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65+ of the Best Ways to Self-Soothe Your Anxiety

The Best Ways to Self-Soothe

Experiencing serious overwhelm? These are the best ways to self-soothe. If therapy isn’t an option for you, start here...


I’d gone to one of my favorite hiding places: the shower.

It was one of those days when my heart felt literally broken. I couldn’t stop crying. My entire body ached. And all I wanted was to melt into the tile floor and wash down the drain.

With hot water pounding my back, I knelt on the hard shower floor, wrapped my arms across my chest, and sobbed.

I didn’t know my boyfriend had come into the bathroom until the shower door slid open and he stepped, fully-clothed, into the shower, where he crouched in front of me and pulled me into his arms.

(Spoiler alert: I married him.)

Yet even as he draped a bathrobe over my shoulders and kissed my head, I thought: I need a different kind of help.

I wanted to wrangle my emotions before they strangled me. I wanted to soothe myself before I was sobbing in the shower.

My healing journey started with a therapist who put a name to my chronic emotional overwhelm. He called it emotional dysregulation.

Unlike the brief periods of emotional overwhelm that everyone experiences from time to time, emotional dysregulation is triggered by trauma, ingrained due to genetics, the result of mental illness or brain injury, or tied to neurodivergencies (like my own ADHD.)

Emotional dysregulation looks like:

Currently, there isn’t a cure for emotional dysregulation. But we can learn to manage it!

And one of the simplest practices for managing emotional dysregulation is self-soothing.

What does self-soothing look like?

Most of us self-soothe without even realizing we’re doing it. Or at least we don’t consciously think of our behaviors as self-soothing.

Imagine: You come home after a stressful day at work, change into comfy sweats, heat up some soup, and turn on your favorite movie.

That’s self-soothing.

Imagine: Your kids are driving you batty, so you drag the whole crew outside and take the dog for a heart-pumping walk.

That’s self-soothing.

Imagine: You’re still hurting from a recent break-up, so you head to the gym with your best friend and boost your confidence with great conversation and some new workout selfies.

That’s self-soothing.

We also self-soothe in subtle ways.

When your emotions are running high, do you twist your ring or twirl your hair? Do you pet your cat or snuggle your dog? Maybe you click you pen repeatedly, chew gum, or tap your foot.

Those are all self-soothing behaviors meant to help us power through emotional distress.

The problem? They don’t always work.

When we’re emotionally dysregulated, our primal, self-soothing instincts aren’t enough.

In fact, when emotional dysregulation is at play, we often attempt to self-soothe in ways that aren’t truly helpful—like screaming at a loved one, drinking too much, sleeping for days on end, or binge-eating.

That’s why we emotionally dysregulated folks need to practice self-soothing.

Think of self-soothing as a muscle.

Unhelpful self-soothing is like working out too hard and pulling a muscle.

Helpful self-soothing builds resilience over time, so we can be our best selves in the real world.

The more we practice helpful self-soothing techniques, the stronger we’ll become. Eventually, it feels natural to self-soothe in ways that settle our emotions and equip us to handle our stressors.

Here are the best ways to self-soothe.

Through countless conversations with my therapists, I discovered the self-soothing practices that help me every day. If psychotherapy isn’t an option for you right now, start here…

#1: Identify your senses.

Our five senses are negatively triggered when we’re in crisis, but we can re-set our emotions by soothing those senses.

NOTE: If you don’t have access to all five senses, skip the ones that don’t apply to you, and focus on the senses you can use.

Our five senses utilize:

  1. Sight
  2. Sound
  3. Scent
  4. Taste
  5. Touch

#2: Connect with your senses.

Look.

Listen.

Inhale.

Taste the air.

Touch your skin, clothing, or an object nearby.

#3: Choose a self-soothing skill from the lists below, and practice it right now.

Practice the self-soothing skill for at least five minutes—but no more than one hour.

If your emotions are still too intense after one hour, move on to a different self-soothing skill.

Ways to self-soothe with Sight

Ways to self-soothe with Sound

Ways to self-soothe with Scent

Ways to self-soothe with Taste

Ways to self-soothe with Touch

Practice self-soothing in your everyday life—even when you aren’t in distress.

I lean into soothing habits throughout my day to help keep me grounded and regulated.

For example:

Because I regularly tap into these skills, it’s easier to self-soothe when my emotions start to spiral.

Identify your unhelpful “soothing” tendencies.

Certain self-soothing habits are more helpful than others. For example, I can self-soothe by drinking a glass of wine, but alcohol tends to give me a migraine. So I benefit more by choosing a different, more-helpful skill.

That is not a moral judgement about wine. It’s simply my truth about my body and mind. When I honor my truth, I’m more likely to actually find relief from my emotional overwhelm.

Make a list of your helpful soothing skills.

My lists above are a good start, but it’s even better to make your own. Identify the self-soothing skills that work best for you, and keep them handy. (I keep my self-soothing lists in a note on my phone!)

When my emotions run rampant, it’s helpful to have a guide nearby so I don’t have to think too hard.

TIP: Helpful self-soothing practices tend to share a few important traits:

The more you practice your helpful self-soothing skills, the easier they’ll become. Eventually, you’ll respond to intense experiences by self-soothing without even thinking about it.

Most days, self-soothing feels pretty natural to me.

Yes: I do still experience feelings of overwhelming by anxiety or depression. But now I have helpful skills that enable me to navigate that distress without causing harm to myself or others.

Which self-soothing skills do you find helpful?

There are no right or wrong answers. We’re all in this wild world together, so I’d love for you to share your insights in the comments!

If self-soothing just isn’t cutting it, reach out for help.

The Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration hotline is free, confidential, and available 24 hours a day, 365 day a year. Call 1-800-662-HELP.

Or try online therapy with:

You deserve to feel safe, happy, and healthy.


Photo by Wolf Zimmermann

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