エピソード

  • Name It to Tame It: How Labelling Your Emotions Reduces Their Power
    2026/07/11

    There is something sitting in your chest.

    It is not quite panic. Not quite sadness. Not quite fear.

    It is just something — a low, unsettled feeling without clear edges.

    And because it does not have a name, it is hard to know what to do with it.

    In this episode of The Anxiety Toolkit, we explore affect labelling — the practice of naming what you feel with precise language.

    The idea is simple: when you can name an emotion clearly, you are no longer completely inside it. You can observe it, understand it, and respond to it more deliberately.

    In this episode, you will learn:


    • Why vague emotional awareness can keep the nervous system activated
    • How unnamed emotions can feel bigger and harder to manage
    • What affect labelling is and why it works
    • Why emotional precision matters more than simply saying “I feel bad”
    • How to move from a broad label to a specific emotional description
    • How to use one sentence to name what you are feeling
    • Why naming an emotion can create the first small space needed for regulation

    Technique covered:

    Affect labelling — the practice of identifying and naming an emotional state in specific language so it becomes easier to observe and manage.

    Key concepts covered:

    Emotional labelling, affect labelling, emotional granularity, nervous system regulation, amygdala activation, prefrontal cortex, emotional awareness, intrusive feelings, vague anxiety, precision writing, and practical anxiety management.

    Practice prompt:

    This week, once a day, pause when you notice emotional activation and write one sentence naming the feeling as precisely as you can.

    Not just “I feel stressed.”

    Ask: What kind of stress? About what specifically? Where do I feel it in the body? What is underneath it?

    Thirty seconds of precision writing. One sentence. That is the practice.

    Episode reminder:

    The unnamed feeling runs the room. The named one takes a seat at the table.

    New episodes of The Anxiety Toolkit are designed to give you one practical technique in about ten minutes.

    Subscribe on your favorite platform so you never miss a new tool.

    This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for therapy, medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    11 分
  • The Physiological Sigh: One Breath That Resets Everything
    2026/07/04

    You are sitting in traffic. You are between meetings. You just finished a difficult phone call.

    Your chest feels tight. Your breathing is shallow. Stress is starting to collect in your body.

    Then, without thinking about it, you sigh.

    That sigh is not random. It is your nervous system trying to reset.

    In this episode of The Anxiety Toolkit, we explore the physiological sigh — a simple double-inhale breathing technique that can help lower stress in real time.

    This is the breath your body already knows. The episode shows you how to use it on purpose.

    In this episode, you will learn:


    • What happens to your breathing when stress builds
    • Why shallow breathing can keep the body in a stress state
    • How the physiological sigh works
    • Why the second short inhale matters
    • How the long, slow exhale helps your nervous system come down
    • When to use this technique during the day
    • How to practice the breath as a transition between stressful moments

    Technique covered:

    The physiological sigh — one full inhale through the nose, one short additional sniff at the top, followed by a long, slow exhale through the mouth.

    Key concepts covered:

    Stress breathing, shallow breathing, nervous system regulation, double-inhale breathing, long exhale breathing, physiological sigh, transition breathing, stress reset, parasympathetic activation, vagal tone, and practical anxiety management.

    Practice prompt:

    This week, use the physiological sigh as a transition tool. Every time you move from one demanding task to another — closing the laptop, standing up, changing rooms, opening the next email, or preparing for a conversation — take one deliberate physiological sigh first.

    Inhale through the nose. Add one short sniff at the top. Exhale slowly through the mouth.

    One breath between the last thing and the next one.

    Episode reminder:

    Your body already knew how to do this. You were just not doing it on purpose. Now you are.

    New episodes of The Anxiety Toolkit are designed to give you one practical technique in about ten minutes.

    Subscribe on your favorite platform so you never miss a new tool.

    This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for therapy, medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    11 分
  • Worry Time: How to Contain the Loop Instead of Fighting It
    2026/06/27

    There is a thought you are trying not to think about.

    You push it away. It comes back. You push harder. It comes back louder.

    That is the loop.

    In this episode of The Anxiety Toolkit, we explore scheduled worry time — a practical cognitive behavioral technique that gives anxious thoughts a specific time and place, so they stop taking over the rest of your day.

    Instead of suppressing worry or engaging it the moment it appears, this technique teaches you to acknowledge the thought, defer it, and return to it during one planned 15-minute window.

    In this episode, you will learn:


    • Why trying not to think about a worry often makes it stronger
    • What the “white bear” problem teaches us about thought suppression
    • How scheduled worry time helps contain anxious thoughts
    • Why a consistent 15-minute worry window can reduce the sense of urgency
    • How to choose the right time and place for your worry window
    • What to say when a worry appears outside its scheduled time
    • What to expect during the first week of practice

    Technique covered:

    Scheduled worry time — a simple CBT-based tool for acknowledging anxious thoughts, deferring them, and giving them a contained place in the day.

    Key concepts covered:

    Thought suppression, intrusive worries, anxiety loops, cognitive behavioral tools, worry scheduling, emotional containment, deferral phrases, nervous system patterns, and practical anxiety management.

    Practice prompt:

    This week, choose one 15-minute worry window at the same time every day. When a worry appears outside that window, acknowledge it and defer it: “I hear you. You get your time at [chosen time]. Not now.”

    Episode reminder:

    Anxiety does not need to be eliminated. It needs a place to live that is not every moment of your day.

    New episodes of The Anxiety Toolkit are designed to give you one practical technique in about ten minutes.

    Subscribe on your favorite platform so you never miss a new tool.

    This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for therapy, medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    9 分
  • Come Back to Now: The 5-4-3-2-1 Grounding Method
    2026/06/20
    There is a thought you keep coming back to. You resolve it, and twenty minutes later it is back. You cannot argue your way out of the anxiety loop — engaging it only gives it more material to work with. The solution is not to reason better inside the loop. It is to step out of it entirely. In this episode, we teach 5-4-3-2-1 grounding: a sensory anchoring technique that interrupts rumination by relocating your attention to the present moment, where the imagined disaster your mind is rehearsing does not exist. We walk you through the full sequence in real time. By the time this episode ends, you will have used the tool once and you will know exactly how to use it again.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    15 分
  • Releasing the Body: Progressive Muscle Relaxation
    2026/06/13
    You are exhausted but wired. Your shoulders have been somewhere near your ears since the second meeting. Your jaw has been quietly clenched for hours. Your body has been braced all day and it does not know how to stop. In this episode, we teach Progressive Muscle Relaxation — one of the most replicated anxiety interventions in clinical research, developed over a hundred years ago and still the most effective way to teach a tense body what release actually feels like. We guide you through a real sequence inside the episode. Use it at bedtime for three consecutive nights this week and notice what changes.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    16 分
  • Cold Water Reset: The 30-Second Nervous System Interrupt
    2026/06/06
    When anxiety is acute — when you are flooded, overwhelmed, and past the point where thinking helps — your nervous system needs a physical interrupt, not a conversation. Cold water is not a metaphor. It activates the mammalian dive reflex, drops your heart rate, and begins to bring the nervous system down from peak activation in fifteen to thirty seconds. In this episode, we explain why reasoning your way out of acute anxiety rarely works, and teach you the cold water reset: three practical versions you can use anywhere, including the middle of a panic moment in a public place. This is the tool that makes every other tool in this series accessible.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    15 分
  • The Reframe: Changing the Channel on Anxious Thoughts
    2026/05/30
    Anxious thoughts feel like facts. They are not. They are predictions, distortions, and worst-case forecasts that the anxious brain presents as settled truth — and the more you argue with them, the louder they get. In this episode, we teach cognitive reframing: the three-step CBT technique for noticing an anxious thought, identifying the distortion behind it, and replacing it with something more accurate. Not more positive. More honest. We walk you through a real reframe inside the episode using one of your own current worries. One thought, three steps, and a practice you can use every day this week.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    15 分
  • Square Breathing: The Emergency Off Switch
    2026/05/30
    Your heart is racing. Your thoughts are accelerating. You tell yourself to calm down and nothing happens. That is because anxiety is a body event before it is a mind event — and you cannot think your way out of an activated nervous system. In this episode, we teach you box breathing: a four-count technique used by Navy SEALs, ER nurses, and performance athletes to interrupt the acute stress response before it peaks. We walk you through the full sequence inside the episode, so by the time it ends, you have already used the tool once. No equipment, no experience needed. Silent, invisible, and ready the next time you need it.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    17 分