“Anxiety isn’t a problem to fix—it’s a process to understand.” – Dr. Elisha Goldstein
We Explore:
00:00 – Understanding Anxiety: The Passenger on the Bus
07:13 – Reframing Anxiety: From Enemy to Ally
11:53 – Practical Tools for Managing Anxiety
SHOWNOTES
What If Anxiety Isn’t the Enemy? Here’s the Real Problem
If you’ve ever felt trapped by anxiety—like it’s something you have to fight or fix—this blog is for you. Let’s explore a new way to think about anxiety—one that invites more compassion, clarity, and choice.
The Science of Helpful vs Harmful Anxiety
Your brain has a built-in alarm system called the amygdala. It scans for threats, and when it senses uncertainty mixed with fear, it kicks anxiety into gear. This isn’t a flaw—it’s how we evolved to survive.
Helpful Anxiety: boosts focus, encourages preparation, keeps you alert, and is temporary. Harmful Anxiety: loops into rumination, causes avoidance, triggers panic or fatigue, and becomes chronic.
How to Take Anxiety for the Ride
Instead of fighting anxiety, what if you could learn to walk alongside it? Here are three simple tools to try:
Name the loop: “I’m noticing my perfectionism loop.”
Ground in the body: Place your hand on your chest or belly, take a breath, and feel your feet on the ground.
Choose one micro-action: Ask, “What’s one small thing I can do, even with anxiety here?”
Here’s a mantra for you: This is anxiety. And I can still choose.
Tiny Shift in Action
Think of something you’ve been anxious about today. Name the loop—maybe it’s control, people-pleasing, or perfectionism. What’s one small thing you can do anyway, even with anxiety present?
Final Thoughts
Anxiety isn’t something broken that needs fixing. It’s something human that benefits from being seen differently. You are not your anxiety. You’re someone learning how to live with it—and through it—with more choice, more self-compassion, and more freedom.