Grounding When I’m Spiralling

This image is a photo of a hare dashing off to depict how we can become hyper anxious in flight mode from our surroundings. This is for the grounding article. Created by counsellor and psychotherapist Amanda Reynolds of AR Counselling services, West Yorkshire.

When you feel yourself beginning to worry about a thought, that leads you to another thought, and your heart rate starts to increase, your chest tightens, anxiety grows, and you may feel more of the following:

Muscles tense

Respirations fast in upper chest

Skin colour changes to paler

May feel sweaty and cold

Hands and feet go cold

Digestion stops

Feel fear or rage

Contact with self and others is limited

Contact with your rational part of your brain may be inaccessible.

Integration with the world around you is not likely.

This image is a photo of the word What If. to depict how we can become hyper anxious in flight mode from our surroundings. This is for the grounding article. Created by counsellor and psychotherapist Amanda Reynolds of AR Counselling services, West Yorkshire.

The “What If’s” take over and suddenly you’re back up there, working from your head in a “Top Down” way. You may spiral into anxiety and fears, that feel so familiar.

When you notice this happening, see this as an opportunity to try some grounding techniques.

Why?

Because it stops you in your racing tracks. It can help us to re-orient ourselves and re-focus back into a more present moment. Yes the fears and the big bad world still exist.

But what we are trying to do is stop that massive stress hormone dump that adds to more feelings of being unsettled and out of control.

We are trying to gently help our nervous system from feeling overwhelmed, and the more we can stop it, ground and come back into the moment (which is what grounding is) then we can help our body to calm down.

The more we practice it, the more we feel calm and the more it will help us to reconnect with ourselves and hopefully our rational voice can be heard again.

When you are racing away down the racetrack, try one of these suggestions.

Remember Grounding Techniques take practice. At first practice the techniques when you feel calm, that way when you need them, you will be familiar with what you are trying to do.

Polar Bear and Puffin by artist Amanda Reynolds are depicted discussing Grounding Techniques and getting them wrong. Includes ARC logo for AR Counselling services for adults age 21 plus.

It’s okay to get it wrong, so keep practising. You’ve got this!

If it doesn’t work for you, then that’s okay, keep looking.

There are plenty out there online and you will find one that suits you.

The photo depicts ARC counselling logo. Amanda Reynolds provides face-to-face counselling sessions to individuals on a one-to-one basis. Her comfortable, quiet, safe space is based in a building from her home. In Allerton Bywater, near Castleford on the borders of Leeds, Wakefield and North Yorkshire. Easy to get to.

When you feel yourself beginning to worry about a thought, that leads you to another thought, and your heart rate starts to increase, your chest tightens, anxiety grows, and you may feel more of the following: Muscles tense Respirations fast in upper chest Skin colour changes to paler May feel sweaty and cold Hands and…

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