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The Anchor Drop: Ground Yourself When Anxiety Takes Over
Published 1 week, 4 days ago
Description
Welcome back to Anxiety Relief Daily. I'm Julia Cartwright, and I'm so glad you're here. It's Wednesday morning, and if you're anything like most of us, your to-do list probably woke up before you did. Maybe you're already feeling that familiar tightness in your chest, that sense of being pulled in a hundred directions at once. Today, we're going to practice something I call "The Anchor Drop," and it's specifically designed to interrupt that anxiety spiral before it takes the wheel.
Let's start by finding a comfortable seat, wherever you are. You don't need to be fancy about this. A chair works beautifully. Just make sure your feet can rest flat on the ground if possible. Take a moment now and notice what you're sitting on. Really feel the support beneath you. That's your first anchor.
Now, let's breathe together. Inhale slowly through your nose for a count of four. Hold it for just a beat. Then exhale through your mouth for a count of six. We're making that exhale longer because it activates your calm nervous system. Let's do that again. Inhale, two, three, four. Hold. Exhale, two, three, four, five, six. One more time at your own pace.
Here's our main practice. Imagine anxiety as a snow globe that's just been shaken. All those white flakes are swirling around, making everything blurry, right? But the snow globe has a base. It's solid. It's unmovable. That base is you, and right now, we're going to focus on grounding into it.
Bring your awareness down to your feet. Feel them pressing into the ground. You might notice warmth or coolness, pressure or lightness. There's no right way to feel this. Now scan slowly upward. Notice your calves, your thighs, your sitting bones pressing into the chair. Your spine tall but relaxed. Your shoulders melting away from your ears. Your hands resting. And your breath, still moving at its own gentle rhythm.
As thoughts come up—and they will, that's not failure, that's just being human—imagine them as clouds passing through that snow globe. You see them, you acknowledge them, but you don't grab them. You let them drift by while you return your attention to your feet, that anchor point. Five seconds on your feet. Feel the ground. That's all.
Let's do this for two more minutes in silence together, just anchoring down each time your mind wanders.
And when you're ready, wiggle your fingers and toes. Open your eyes if they were closed. Notice how your body feels different now. That calm you just created? You can access it anytime today. When anxiety starts building, drop into your feet. Feel that ground. You're more stable than those anxious thoughts want you to believe.
Thank you so much for practicing with me on Anxiety Relief Daily: Mindfulness Techniques for Inner Calm. Please subscribe so you never miss a moment of peace. You deserve this calm. See you tomorrow.
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/47ZqpWT
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Let's start by finding a comfortable seat, wherever you are. You don't need to be fancy about this. A chair works beautifully. Just make sure your feet can rest flat on the ground if possible. Take a moment now and notice what you're sitting on. Really feel the support beneath you. That's your first anchor.
Now, let's breathe together. Inhale slowly through your nose for a count of four. Hold it for just a beat. Then exhale through your mouth for a count of six. We're making that exhale longer because it activates your calm nervous system. Let's do that again. Inhale, two, three, four. Hold. Exhale, two, three, four, five, six. One more time at your own pace.
Here's our main practice. Imagine anxiety as a snow globe that's just been shaken. All those white flakes are swirling around, making everything blurry, right? But the snow globe has a base. It's solid. It's unmovable. That base is you, and right now, we're going to focus on grounding into it.
Bring your awareness down to your feet. Feel them pressing into the ground. You might notice warmth or coolness, pressure or lightness. There's no right way to feel this. Now scan slowly upward. Notice your calves, your thighs, your sitting bones pressing into the chair. Your spine tall but relaxed. Your shoulders melting away from your ears. Your hands resting. And your breath, still moving at its own gentle rhythm.
As thoughts come up—and they will, that's not failure, that's just being human—imagine them as clouds passing through that snow globe. You see them, you acknowledge them, but you don't grab them. You let them drift by while you return your attention to your feet, that anchor point. Five seconds on your feet. Feel the ground. That's all.
Let's do this for two more minutes in silence together, just anchoring down each time your mind wanders.
And when you're ready, wiggle your fingers and toes. Open your eyes if they were closed. Notice how your body feels different now. That calm you just created? You can access it anytime today. When anxiety starts building, drop into your feet. Feel that ground. You're more stable than those anxious thoughts want you to believe.
Thank you so much for practicing with me on Anxiety Relief Daily: Mindfulness Techniques for Inner Calm. Please subscribe so you never miss a moment of peace. You deserve this calm. See you tomorrow.
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/47ZqpWT
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI