I got into mindfulness for anxiety the same way most of my life changes happen—by accident and mild desperation.
Picture this: It’s 2:13 AM. I’m lying in bed. Wide awake. My brain is doing that thing where it replays every awkward moment I’ve ever had plus invents new problems for fun.
You know the vibe?
“Did I offend that person in 2017?”
“What if I mess up tomorrow?”
“What if everything collapses???”
And I’m just lying there like… cool cool cool, love this for me.
At some point, I sat up and actually said out loud:
“Can you… stop?”
My brain: No.
Rude.
That’s when I remembered something someone once told me about mindfulness. Specifically mindfulness for anxiety. And honestly? I didn’t think it would work.
But I tried anyway.
Because at 2:13 AM, you’ll try anything.
First attempt: chaotic, dramatic, not impressive
I sat there, closed my eyes, and tried to “focus on my breath.”
Which lasted about 4 seconds.
Then my brain went:
- “You’re doing this wrong.”
- “This is pointless.”
- “Also you forgot to reply to that message.”
So yeah. Not exactly peaceful.
If anything, I felt more aware of how chaotic my thoughts were.
Which… wasn’t comforting.

But here’s the weird part (stick with me)
Even though it felt messy and kinda useless…
Something tiny shifted.
Not a huge calm wave. Not enlightenment.
Just… a pause.
Like my anxiety was still there, but I wasn’t completely drowning in it.
And that was enough to make me try again the next night.
And the next.
Not consistently. Not perfectly.
Just… sometimes.
What mindfulness for anxiety actually feels like (spoiler: not perfect)
I used to think mindfulness meant feeling calm.
Nope.
It’s more like:
Feeling anxious… but noticing it instead of immediately spiraling.
Like:
“Oh. My chest feels tight.”
“Oh. My thoughts are racing.”
Instead of:
“THIS IS BAD SOMETHING IS WRONG EVERYTHING IS WRONG”
Subtle difference. Huge impact.
The 5 practical exercises that actually helped me
Not all at once.
Not every day.
But enough that my anxiety stopped feeling like a runaway train.
1. The “just breathe, but don’t overthink it” exercise
Yeah, I know. Basic.
But hear me out.
I used to try breathing perfectly. Like I was being graded.
Now I just:
- Inhale slowly
- Exhale slowly
- Notice it
That’s it.
Sometimes I count. Sometimes I don’t.
Sometimes I get distracted after 2 breaths and forget what I was doing.
Still counts.
Because even one mindful breath can interrupt that anxiety spiral for a second.
And sometimes, one second is all you need.
2. The 5-4-3-2-1 grounding thing (aka “get me out of my head”)
This one is clutch when anxiety gets loud.
You look around and name:
- 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
The first time I tried this, I was like:
“Okay… I see a chair. A lamp. A… questionable stain on the wall.”
Not glamorous.
But it worked.
Because it pulled me out of my thoughts and back into reality.
3. The “name the feeling” trick (sounds simple, feels weird)
Instead of saying:
“I’m anxious.”
I try saying:
“I’m feeling anxious.”
Small difference.
But it creates a little space.
Like… I’m not the anxiety. I’m just experiencing it.
Which sounds very deep and philosophical, but really it just means I don’t spiral as fast.
Sometimes I even get specific:
“I’m feeling overwhelmed.”
“I’m feeling nervous.”
And weirdly, naming it makes it less intense.
4. The “slow down your body” move
When anxiety hits, my body goes into full chaos mode:
- Fast breathing
- Tight shoulders
- Restless energy
So instead of trying to control my thoughts (which… good luck), I focus on my body.
I:
- Relax my shoulders (or at least try)
- Unclench my jaw
- Slow my breathing
And somehow, my mind follows.
Not immediately.
But gradually.
Like convincing a hyper dog to sit down. Takes a minute.
5. The “this moment is okay” reminder
This one took me a while.
Because when you’re anxious, your brain is like:
“Everything is NOT okay.”
But I try to check in:
Right now, in this exact moment…
Am I safe?
Usually, the answer is yes.
And that realization doesn’t fix everything.
But it softens the panic.
Just a little.
The part where I admit I still struggle
I still get anxious.
A lot.
I still overthink. I still spiral. I still lie awake at night questioning random life choices like I’m in a dramatic movie.
But now?
I have tools.
Not perfect tools. Not magical solutions.

Just… small things I can do in the moment.
And that changes everything.
Two links I actually found helpful
- A simple guide to grounding techniques: https://www.verywellmind.com/grounding-techniques-2797300
- This calming “nothing happens” video that somehow helps: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZYbU82GVz4
A slightly messy thought before I wrap this up
Anxiety makes everything feel urgent.
Like you need to solve everything right now.
Mindfulness for anxiety doesn’t solve everything.
It just brings you back to this moment.
And usually, this moment is… manageable.
Not perfect. Not amazing.
Just okay.
And honestly?
Okay is underrated.
Final thought (kind of rambling, but stay with me)
If you had told me a year ago that focusing on my breath would help my emotional chaos, I would’ve laughed.
Or rolled my eyes. Probably both.
But here we are.
Still messy. Still human. Still figuring things out.
Just… slightly calmer.
And sometimes, that’s more than enough.
