7 Self‑Care Tips That Helped Me During Anxiety Attacks

Anxiety attacks can feel terrifying — your heart races, your thoughts spiral, and everything becomes too much. Over time, I’ve found a few small but powerful ways to ground myself and get through those intense moments.

Here are 7 self-care tips that helped me during anxiety attacks. These aren’t magic fixes — just real things that made a difference when I needed them most.

Cold Water
Splashing cold water on my face or holding an ice cube in my hand helps interrupt the panic response. It gives my body a physical signal to shift focus and activates the mammalian dive reflex, which can slow your heart rate.

Box Breathing
When my breath gets shallow, I use box breathing:
Inhale 4 counts → Hold 4 → Exhale 4 → Hold 4.
It’s structured and calming, and it keeps me from hyperventilating during high anxiety.

Noise Cancelling Headphones
Blocking out overstimulating noise and playing nature sounds or calming music helped me create a "safe bubble" when everything felt chaotic.

4,3,2,1 Grounding Technique
This simple mindfulness exercise helped bring me back to the present:
  • 5 things you can see
  • 4 things you can feel
  • 3 things you can hear
  • 2 things you can smell
  • 1 thing you can taste
It forces your brain to focus on your surroundings, not your panic.

Chatting with a friend
Sometimes just sending a “Hey, I’m not okay” message felt like enough. I didn’t always need a response, just a reminder that I wasn’t alone.

Writing down how I was feeling, then destroying it.
Journaling helped me externalize the panic. When I couldn’t make sense of anything, I’d scribble down thoughts on paper — then tear it up as a physical release of tension.

Sensory Anchors
I kept a small object — like a stone or piece of fabric — in my pocket. During an anxiety attack, focusing on the texture helped pull me out of spirals and reconnect to something real.


Everyone’s experience with anxiety is different. These tips might not work for everyone, but they helped me. If you’ve found your own ways of coping, share them — you never know who might need to hear them.

ChatGPT Image Jun 18, 2025 at 08_34_22 PM.webp
 
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