Some Proven Ways to Cope With Anxiety

Anxiety happens to the best of us. Feeling anxious or overwhelmed is a normal and healthy response to stressful situations, such as dealing with the uncertainty of an acute medical crisis. But that doesn’t make it pleasant.

Fortunately, we can learn how to cope with anxiety. Try these nine strategies to prevent anxiety from taking hold.

1. Get Enough Sleep

The relationship between sleep and anxiety goes two ways: Anxiety can cause sleeping problems, according to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America (ADAA). Not getting enough sleep can worsen anxiety.

Most adults need seven to nine hours of sleep each night. To increase the amount of sleep you get, the National Sleep Foundation recommends maintaining a regular schedule that includes going to bed at the same time each night and waking up at the same time each morning.

2. Practice Mindfulness Meditation

Incorporating meditation into your life can help you cope with anxiety, according to the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health.

Research shows mindfulness meditation programs are effective in reducing anxiety and depression. They can also improve the amount of sleep you get by reducing insomnia.

3. Exercise Regularly

Exercise promotes the release of endorphins. These brain chemicals reduce the body’s reaction to pain and stress. They also produce a feeling of euphoria, or happiness, that’s comparable to morphine. Just five minutes of aerobic exercise can kick start these anti-anxiety effects, according to the ADAA.

Current federal Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans recommend adults get at least 150 to 300 minutes of moderately intense physical activity, such as brisk walking, each week. They also can get 75 to 150 minutes of vigorously intense activity, such as jogging, biking or swimming. Aerobic activity should be spread out over the week.

4. Spend Time in Nature

Research shows that forest bathing — long, slow walks in nature for health purposes — can lower blood pressure and relieve anxiety. A review of clinical trials published in the International Journal of Biometeorology found that salivary cortisol levels, biomarkers for stress, were significantly lower in groups who participated in forest bathing versus the control group.

5. Take up Yoga or Tai chi

Yoga does more than increase your flexibility. It incorporates exercise, deep breathing, and meditation. Yoga is an all-in-one antianxiety activity, as shown in a review of body-centered interventions published in Frontiers in Psychology. Tai chi, a mix of meditation and martial arts, works much the same way.

6. Dance Therapy

That same research found that dance therapy, also known as movement therapy, reduces anxiety by engaging the body’s nervous system, which regulates how the body reacts to stress. In addition, dance/movement therapy increases production of serotonin, a chemical produced by the cells that’s responsible for mood.

7. Breathe Through It

When you feel anxiety or a panic attack — sweating, trembling, dizziness, rapid heart beat and nausea — start to come on, take deep, slow breaths to help your body and mind calm down, says Psychology Today. Avoid quick, shallow breaths as they can induce or worsen anxiety.

8. Limit Caffeine and Alcohol

Too much caffeine restricts blood vessels, which can increase blood pressure and contribute to anxiety. Coping with anxiety also doesn’t mean masking it with alcohol.

Alcohol can interfere with the neurotransmitters that manage anxiety and prevent you from getting a good night’s sleep. Drinking to cope creates a sort of feedback loop, which makes the anxiety worse and can lead to alcohol dependence, reports Vice.

9. Check Your Medicine

Certain medicines, such as corticosteroids, asthma drugs, and others, can cause anxiety. Ask your doctor if any medicines you take may be a contributing factor.