking to my beloved on the phone because âif I can just keep driving away from it, it will be okay.â…
10 Simple Ways to Ease Your Anxiety Today

âSmile, breathe, and go slowly.” ~Thich Nhat Hanh
As an almost recovered anxiety sufferer I know what it’s like to feel stressed, out of sorts, desperate, and unlike yourself. I know what panic attacks feel like; I’ve had many. I wouldn’t wish them on my worst enemy.
Anxiety can be debilitating and affect every area of your day-to-day life.
I remember about four years ago, when I was feeling so overwhelmed and anxious I could barely leave my house. I had three young children at the time. It was all I could do to get through each day.
Just …
4 Powerful Mantras to Help You Deal with Fear and Anxiety

âTrust that, when you are not holding yourself together so tightly, you will not fall apart. Trust that it is more important to fulfill your authentic desires than listen to your fears. Trust that your intuition is leading you somewhere. Trust that the flow of life contains you, is bigger than you, and will take care of youâif you let it.â ~Vironika Tugaleva
Anxiety has been a part of my life for as long as I can remember. But a year ago marked my first full-blown panic attack.
As is common with first-time panic attacks, I had no idea …
Freeing Yourself from Fear: 4 Lessons from Anxiety

âThe only journey is the one within.â ~Rainer Maria Rilke
Out of nowhere, my heart starts to speed up. I canât get a deep breath; it feels like Iâm slowly suffocating.
My throat and chest start to hurt, I suddenly feel weak, and my thoughts race through my mind. A desperate feeling comes over me. I lose control, canât think straight, and canât stop shaking. I feel restless and donât know what to do to feel better. And suddenly, this feeling fades away.
Afterward, I feel a little depressed, confused, and tired. Sometimes I cry; sometimes I just sit on …
When Waiting Gives You Anxiety: How to Find Peace in the Present

âThe time is now, the place is here. Stay in the present. You can do nothing to change the past, and the future will never come exactly as you plan or hope for.â ~Dan Millman
Nothing gives me anxiety quite like waiting for things to happen. If I donât know how long I will be in line, stuck on a delayed NYC subway, or behind someone at the grocery store who is paying in pennies, I get very anxious. Or at least I used to.
Going to the doctorâs office was the worst. I know that no one likes …
Managing Anxiety: 5 Steps to Open Your Mind and Calm Your Heart

âDonât wait for your feelings to change to take action. Take action and your feelings will change.â ~Barbara Baron
Iâve struggled with anxiety for as long as I can remember. From the time I was very young, I would worry about thingsâmy life, my parents, my house, the state of the world.
I would experience a tightness in my chest and an overall sense of fear that only got worse the more I worried. The more I worried, the more afraid I became of the unseen factors that plagued me.
Anxiety is distress, caused by fear of danger or misfortune, …
How Stepping Outside Your Comfort Zone Can Help Reduce Anxiety

âWhat you do today can improve all your tomorrows.â ~Ralph Marston
For as long as I can remember, I’ve been an anxious person. My grandfather died when I was four years old and some of my earliest memories consist of panic attacks whenever I was left alone. In my mind, I had to keep my loved ones in sight at all times, so there would be no chance of them disappearing, just as my grandpa did. Â
From that point on, I slowly began to overcome my fears of separation from family. However, new anxieties began to take its place. Whether …
Let It Be: Using Mindfulness to Overcome Anxiety and Depression

âPerhaps many things inside you have been transformed; perhaps somewhere, someplace deep inside your being, you have undergone important changes while you were sad.â ~Rainer Maria Rilke
When I was twelve years old, I figured out how to get out of things.
It was a rainy Saturday morning, and I was supposed to be getting ready for choir practiceâan eight-hour rehearsal before a big concert. Eight hours! I began to obsess about how much time this was in my then-tiny life.
As though by my own will, a heavy sensation of dread and nausea arose. I wasnât aware of it …
The Power of Patience: Let Go of Anxiety and Let Things Happen

âYour mind will answer most questions if you learn to relax and wait for the answer.â ~William S. Burroughs
Patience can be a struggle.
I know this firsthand. My experience with impatience used to be confined to overusing the microwave or skipping to the end of a long novel.
Back then, when waiting at a traffic light for more than two minutes seemed like an eternity, I didnât know that life would teach me several advanced lessons in patience.
Shortly after finishing my morning bike ride I started feeling queasy. I wondered what was happening, but tried to ignore the …
3 Often Overlooked Causes of Anxiety (And What to Do About Them)

âPeace cannot be kept by force. It can only be achieved by understanding.â ~ Albert Einstein
An anxious mind is a hard burden to bear. In fact, if you suffer from an anxious mind it can truly feel like a curse.
The racing thoughts. The daily tirade of “what ifs.” The relentless voice of your inner critic constantly nagging you and deriding your every move.
And the worst part is that the mental chatter feels uncontrollable. Truly, there were times when I struggled in vain to quiet my mind.
It was like there was some hub or center in my …