Key takeaways

  • Aim for a 10% shift—“safe enough”—instead of forcing calm.
  • Use simple body-based cues to reduce threat signals.
  • Bring your mind back to one doable step in the next 10 minutes.

Anxiety often shows up as a demand: “Fix this now.” But your nervous system usually needs something different—permission to slow down, orient, and rebuild a sense of safety in tiny increments.

Start with the goal: “enough safety to keep going”

Instead of aiming for total calm, try aiming for a 10% shift: a little more space, a little more choice, a little more steadiness.

Practice: Put one hand on your chest, one on your abdomen. Take 3 slow breaths and name 3 things you can see in the room. You’re teaching your brain: “I’m here, I’m safe enough, I can respond.”

Work with your body, not against it

  • Try a short walk, gentle stretching, or a warm drink.
  • Notice what your jaw, shoulders, and hands are doing—soften them slightly.
  • If your thoughts race, give them a container: write them down for 2 minutes.

Use “next right step” thinking

When anxiety escalates, your mind can jump to the worst-case future. Bring it back to the smallest doable step in the next 10 minutes.

If you want support building a steady anxiety toolkit that fits your life, I’d be glad to talk with you.

Schedule a Free Consultation Ask a question