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Mindfulness is about paying full attention to the present moment without judging it. It can help with anxiety in these simple ways: 1. Calms the mind – When you focus on your breathing or the sensations in your body, your thoughts slow down, and your brain feels less “crowded.” 2. Breaks the worry cRead more
Mindfulness is about paying full attention to the present moment without judging it.
It can help with anxiety in these simple ways:
1. Calms the mind – When you focus on your breathing or the sensations in your body, your thoughts slow down, and your brain feels less “crowded.”
2. Breaks the worry cycle – Anxiety often comes from thinking too much about the future. Mindfulness gently brings your attention back to “right now,” which reduces overthinking.
3. Relaxes the body – Mindful breathing and body scans help release tension in your muscles, making you feel physically calmer.
4. Improves control over thoughts – With practice, you learn to notice anxious thoughts without getting carried away by them.
A simple way to try:
Sit comfortably.
Close your eyes.
Take slow, deep breaths.
Notice your breath going in and out.
If your mind wanders, gently bring it back to your breath.
Even 5 minutes a day can make a difference.
See lessThe “what if” future and come back to the “what is” present. When you’re anxious, your mind tends to sprint ahead — imagining worst-case scenarios, overthinking tiny details, and reacting to thoughts as if they’re facts. Mindfulness is like gently pulling the emergency brake on that mental runaway tRead more
The “what if” future and come back to the “what is” present.
When you’re anxious, your mind tends to sprint ahead — imagining worst-case scenarios, overthinking tiny details, and reacting to thoughts as if they’re facts. Mindfulness is like gently pulling the emergency brake on that mental runaway train.
How It Helps:
Slows the Spiral
By bringing your attention to your breath, your senses, or the here and now, mindfulness breaks into the cycle of worrisome thoughts before they gain momentum.
Soothes the Body
Taking slow, deep breaths and paying attention to your body tells your nervous system to shift from “fight or flight” to “rest and digest.” You essentially instruct your body, “It’s all right. We are safe.”
Transforms Your Interaction with Thoughts
Rather than attempting to push worrisome thoughts aside (which tends to make them more prominent), mindfulness instructs you to observe them, name them, and allow them to drift away — like clouds passing across the sky.
Strengthens Emotional Resilience
The more that you practice, the quicker you can spot anxious habits and nudge your mind to a more balanced location.
A 1-Minute Mindfulness Hack for Anxiety:
Sit quietly.
Inhale slowly for 4 counts.
Hold for 2 counts.
Breathe out for 6 counts.
Then list 3 things you can see, 2 you can touch, and 1 you can hear.
This little grounding exercise can ground you in the now rather than becoming caught up in “what if.”
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