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Managing Anxiety Part 3

Author | Lana Mamisashvili

Learning to Stay Present with Emotion: A Practice for Anxiety and Overwhelm

This blog continues my exploration of anxiety and how we can learn to change our experience of it. In truth, the steps outlined here are not limited to anxiety—they are useful for any sense of overwhelm. When we block, push away, or numb our emotions, we lose our capacity to be emotionally and psychologically flexible, to bend with life’s inevitable curveballs—big and small. The result is familiar to many: we swing from numbness to rage, from tears to withdrawal, as if our nervous system is a tightly wound spring snapping in unpredictable ways.

Neuroscience helps us understand why. Suppression of emotion keeps the amygdala hyperactive and prevents the prefrontal cortex from regulating response. Over time, this diminishes our resilience, leaving us easily triggered and reactive. Psychodynamic and attachment perspectives remind us that these patterns often echo early relational experiences—times when feelings were invalidated, ignored, or deemed unsafe. Trauma-informed practice encourages us to approach these reactions with curiosity and gentleness rather than judgment, recognizing that our nervous system is doing the best it can with the resources it has.

The antidote lies in awareness, self-compassion, and mindful engagement with experience. Here is a practice that, though it may seem lengthy in description, can be done in just a few quiet moments:

  1. Notice Your Surroundings and Your Reactions
    Begin by observing what is happening around you: who is present, what is being said, what you are reacting to. Describe it silently to yourself. Neuroscience shows that bringing attention to sensory details recruits the prefrontal cortex, creating distance from overwhelming emotional arousal. Psychologically, naming what you observe allows your mind to step back from the flood of feeling, giving clarity and choice.
  2. Practice Self-Compassion
    Self-compassion is often foreign, especially when guilt or shame runs deep. Depth psychology reminds us that we internalize critical voices from early attachment figures and culture, and trauma-informed perspectives encourage us to treat ourselves as we would treat a loved one in distress. You do not need to exhaust yourself to prove worth or adequacy. Pause and remind yourself: Its okay to feel what I feel and think what I think at this moment.” Feelings and thoughts are data—they signal needs, boundaries, or fears. They are not immutable truths about who you are.
  3. Language Matters: I feel” vs. I am”
    Notice the way you talk to yourself. When you catch a thought like I am a bad parent,” soften it to I feel like a bad parent.” This linguistic shift may seem small, but it changes the brain’s relationship to the thought. Neuroscience teaches us that repeated statements solidify neural pathways; “I am” risks becoming a fixed identity, while “I feel” situates the experience in time—a transient state, not a permanent label.
  4. Curiosity Over Judgment
    Engage with your experience as a witness rather than a critic. Ask: What is this feeling like? Where do I feel it in my body? If it had a color, texture, shape, or sound, what would it be?” Curiosity activates higher-order cortical areas and strengthens emotional regulation. Depth psychology shows that attending to feelings rather than denying them promotes integration of conscious and unconscious experience. Trauma-informed practice underscores the importance of pace: start slowly, honour your boundaries, and allow yourself to explore safely.
  5. When Overwhelm Arises
    If you begin to feel swept away by intensity, return to your breath. Deep, slow abdominal breaths anchor the nervous system and signal safety. This is a skill you can rely on repeatedly: the body and mind learn that intense emotion does not have to lead to collapse.
  6. Compassionate Self-Guidance
    Always return to kindness toward yourself. Ask: What would I say to someone I love who was experiencing this?” You would not blame or criticize them—extend the same care to yourself. Attachment theory reminds us that self-compassion nurtures the internalized secure base that supports emotional resilience.

This practice does not promise immediate relief from difficult feelings. What it offers is presence, awareness, and a framework for navigating emotion with curiosity rather than judgment, allowing the nervous system to settle, the mind to observe, and the self to respond rather than react. Over time, these small, consistent acts build flexibility, emotional regulation, and resilience—the foundation for moving through life’s challenges with steadier, more compassionate presence.

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