When you’re caught in the roiling storm of anxiety, often the best way to calm that anxiety is to step back and simply observe. The fear, worry, and apprehension that are part of anxiety can become strong and debilitating when we’re up close and personal with an anxiety-provoking situation. Why do we need to step back and observe when our anxiety is intense, and how do we do it?
Why It’s Good to Step Back and Observe to Calm Anxiety
Anxiety has a way of sucking us in. Anxiety pulls us close to worry- and fear-provoking situations because the closer we are to a troublesome situation, the stronger our anxiety becomes.
For example, someone might fear failure in a relationship or at work. Once that anxiety begins, it works its way deep inside, making his thoughts race with worry. The more his thoughts are consumed with anxiety (Anxiety and Over-Thinking Everything), the stronger his negative emotions become, creating feelings like anger, jealousy, self-hatred, despair, and more. His behaviors could very well change because of this anxiety and fear of failure; perhaps he becomes paralyzed by his fears, unable to start projects at work or initiate activities with his partner. Or he might be able to take action, but fear and anxiety make him question himself, miss deadlines, apologize too much, and more.
His anxiety continues to skyrocket, and because he’s immersed in his situation, his thoughts continue to race, his emotions spiral out of control, he struggles with physical symptoms, and he just can’t calm his anxiety. He needs to step back and observe.
When we’re in the middle of struggling against anxiety, staying with the anxiety by thinking about it, feeling it, and cursing it can only serve to worsen it because what we pay attention to grows. Therefore, it’s important to step back from anxiety and be a distant observer.
How To Calm Anxiety By Stepping Back and Observing
An important clarification is in order: stepping back isn’t the same thing as running away or avoiding. Avoidance doesn’t work to reduce anxiety; no matter how much we ignore problems in our world, we can’t ignore them fully because they stay with us in our mind. Stepping back, therefore, involves not ignoring or running away but putting some metaphorical distance between yourself and the anxiety-provoking problem.
When caught up in anxiety, we often feel stressed, nervous, apprehensive, and worried. Our thoughts race with anxiety, and our minds are stuck in negative thought patterns, pelting us with “what-ifs,” “shoulds,” all-or-nothing thinking, and other thought traps. We’re so close to the situation that is causing anxiety that it’s hard to see the big picture. We can’t see the forest when we’re standing against a single tree staring at its trunk. To calm anxiety, we need to back up so we can see the whole picture.
You might want to try these simple steps to step back, observe, and calm anxiety:
- Imagine that you’re someone you respect. I have a mentor and former teaching partner that I admire, and I envision what he would think and do in an anxiety-provoking situation.
- Use an imaginary wide-angle lens to take in the big picture. If it’s a work project that’s making you anxious because of the threat of failure, look beyond the project. What other projects have you done well? Why do you have the project/what skills does the boss perceive? What else do you do in your job? If you do fail at this project, what might happen and how will you deal with the consequences?
- Observe neutrally. Pretend you are a neutral party just watching a show about anxiety. You don’t know the characters in this story, nor do you have a stake in the outcome. Also, observe this situation and its outcome with the distant perspective that this is just one drop in the gigantic bucket of your life. The drop will plunk into your bucket, cause some ripples, and the drop will merge with the other “water,” the ripples will settle, and your life will continue.
To calm anxiety, step back and observe your situation neutrally. This doesn’t change the situation, but it does positively affect how you think and feel about it. It can calm anxiety and help you deal with what you need to address.
In the below video, I share an experience I had, one where I realized that stepping back and observing helps calm anxiety. I invite you to tune in.
Let’s connect. I blog here. Find me on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, and Pinterest. My self-help book and mental health novels, including one about severe anxiety, are here.
from Anxiety-Schmanxiety Blog http://ift.tt/2kmiWs7
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