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October 5, 2022

Coping With Anxiety – Grounding

Feelings of anxiety are very common, especially when things have been unsettled, unpredictable, and feel unsafe. Before we work on helping you with those feelings of anxiety it's important to define anxiety.

What is anxiety?

Anxiety is a feeling of worry, dread or uneasiness that can have a number of different symptoms:

Feelings of anxiety can differ from an anxiety disorder based on the longevity of the symptoms and how often they appear. You may feel anxiety before a test, speaking in front of a group of people or trying something new. You may also get this feeling when a relationship feels rocky and you are unsure about your future.

Anxiety thoughts might sound like this: "what happens if I fail?" "what if people judge me?" "what if I look stupid?" "What if I don't get the job, how will I pay my rent?" "What if they break up with me?"

As much as anxiety doesn't feel like a protective mechanism, it often is trying to help you. Anxiety projects into the future what the worst case scenario may be and tries to prepare you for that situation. The problem that we encounter is when anxiety can't differentiate its projections about the future from your reality and continues to ruminate on those possibilities even when it is no longer helpful.

While there is no one-size-fits all solution to help feelings of anxiety, we do know that mindfulness has been shown to help reduce anxiety symptoms (Khoury et al., 2013).

Mindfulness

Mindfulness is the ability to be present in your present moment as you are. There are a number of mindfulness exercises that can help you practice this, one of which is called sensory grounding. You may have heard the term "grounding" before and maybe you already know what that is. Sensory grounding is when we engage all of our senses in the present moment and slow down to pay attention to what's happening in the here and now. One way you can practice this is:

Written by Amy Kobelt, MA, RCC

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