Read Calming the Rush of Panic Online
Authors: Bob Stahl
Mindfulness is a way to help you cope with your panicky feelings. Day-to-day chores are an ideal time for bringing mindfulness into your routine at home, at work, at a social gathering at someone’s house, or wherever some dirty dishes are piling up. Try this next practice while you wash the dishes, that much-dreaded activity that follows a hard-earned meal.
For most people, the goal in washing dishes is to get them clean and to be done with it, in order to move on to something else, something more pressing and demanding of their attention. When you bring mindfulness into your daily chores, you experience washing the dishes merely for the sake of washing dishes, without a goal or destination in mind. Mindfully washing the dishes opens you to the experience of fully appreciating and participating in the act and being more aware of the small wonders in life that bring order and calm into your life. During your mindful practice, you are also opening yourself to the awareness that all emotions eventually pass and are never a permanent state of being. Doing routine chores with mindfulness helps train you to bring mindfulness into your approach to strong emotions, such as embarrassment and shame, when they arise. A deeper awareness of these strong feelings will help restore feelings of ease and peacefulness.
A Good Day’s Work
When panic strikes you on the job, it’s a challenge to get through your day and to stay focused on your tasks at hand. You may feel as though you have no worth, value, or use. Similarly, you may feel inadequate, deficient, or incompetent. You may feel very alone and isolated when you do not see others expressing these same feelings. But you are not alone. Many people face these same challenging emotions behind closed office doors or as they travel to and from work, suffering in private.
The following mindful breathing practice is for restoring self-kindness and compassion and allowing yourself to befriend your emotions instead of criticizing and judging. There’s no time like the present to begin.
Self-kindness may not come easily, particularly during times of panic, which is why we recommend that you make this part of your daily practice of mindfulness. Give yourself the gift of self-compassion and understanding every day.
Transform Your Anger
When something or someone pushes your panic button, you may frequently feel anger. You might carry anger around with you without even being aware that it’s there, until it lashes out unpredictably at some moment of contact with another person. You might be face to face, talking on the phone, texting, or e-mailing, when suddenly in a moment of panic, you feel extremely annoyed, infuriated, or offended. These angry emotions get in the way of your ability to communicate effectively and can create a cycle of more inflamed exchanges.
The next time your panic and anger flare up, practice R.A.I.N. as described below. It’s a helpful tool for restoring a sense of calm and assisting in difficult conversations when your anger might get in the way of resolution.
Before your anger takes hold of your next conversation, try this mindful practice. You will carry this awareness into your next exchange. The ability to restore your sense of calm using this practice will be a useful communication skill and help you find resolution in every interaction.
Free Yourself from Feeling Out of Control
A great many people who suffer with panic attacks experience feeling as though they are losing control and going crazy. Some people describe feeling a disconnect from reality that scares and confuses them. You may feel completely helpless, as though there is nothing you can do and no one can help you. You literally believe that a threat is present, likely, or imminent. It’s a frightening experience that is not soon forgotten. In fact, the fear alone that it may happen again is enough to start the cycle of panic and insecurity. If you’re feeling scared or insecure about a reoccurrence right now, you are not alone and there is help.
There’s no predicting when your next panic attack will occur. It might happen while you’re out running errands, interacting with strangers at the market or post office. Being in public may feel like the worst-case scenario for a panic attack, but it is also your cue to listen to your mind and body. This next practice uses mindful inquiry. It will help you investigate what is driving or fueling your panicky emotions in order that you might become freer from them. Practice these skills during an episode of panic on an occasion when you’re out and about.
With practice, you will come to learn what is driving your feelings and to let them run their natural course. Strong emotions can be fierce and unrelenting for a time, but eventually they fade and you move on.
Work Through Painful Emotions