How to Help Yourself If You Are Depressed

Depressive disorders make one feel exhausted, worthless, helpless, and hopeless. Such negative thoughts and feelings make some people feel like giving up. It is important to realize that these negative views are part of the depression and typically do not accurately reflect the situation. Negative thinking fades as treatment begins to take effect. In the meantime:

  • Set realistic goals and assume a reasonable amount of responsibility.
  • Break large tasks into small ones, set some priorities, and do what you can as you can.
  • Try to be with other people and to confide in someone; it is usually better than being alone and secretive.
  • Participate in activities that may make you feel better.
  • Mild exercise, going to a movie, a ballgame, or participating in religious, social, or other activities may help.
  • Expect your mood to improve gradually, not immediately. Feeling better takes time.
  • It is advisable to postpone important decisions until the depression has lifted. Before deciding to make a significant transition--change jobs, get married or divorced--discuss it with others who know you well and have a more objective view of your situation.
  • People rarely "snap out of" a depression. But they can feel a little better day by day.
  • Remember, positive thinking will replace the negative thinking that is part of the depression and will disappear as your depression responds to treatment.
  • Let your family and friends help you.

Source: National Institute of Mental Health

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2021, December 21). How to Help Yourself If You Are Depressed, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2025, April 29 from https://www.healthyplace.com/sex/sex-and-depression/how-to-help-yourself-if-you-are-depressed

Last Updated: March 26, 2022

How to Develop Intimate Relationships

What keeps someone from forming intimate relationships? Learn how to develop intimacy, intimate relationships, with others.

What is Intimacy?

Intimacy is a process - not a thing. It takes place over time and is not stagnant. In fact, any kind of stagnation in a relationship kills intimacy. Intimacy can also take many forms.

One form of intimacy is cognitive or intellectual intimacy where two people exchange thoughts, share ideas and enjoy similarities and differences between their opinions. If they can do this in an open and comfortable way, they can become quite intimate in an intellectual area.

A second form of intimacy is experiential intimacy or intimacy activity. Examples of this would be where people get together to actively involve themselves with each other, probably saying very little to each other, not sharing any thoughts or many feelings, but being involved in mutual activities with one another. Imagine observing two house painters whose brushstrokes seemed to be playing out a duet on the side of the house. They may be shocked to think that they were engaged in an intimate activity with each other, however from an experiential point of view, they would be very intimately involved.

A third form of intimacy is emotional intimacy where two persons can comfortably share their feelings with each other or when they empathize with the feelings of the other person, really try to understand and try to be aware of the other person's emotional side.

A fourth form of intimacy is sexual intimacy. This is the stereotypical definition of intimacy that most people are familiar with. However, this form of intimacy includes a broad range of sensuous activity and is much more than just sexual intercourse. It's any form of sensual expression with each other. Therefore, intimacy can be many things for different people at different times.

Barriers to Developing and Maintaining Intimacy

  • Communication - one barrier is when a person enters a relationship with some mistaken notions about just what intimacy is, or misjudges the needs or the thoughts of the other person in the relationship. Communication or the lack of communication would be one of the main barriers to the foundation of an intimate relationship.
  • Time - intimacy takes time to develop and a person who is not willing to allow for time for an intimate relationship to occur will not be able to develop that kind of relationship.
  • Awareness - it is necessary for a person to be aware of him or herself and to realize what she/he has to share with another person. People who are not aware of themselves frequently are not able to be aware of other people, at least not in terms of the potentially intimate aspects of the other person.
  • Shyness - reluctance to share oneself with another person can keep an intimate relationship from developing.
  • Game Playing - people who act in stereotypical roles or try to play certain kinds of games, even if they're intimate-appearing games (such as romantic games) cannot develop an intimate relationship with someone else simply because they are not being themselves. Game playing can be a detriment to the development of intimacy and can develop only when two people are being himself or herself in a significant way with another person.

How to Develop Intimate Relationships

  • Awareness - be aware of yourself and start where you are and not try to start some other place. Start with the form of intimacy where you feel most comfort. If a particular form of intimacy is difficult for you, whether that's intellectual, experiential, emotional, or sexual, that's not the place for you to try to start to develop an intimate relationship with another person. If you're more comfortable with intellectual intimacy, start by sharing thoughts, talking with another person about their opinions and ideas. Once comfortable in an intimate relationship on that basis, then other intimate areas can be approached and developed.
  • Knowledge - every intimate relationship does not have to include all the different aspects or types of intimacy that's been mentioned. Many compatible and satisfying intimate relationships can exist in any one of the four areas or any combination of those areas.

Suggested Books

  • The Art of Loving. Eric Frohm - general information for the person interested in developing
  • Intimacy. Allen and Martin - deals with the different forms of intimacy and discusses the specifics of intimacy formation.
  • What Do You Do After You Say Hello?. Eric Bern - a humorous book which directly deals with the initial stages of forming potentially intimate relationships.
  • Why Am I Afraid to Tell You Who I Am?. Power - beneficial in helping people understand their own internal barriers to forming intimate relationships.

Note: This document is based on an audio tape script developed by the University of Texas, Austin. With their permission, it was revised and edited into its current form by the staff of the University of Florida Counseling Center.

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2021, December 21). How to Develop Intimate Relationships, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2025, April 29 from https://www.healthyplace.com/relationships/intimate-relationships/how-to-develop-intimate-relationships

Last Updated: February 2, 2022

Use These Positive Affirmations for Anxiety Relief

Positive affirmations for anxiety do work. Learn how to use affirmations for anxiety relief and how you can make your own on HealthyPlace

Positive affirmations are replacements for anxious thoughts. They provide real, tangible anxiety relief because they address one of anxiety’s most insidious effects: harsh, negative thoughts and self-beliefs. Positive affirmations allow us to take control of anxiety by choosing our thoughts rather than remaining at the mercy of anxious thoughts.

Positive affirmations for anxiety have a broad application, usable in many situations such as in periods of intense anxiety, during an anxiety attack, and during times of relatively low stress and anxiety for regular reinforcement of healthy, positive beliefs. Anxious thoughts feel realistic, but that is an illusion created and perpetuated by anxiety. The truth about who we are and what we can do is uncovered when we design and use positive affirmations.

Guidelines for Creating Positive Affirmations for Anxiety

When developing your affirmations for stress and anxiety, following these tips will maximize their effectiveness in reducing anxiety as well as the intensity and duration of anxiety attacks.

  • Keep them short, just a brief phrase or sentence.
  • Make them meaningful to who you are and the goals you have.
  • Fit them to your personality (use humor and lightheartedness, or make them serious).
  • Create statements that encourage.
  • Incorporate reminders of facts, such as your strengths or accomplishments.
  • Affirmations specifically for anxiety attacks can incorporate supportive reminders that you get through these episodes.
  • Write them using positive statements, emphasizing what you are rather than what you are not.
  • “I” statements are most effective.
  • Focus on the present rather than the past or future.
  • Make the affirmations statements you buy into.
  • Pay attention to your anxious, harsh self-talk, and write affirmations to target them.

Examples of Positive Affirmations for Anxiety Relief

There is no limit to affirmations for replacing anxious thoughts. The most important thing is that they speak to you personally, counter your own negative self-talk, and are meaningful. Use positive affirmations from a list such as this one, reword them to fit you, or start from scratch. You have the ability to pick the best affirmations for you.

  • I’ve survived this before, I’ll survive now.
  • I’m strong and can persevere.
  • I know that I’m not my anxiety.
  • I can take things one step at a time.
  • I live only in this moment.
  • I approach this situation with openness and curiosity.
  • I’m someone who can focus on the beauty around me.
  • I’m in charge of my breathing, and I can slow it down.
  • I enjoy my feelings of inner calm.
  • I’m actively taking steps to reduce my anxiety.
  • I’m talented and have many things to offer.
  • I contribute positively to my family.
  • I enjoy making others laugh.
  • I’m an excellent listener.
  • I cultivate patience to overcome anxiety.
  • I’m courageous and can make it through.
  • I use my unique strengths to move beyond anxiety.
  • I know what I value and place my energy there instead of on anxiety.

Whether you pick positive affirmations for anxiety from a list or create your own, write them down on small cards, craft sticks, or anything you can carry with you. Also, place your affirmations in places where you will see them. To be fully effective, affirmations must be read and re-read, rehearsed and practiced. The more you see the statements and repeat them to yourself, the more they become natural thoughts.

Affirmations are a useful tool for anxiety relief, for when we use them we’re actively replacing anxiety with realistic self-talk that represents the real version of ourselves and our potential. With positive affirmations, you can go forth and conquer anxiety, anxiety attacks, and stress.

article references

APA Reference
Peterson, T. (2021, December 21). Use These Positive Affirmations for Anxiety Relief, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2025, April 29 from https://www.healthyplace.com/self-help/anxiety/use-these-positive-affirmations-for-anxiety-relief

Last Updated: January 6, 2022

Exercises to Relieve and Reduce Anxiety

Exercises to relieve and reduce anxiety put you in charge. Try these anxiety-reducing exercises to create calm, release energy, and empower your thoughts

Many different types of exercises to relieve and reduce anxiety are available and easily accessible to all of us. Anxiety-reducing exercises don’t have to be fancy to work (and in fact, usually the simpler they are the better they work). All exercises to relieve anxiety involve some sort of action, and action is what takes power away from anxiety and puts it back with you. Ready to empower yourself and to actively reduce your anxiety? If so, check out the following exercises to relieve and reduce anxiety.

Anxiety affects our thoughts, emotions, and behaviors. Anxiety agitates all of these, and racing thoughts and swirling emotions are common to all anxiety disorders. Anxiety can make us freeze in fear, or it can make us keyed-up, restless, and hypervigilant. Anxiety makes us wired. And because of that, it makes us tired. Engaging in anxiety-reducing exercises will help all of this. Start with the area that is troubling you the most, and progress from there, systematically relieving anxiety.

Exercises for Anxiety That Calm Your Brain

Relaxing exercises for anxiety induce inner calm.

  • Practice mindfulness. Mindfulness means living in the present moment and allowing our anxiety and worries about the past and future to fade away. Use all of your senses to fully experience your moment, your life. When you notice your thoughts wandering, gently turn them back to what you’re doing.
  • Use imagery. This involves focusing your attention on a calming object or image, visualizing it completely (what does it look like? Sound like? Etc.) in your mind while breathing slowly and deeply.
  • Massage. From a partner or a practitioner, touch is a powerful exercise to help anxiety.
  • Meditation for anxiety. Even just 10 minutes a day will soothe the brain and reduce anxiety. Don’t worry so much about technique or “getting it right.” Sit comfortably, breathe deeply, and simply let your thoughts come and go.
  • Progressive relaxation. With or without a recording, concentrate on each part of your body, one at a time. Starting at your feet, tense, hold, and relax your muscles. Work your way up to your head.
  • Take quiet breaks. Anxiety can build throughout the day. Notice when your anxiety is increasing, and take a short break where it’s quiet.
  • Practice yoga for anxiety. Intentional poses, stretches, and postures have a calming effect on both brain and body.
  • Listen to soothing music. Because music has been shown to have a direct influence on how we think and feel, listening to relaxing music is a great calming exercise for anxiety.

Release Pent-Up Anxiety

Get physical. Exercise to reduce anxiety works. Says anxiety expert Dr. Carolyn Clark, “Movement is one of the simplest, most effective ways to reduce anxiety and stress” (2006, p. 102). Exercise also rids the brain of toxic worry and anxiety, things that run in the background of our minds all day and sometimes even night (Hallowell, 2002).

  • Do any exercise you enjoy. The idea is to burn off anxiety, and when you are doing something that doesn’t feel terrible, it is very effective.
  • Listen to peppy music, and move to it. Music can calm, and music can energize. Crank up your favorite upbeat tunes, and move and shake to them.
  • Walk. Taking short walk breaks during the day helps keep anxiety levels consistently lower.
  • Laugh. Laughter provides a release, reduces stress hormones, releases our feel-good hormones known as endorphins, and induces a global sense of wellbeing.

To maximize exercise’s anxiety-reducing benefit, avoid multi-tasking. Be mindful of the process. If you do enjoy reading a book or watching TV while on the treadmill, just make sure that they’re light and entertaining. Avoid cramming for an exam while exercising or watching the news. The idea is to reduce anxiety, not increase it.

Empower Yourself

The below exercises empower by activating our thoughts.

  • Journal. Writing about our thoughts and feelings helps get them out of our head and onto paper where we can better deal with them. When you journal, write about positive things, too, such as gratitude, good things that happened, beauty you’ve noticed, hopes, dreams, and more. This is very effective in reducing anxiety because it shifts attention away from anxiety and replaces it with the positive.
  • Find flow. Discover an activity that you enjoy doing so much that when you’re doing it, you’re fully engaged. Your anxious thoughts will drop away as you’re immersed in your activity.
  • Track your anxiety. Use a log or diary to record triggering events, their settings, your reactions, the intensity, who else was there, etc. This will help you find patterns to your anxiety that you can then address.

The above ideas are mere suggestions to get you started. Pick and choose from the lists, and create some of your own. Whatever you do, just do it. The very best exercise to reduce anxiety is action.

article references

APA Reference
Peterson, T. (2021, December 21). Exercises to Relieve and Reduce Anxiety, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2025, April 29 from https://www.healthyplace.com/self-help/anxiety/exercises-to-relieve-and-reduce-anxiety

Last Updated: January 6, 2022

Sex Therapy With Survivors of Sexual Abuse

I became a sex therapist in the mid-1970s because I was impressed with how well standard sex therapy techniques were able to help people overcome embarrassing problems such as difficulty having an orgasm, painful intercourse, premature ejaculation, and impotence. The use of sex education, self-awareness exercises, and a series of behavioral techniques could cure many of these problems within a matter of only several months. I noticed that as people learned more about the sexual workings of their bodies and gained confidence with their sexual expressions, they would also feel better about themselves in other areas of their lives.

But there were always a number of people in my practice who had difficulty with sex therapy and the specific techniques I gave them as "homework." They would procrastinate and avoid doing the exercises, would do them incorrectly, or, if they could manage some exercises, would report getting nothing out of them. Upon further exploration I discovered that those clients had one major factor in common: a history of childhood sexual abuse.

Besides how they reacted to standard techniques, I noticed other differences between my survivor and nonsurvivor clients. Many survivors seemed ambivalent or neutral about the sexual problems they were experiencing. Gone was the usual sense of frustration that could fuel a client's motivation to change. Survivors often entered counseling because of a partner's frustration with the sexual problems, and they seemed more disturbed by the consequences of sexual problems than by their existence. Margaret, an incest survivor, tearfully confided during her first session, "I'm afraid my husband will leave me if I don't become more interested in sex. Can you help me be the sexual partner he wants me to be?"

Many of the survivors I talked with had been to sex therapists before, with no success. They had histories of persistent problems that seemed immune to standard treatments. What was even more revealing was that survivors kept sharing with me a set of symptoms, in addition to sexual functioning problems, that challenged my skills as a sex therapist. These included --

Avoiding or being afraid of sex. Approaching sex as an obligation. Feeling intense negative emotions when touched, such as fear, guilt, or nausea. Having difficulty with arousal and feeling sensation. Feeling emotionally distant or not present during sex. Having disturbing and intrusive sexual thoughts and fantasies. Engaging in compulsive or inappropriate sexual behaviors. Having difficulty establishing or maintaining an intimate relationship. Considering their sexual histories, touch problems, and responses to counseling, I quickly realized that traditional sex therapy was horribly missing the mark for survivors. Standard treatments such as those described in the early works of William Masters, Virginia Johnson, Lonnie Barbach, Bernie Zilbergeld, and Helen Singer Kaplan often left survivors feeling discouraged, disempowered, and in some cases, retraumatized. Survivors approached sex therapy from an entirely different angle than other clients did. Thus they required an entirely different style and program of sex therapy. Over the course of the last 20 years, the practice of sex therapy has changed considerably. I believe many of these changes were the results of adjustments other sex therapists and I made to be more effective in treating sexual abuse survivors. To illustrate, I will show how sex therapists have challenged and changed six old tenets of traditional sex therapy through treating survivors.

Tenet 1: All Sexual Dysfunctions Are "Bad"

In general, traditional sex therapy viewed all sexual dysfunctions as bad; the goal of treatment being to cure them right away. Techniques were directed toward this goal, and therapeutic success was determined by it. But the sexual dysfunctions of some survivors were, in fact, both functional and important. Their sexual problems helped them avoid feelings and memories associated with past sexual abuse.

When Donna entered therapy for difficulty achieving orgasm, she seemed most concerned with the effect her problem was having on her marriage. She had read many articles and a few books on how to increase orgasmic potential but had never followed through with any suggested exercises. For several months, I worked unsuccessfully with her, trying to help her stick with a sexual enrichment program.

Then we decided to shift the focus of her treatment. I asked Donna about her childhood. She reported some information that hinted at the possibility of childhood sexual abuse. Donna said that during her upbringing her father was an alcoholic whose personality changed when he was drunk. She disliked it whenever he touched her, she pleaded with her mom for a dead-bolt lock on her bedroom door when she was 11 years old, and she had few memories of her childhood in general. After several sessions during which we discussed dynamics in her family of origin, Donna told me she had a very upsetting dream [that included a graphic description of sexual abuse by her father that the client felt was historically true].

No wonder Donna had been unable to climax. The physical experience of orgasm had been intimately associated with her past abuse. Her sexual dysfunction had been protecting her from the memory of her father's assault.

In numerous other cases, I encountered a similar process. Steve, a 25-year-old recovering alcoholic, had a chronic problem with premature ejaculation. As we explored his inner psychological experience in therapy, he was able to identify that when he allowed himself to delay ejaculation, he would start to feel an urge to rape his partner. Premature ejaculation was protecting him from this very upsetting feeling. It wasn't until he connected this urge to rape with his intense rage at his mother for sexually abusing him as a child that he was able to resolve the internal conflict and comfortably prolong gratification.

Impressing upon Donna or Steve the idea that their sexual dysfunctions were bad would have done them a disservice. Their dysfunctions were powerful coping techniques. I also encountered another type of situation that challenged the old tenet that sexual dysfunctions are bad. For some survivors who had experienced little difficulty with sexual functioning, the onset of sexual dysfunction signaled a new level of recovery from sexual abuse.

Tony was a 35-year-old single man who had been in and out of abusive relationships for years. His partners were often sexually demanding and generally critical. Tony's father had raped him repeatedly when he was young, and his mother had molested him in his teens. As Tony resolved issues related to his past abuse, his choice of partners improved. One day he told me that he had been unable to function sexually with his new girlfriend. This was extremely unusual for him.


"She wanted to have sex, so she began to do oral sex on me," Tony explained. "I got an erection and then lost it and couldn't get it back." "Did you want to be having sex?" I asked him. "No, I really wasn't interested then," he replied. "So your body was saying no for you," I remarked. "Yeah, I guess so," he said somewhat proudly. "Wow, do you realize what's happening?" I declared, "You're becoming congruent! For all these years, your genitals have operated separately from how you really felt. Now your head, heart, and genitals are lining up congruently. Good for you!"

That day in therapy with Tony was a turning point for me as a sex therapist. l was amazed that I was actually congratulating him on his temporary sexual dysfunction. It felt appropriate. Instead of functioning, the goal of treatment shifted to self-awareness, self-care, trust, and intimacy-building. Insight and authenticity became more important than behavioral functioning.

While healthy sexual functioning is a desirable long-term goal, conveying the idea that all dysfunctions are bad and must be immediately cured is too simplistic. In working with survivors and others, sex therapists need to see sexual problems in context and we need to find out how people feel about a symptom before attempting to treat it. Therapists must respect dysfunctions, learn from them, work with them, and resist the urge to automatically try to change them.

Tenet 2: All Consensual Sex Is Good

In general, traditional sex therapy didn't make distinctions between different types of sex as long as sex was consensual and did not cause physical harm. That way of thinking does not hold up considering the sexual addictions and compulsions that are by products of sexual abuse. Little distinction was given to the type of sex that fostered addictive and compulsive behavior. The lack of distinction between the more specific nature of sexual interaction has left some people, including survivors, fearful of all sex. From working with survivors we have learned that sexual addictions and compulsions develop to a type of sex that incorporates or mimics the dynamics of sexual abuse.

On business trips Mark, a married man with two children, could not stop himself from cruising strange neighborhoods looking for pretty women whom he could watch from inside his car while masturbating. He knew all the video parlors in a four-state area and could not pass one without stopping to masturbate. He sought counseling because his wife had caught him in bed with his secretary. She threatened to leave him unless he got help.

When Mark entered therapy he described himself as being addicted to sex. I asked him to describe sex. He used terms like, "out-of-control, impulsive, exciting and degrading."

Mark's preoccupation and addiction was to a type of sex that was fueled by secrecy and shame. It was undertaken in a high state of dissociation; filled with anxiety; focused on stimulation and release; and lacking in true caring, emotional intimacy, and social responsibility. This type of sex was associated with power, control, dominance, humiliation, fear, and treating people as objects. It was the same type of sex that he was exposed to as a young man when his mother's best friend would pull down his pants, molest him, and laugh at him.

Helping Mark recover involved helping him make connections between what happened to him in the past and his present behavior. He needed to learn the difference between abusive and healthy sex. Sex, per se, was not the problem. It was the type of sex he had learned and developed arousal patterns to that had to change. Healthy sex, like healthy laughter, incorporates choice and self-respect. It is not addictive.

To help people overcome fears of sex, sex therapy involves teaching conditions for healthy sexuality. These include consent, equality, respect, safety, responsibility, emotional trust, and intimacy. While abstinence can be an important part of recovery from sexual addictions, it won't be enough unless new concepts and approaches to sex are also learned.

Tenet 3: Fantasy and Pornography Are Benign

In traditional sex therapy, the therapeutic use of sexual fantasy and pornography was generally viewed as benign and often even encouraged. Because the goal of therapy was functioning, fantasy and pornography were seen as therapeutically beneficial: giving permission, offering new ideas, and stimulating arousal and interest. Books on becoming orgasmic frequently recommended that women read something juicy, like Nancy Friday's collection of sexual fantasies, to "get them over the hump" and be able to climax.

In the early years of my practice, like other sex therapists I knew, I kept a collection of pornography in my office to lend out. While most pornography was degrading to women and contained descriptions of sexual abuse and irresponsible sex, the common attitude in the field was that "thinking it" is not "doing it." The implication was that sexual thoughts and images are harmless; as long as you don't act out a perversion, it's not damaging.

Through working with survivors, sex therapists have learned that sexual fantasies and pornography can be very harmful. Reliance on them is often a symptom of unresolved issues from early sexual trauma.

Joann and her husband, Tim, came to see me for marital sexual counseling. On the very rare occasions when Joann was interested in sex with Tim, she would manipulate the lovemaking in such a way as to encourage Tim to have forceful anal sex with her. Sexual contact invariably concluded with Joann curled in a ball on the bed sobbing and feeling isolated. Tim had some difficulty understanding why he went along with this scenario, but what I found equally curious was Joann's response when I asked her why she did it. Joann shared that ever since she was about 10 years old, she had been masturbating to fantasies of anal rape. They turned her on more than anything she knew.

In the beginning of their marriage, Joann was able to have sex without the fantasies; but as stresses with Tim increased, she found herself more and more drawn to them. Often the fantasies would intrude during sex. She felt controlled by them, filled with shame and disgust.


Joann's behavior had its roots in early abuse by her father. He would spank her in a sexual manner or penetrate her anally with his finger as he masturbated himself. The sexual fantasies Joann developed were not harmless or enhancing her sexuality. They were upsetting and unwanted, symptoms of unresolved guilt and shame from the abuse she had experienced in childhood. Her fantasies were reinforcing abuse dynamics, reenacting the trauma, punishing her unjustly, and expressing deep emotional pain at the betrayal and abandonment by her parents.

For survivors, using pornography and experiencing certain sexual fantasies are often part of the problem, not part of the solution. Rather than condemn certain sexual behaviors, I encourage people to evaluate their sexual activities according to the following criteria:

  • Does this behavior increase or decrease your self-esteem?
  • Does it trigger abusive or compulsive sex?
  • Does it emotionally or physically harm you or others?
  • Does it get in the way of emotional intimacy?

Sex therapists can help people understand the origins of their negative sexual behaviors by showing compassion and not condemning. Survivors benefit from learning ways to gain control over unwanted reactions and behaviors.2 They can develop new ways of increasing arousal and enhancing sexual pleasure such as staying emotionally present during sex, focusing on body sensations, and creating healthy sexual fantasies.

Tenet 4: Use Standardized Techniques In a Fixed Sequence

Another tenet of traditional sex therapy was the importance of using a fixed series of behavioral techniques. Sex therapists relied heavily on "sensate focus" exercises that were developed by William Masters and Virginia Johnson. Versions of these techniques exist in the standard treatments for low sex desire, pre-orgasmia, premature ejaculation, and impotence. These structured step-by-step behavioral exercises were designed to improve self-awareness, sexual stimulation, and partner communication. Through working with survivors, however, we have learned that sex therapy techniques need to be expanded, modified, and individualized. Time must be spent teaching appropriate developmental skills and pacing therapy to prevent retraumatization.

One day in 1980, the bulb on my little projector broke and I could not show Fred and Lucy the tape on the first level of sensate focus exercises. Instead I gave them a handout and complete verbal instructions. They were to take turns lying down and massaging each other in the nude. The next week they came back and reported on how it went. Lucy said the exercise was all right, but Fred's belt buckle kept hurting her as she passed over it. Even though they had been given specific instructions to take their clothes off, Lucy, an incest survivor, said she never heard them. Instead, she adapted the technique to make it less threatening.

Standardized techniques performed in a fixed sequence generally don't work for survivors because these techniques fail to respect the important needs survivors have for creating safety, pacing experiences, and being in control of what's happening. Just being able to sit, breathe, feel relaxed, and stay present while touching one's own body can be a challenge.

Survivors need a lot of options for exercises that offer opportunities to heal without being overwhelmed. I rely on the techniques for relearning touch described in my book The Sexual Healing Journey. These techniques can easily be modified, adapted, and rearranged in different sequences by survivors themselves.

It is essential that sex therapists assess a client's readiness before suggesting a particular sex therapy exercise. I often find that a client's curiosity about an exercise is a good indicator of readiness to try it. Starting, stopping, and shifting among different techniques. Nudity, genital exploration and exchanging sexual touch with a partner are often advanced challenges, generally not appropriate to suggest in the early stages of therapy.

Sexual healing is generally an advanced type of healing work for survivors, less important than issues such as overcoming depression, improving self-esteem, resolving family-of-origin issues, and securing physical safety and health to name a few. Any sex therapy, therefore, needs to take a back seat to general recovery issues that might arise. Sex therapy needs to be integrated with other aspects of resolving sexual abuse.

Tenet 5: More Sex Is Better

In traditional sex therapy, the main criteria by which we judged success was how regularly and frequently clients were having sex. I used to ask lots of questions about frequency and evaluated success by how much a couple conformed to the national average of engaging in sexual activity once or twice a week. This focus on quantity often ignored issues of quality. Working with survivors taught me that with physical and sexual interaction, high quality is more important than large quantity.

Jeannie1, a 35-year-old survivor of childhood molestation, and her boyfriend, Dan, sought therapy to address sexual intimacy problems. They planned to marry in the next year. It was concerning both of them that Jeannie would "check out" during sex. "I feel like I'm making love to a rag doll," Dan lamented. She agreed to sex to please him, fearing he would end the relationship if she declined too often.

For Jeannie, more sex brought on more problems of dissociation. The sexual contact she was having was getting in the way of her recovery from sexual abuse and her ability to create an honest intimacy with Dan. In therapy, as the reality of what was going on emerged, the couple decided to take a vacation from sex for awhile. Jeannie needed time and permission to validate her inner experience. The break from sex enabled her to honor her real feelings, learn new skills, and eventually be able to say yes to it without anxiety. Jeannie also learned that Dan loved her for herself, supported her getting in touch with her inner feelings, and viewed sexual interaction as less important than emotional intimacy and honesty.


When survivors progress in healing and start having sexual relations more regularly, it's not uncommon for the frequency of their sexual interactions to vary. To ensure positive sexual experiences, survivors often need to give themselves a safe, comforting envirornment and plenty of time for intimate relating. Sex emerges from mutual good feelings and a sense of emotional connection between partners. The high quality and specialness of sexual encounters become more significant than how often they occur.

Tenet 6: An Authoritative Behavioral Goal-Focused Style Works Best

In traditional sex therapy, the therapist's role was primarily to present a program of exercises and help clients follow that program to achieve functioning. Therapists offered sex education and worked to improve couples' communication. The therapist was the authority, suggesting techniques, pacing interventions, and monitoring progress. Little attention was paid to how a therapist's style might be influencing the progress of therapy. Working with survivors has taught many sex therapists that their therapeutic style is as important as any intervention.

For many survivors, sex is one of the most difficult areas to address in recovery Just hearing the word "sex," or saying it can bring on a minor panic attack. Survivors can easily unconsciously project feelings toward the offender and the abuse onto the therapist and the sexual counseling. After all, therapists seem invested in survivors being sexual, and the process of therapy strains a survivor's sense of control and protection. This high potential for negative transference needs to be addressed if sex therapy with survivors is to be successful.

To minimize negative transference, I suggest therapists adopt the following premise: Do the opposite of what happened in the abuse. For instance, because the victim was dominated and disempowered in abuse, it makes sense that therapy should focus on empowering the client and respecting his or her reactions to it. Therapists need to explain techniques and interventions, encouraging clients to exercise choice at all times. Suggestions, not directions or prescriptions, should be given. Rather than admonish clients for their resistances and relapses, therapists should reframe these as inevitable, seek to understand, and work with them.

Because sexual abuse involved a traumatic violation of boundaries, it's important that sex therapists be extremely good at maintaining clear emotional and physical boundaries. Talking about sex can stir up sexual feelings. It's inappropriate to combine sex-focused sessions with touch.

Several years ago, I was appalled when a prominent sex therapist told me how she held and rubbed her female client's hand during a session to demonstrate different stroking techniques for masturbation. Therapy needs to be a safe place physically and psychologically for everyone, at all times.

It's also important for sex therapists not to dominate the content and course of therapy. Personally, I find I'm most effective when I establish a therapeutic relationship with the client in which we're working together. The client sets the pace and direction and presents the content; I provide encouragement, support, guidance, creative ideas, insight, information and resources.

The Value of Change

There is no question that the challenge of treating survivors of sexual abuse has revolutionized and improved the practice of sex therapy Personally, I know that the changes I have made in how I perceive and practice sex therapy have made me a better therapist with all of my clients, regardless of whether they were abused. Other sex therapists seem to agree that the practice of sex therapy has become more client-centered and respectful of individual needs and differences. Learning about the dynamics of sexual trauma has helped therapists become more aware of the conditions necessary for sex to be positive and life-affirming for everyone.

Endnotes

1 This is a pseudonym, as are all names in this article.

2 For more information on techniques, see The Sexual Healing Journey, HarperCollins, 1991.

3 For a description of these techniques, see William Masters et al., Masters and Johnson on Sex and Human Loving, Little Brown and Co., 1986.

Wendy Maltz, M.S.W., is clinical director of Maltz Counseling Associates. She is the author of the Sexual Healing Journey: A Guide for Survivors of Sexual Abuse and Caution: Treating Sexual Abuse Can Be Hazardous to Your Love Life.

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2021, December 21). Sex Therapy With Survivors of Sexual Abuse, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2025, April 29 from https://www.healthyplace.com/sex/abuse/sex-therapy-with-survivors-of-sexual-abuse

Last Updated: March 26, 2022

Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety and Depressed Mood

Adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood is a common type of adjustment disorder. Get details on symptoms, treatments on HealthyPlace.com

Adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood is a common type of adjustment disorder, one of six official types of adjustment disorders categorized in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5), published by the American Psychiatric Association. This official volume, used by professionals to diagnose mental illness and other disorders, describes adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood as a stressor-induced disorder that creates personal distress through symptoms of both anxiety and depression.

Symptoms of Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety and Depressed Mood

The DSM-5 discusses adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood as one of six types of adjustment disorders. In this adjustment disorder, someone experiences symptoms of both anxiety and depression. This is very individualized; while everyone with this type of adjustment disorder has symptoms of anxiety and depression, the way they appear in someone’s life differs from one person to another. Some people’s symptoms are more anxious, others’ are more depressed, and some people experience an equal amount of each type of symptom.

Reaction to a life change or another type of stressor can lead to a subjective, personal experience of mixed anxiety and depression. The symptoms of adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood can include any combination of

  • Excessive worry
  • Nervousness
  • Jitteriness
  • Edginess
  • Low mood, sadness
  • Increased tearfulness, frequent crying spells
  • Sense of hopelessness
  • Decreased self-esteem
  • Anhedonia—loss of a sense of pleasure
  • Lack of motivation
  • A feeling of loneliness and isolation
  • Suicidal ideation or behavior

The combined symptoms of depression and anxiety can feel crushing and overwhelming. This can make it even more difficult to deal with the stressor that caused these symptoms in the first place.

Distinguishing Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety and Depressed Moods from Anxiety and Depression

Because adjustment disorder symptoms are shared with symptoms of other mental health disorders, it can be challenging to determine an accurate diagnosis. In the case of adjustment disorder with depressed mood, a doctor or mental health professional will work with the person experiencing the symptoms to determine whether he/she is dealing with an anxiety disorder, depressive disorder, both, or adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood.

Perhaps the single most important factor in differentiating between adjustment disorders and other mental health disorders is the presence of one or more identifiable stressors in the person’s life. Adjustment disorder happens when someone is having difficulty coping with or adjusting to one or more life stressors of any severity. In the case of adjustment disorder with anxiety and depression, the stressors lead to both symptoms of anxiety and symptoms of depression. Without identifiable stressors that cause the symptoms, a diagnosis of something other than adjustment disorder is appropriate.

Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety and Depressed Mood is Temporary and Treatable

If you’ve experienced one or more stressors and now are feeling disruptive symptoms of both anxiety and depression, it’s possible that you’re dealing with adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood. A visit to a doctor or mental health professional will help determine this.

The wonderful news about adjustment disorders, including adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood, is that they can be overcome. Effective adjustment disorder treatment exists, and it involves addressing the stressor as well as treating the symptoms, in this case, the symptoms of anxiety and depression.

Once the stressor is removed or the person has learned to adjust to and cope with it, the symptoms of adjustment disorder diminish within six months. Adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood isn’t something someone permanently lives with.

article references

APA Reference
Peterson, T. (2021, December 21). Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Anxiety and Depressed Mood, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2025, April 29 from https://www.healthyplace.com/ptsd-and-stress-disorders/adjustment-disorder/adjustment-disorder-with-mixed-anxiety-and-depressed-mood

Last Updated: February 1, 2022

What to Do About an Unhealthy Relationship

Here are some red flags that your relationship is in the danger zone and what can be done to repair an unhealthy relationship.

"It's better late than never." You have probably said this or heard this at least once in your lifetime, but when it comes to the health of important relationships, this very catchy phrase is in some cases the seal of death.

Nursing a troubled relationship back to health through therapy can be a difficult task, and can be even more so when emotions of love and friendship have deteriorated to the point of intense dislike, or even hatred.

Yet, couples often seek therapy after a separation has occurred, soon after divorce has been considered, or, in some cases, while already in divorce court. Although it is not impossible, even at these late stages to restore a relationship back to health, attaining a positive outcome this late in the game is more the exception than the norm.

Seeking Therapy

Surprisingly, one of the main reasons couples fail to seek therapy early is their unwillingness to come to terms with the extent to which their relationship has deteriorated, and/or the embarrassment of admitting to others that they are having problems.

There can be a sense of hopelessness and unwillingness to invest in therapeutic work, which is the result of a build-up of resentment between a couple. As individuals become resentful of each other, their defense mechanisms progressively become entrenched as adaptive coping styles and further emotional investment, or any commitment to therapeutic work necessary for healing is considered a threat. Due to this unwillingness to commit to therapeutic work, couples who do seek help early on often abandon therapy sessions before any positive goals are accomplished.

Undoing the damage caused by two resentful people acting out against each other in a relationship is sometimes beyond the scope of therapy. Even when professional therapeutic help can conceivably be effective, such a great amount of time and patience is required that couples are often unwilling to invest themselves in therapy when so much damage has already been done.

There are often clear signs that a couple needs to seek therapy immediately to nurse their relationship back to health. A brief questionnaire is included at the end of this article - it provides some key indicators of the health of a relationship.

Red Flags That a Relationship Is Approaching Serious Damage

In addition, the following are some red flags that your relationship may be approaching serious damage. If you are currently experiencing any of these indicators, you may want to seek the help of a qualified therapist:

  • The only conversation you and your spouse have with each other is about everything that is wrong with your relationship.
  • You have a long list in your head of all the things your spouse has done to offend you, and you literally go through that list every day.
  • You cannot remember the last time you were intimate with each other - or when you are, it is not satisfying, and on some occasions, even the intimate moments end with an argument.
  • You frequently wonder whether you would be happier with someone else. You have sometimes mulled over the idea of calling an old flame or flirting with someone you think might be interested in you.
  • You spend a great deal of time expressing how dissatisfied you feel in your relationship to close friends or family. Everyone knows you are unhappy.
  • You and your spouse are more like roommates than a romantic couple. You have started to live different lives, and form separate interests; you are no longer partners.
  • You are constantly involved in power struggles; it has become more important to be right than to work on healing and recreating friendship between you and your spouse.

If these scenarios describe your relationship, remember that when it comes to seeking therapy, late is sometimes just as good as never.

How Is Your Relationship Doing?

Answer the following confidential questions as honestly as possible:

  • Does your partner/ spouse value your needs as much their own?
  • Do you value your partner's/spouse's needs as much as your own?
  • Can you express your opinions and desires without fear?
  • Can your partner/spouse express their opinions and desires without fear?
  • Can you and your spouse/partner spend quality alone time together just talking?
  • Do you regularly and frequently have satisfying sex?
  • When you have a disagreement, do either one of you act nasty and disrespectfully (e.g., giving the silent treatment, staying out all night, yelling, threatening, intimidating)?
  • Do you know for certain or do you suspect your partner/spouse is cheating on you?
  • Are you unfaithful to your partner/spouse?
  • Do you feel that your marriage is a partnership in every respect?
  • Do you share the household and financial responsibilities?
  • Does your partner/spouse value their family's opinion more than yours?
  • Does your spouse/partner lie to you?
  • Do you feel that you can depend on your spouse/partner to support you through a difficult time (e.g., unemployment, sickness, financial crisis, infertility)?
  • Do you and your spouse have other meaningful relationships and interests?
  • Do you and your spouse/partner have a vision for why you are together, a vision that is something beyond yourselves?
  • Does your spouse/partner regularly threaten you with divorce or separation?
  • Do you regularly threaten your spouse/partner with divorce or separation?
  • Does your spouse/partner have a list of everything you have done wrong that they regularly refer to?
  • Do you have a mental list of everything your spouse/partner has done wrong that you regularly refer to?
  • Does your spouse/partner make important decisions that affect you too without seeking your input?
  • Do you make important decisions that affect your spouse/partner without seeking their input?
  • Do you or your spouse /partner have a troubling habit (e.g., drugs or other addictions, pornography, crime, frequent and lengthy periods of unemployment)?
  • Can you remember why you chose your spouse/partner with a smile on your face?
  • Does your spouse/partner ever apologize to you when you point out a mistake they've made?
  • Do you ever apologize to your spouse/partner when they point out a mistake you've made?
  • Does your spouse/partner ever say "thank you" for the usual things you do?
  • Do you ever say "thank you" for the usual things your spouse/partner does?

Hopefully, this article and the preceding questions have prompted you to think all the more honestly and thoughtfully about the current state of your relationship and whether or not you two would benefit from professional help. Seeking therapy as soon as possible, before problems deteriorate into crises, is especially advised - this especially applies to those issues that really trouble you, and/or when you feel there is abuse or intimidation going on.

By Claire Arene, MSW, LCSW

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2021, December 21). What to Do About an Unhealthy Relationship, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2025, April 29 from https://www.healthyplace.com/relationships/unhealthy-relationships/what-to-do-about-an-unhealthy-relationship

Last Updated: February 2, 2022

Sugar and Anxiety: How Sugar Can Make Your Anxiety Symptoms Worse

Sugar and anxiety are connected, with sugar often making your anxiety symptoms worse. Learn how sugar worsens anxiety and what to do on HealthyPlace.

Sugar and anxiety often team up to make you miserable. Sugar is something that many people eat a great deal of because it lurks in so many places. This can be problematic because sugar can make your anxiety symptoms worse. Because sugar and anxiety are connected, and sugar can make anxiety symptoms worse, it makes sense to make some adjustments to reduce the amount of sugar we’re consuming.

Sugar has been found to be so detrimental to our mental and physical health that the authors—a neuroscientist, psychiatrist, and medical science journalist—of the book The Psychobiotic Revolution: Mood, Food, and the New Science of the Gut-Brain Connection boldly proclaim,

“You can probably make no single change to your diet that will be as good for your health and well-being as cutting down on sugar.”

Sugar and Anxiety: How Does Sugar Make Your Anxiety Worse?

It’s long been theorized that sugar causes anxiety. Studies are showing that there is a correlation and that yes, sugar can make your anxiety symptoms worse.

One way in which sugar contributes to anxiety is related to our blood sugar levels, also known as blood glucose levels. When we eat or drink refined sugar or artificially processed sugar substitutes, this is the basic process that happens in our bodies:

  • We experience a burst of energy as the body effortlessly and rapidly digests these simple carbohydrates
  • The body burns fuel from simple carbohydrates quickly because there’s not much to simple carbs on the molecular level
  • As this happens we experience a crash because our blood sugar levels have plummeted quickly
  • The crash is frequently accompanied by symptoms of anxiety (especially the physical symptoms of anxiety such as shakiness, rapid heartbeat, heart palpitations, and sweating)
  • Often, to get out of the crash or because we crave a certain food or beverage, we consume more foods that are high in refined sugars
  • The cycle repeats itself

This pattern of blood sugar spikes and crashes is hard on the brain and leads to symptoms of anxiety. Further, there’s a connection between sugar and anxiety attacks.

In this cycle, when blood sugar suffers extreme swings from high to low and back again, the brain tries to deal with the stress by releasing hormones like cortisol and adrenaline. The release of these hormones can make your anxiety symptoms worse as well as contribute to new anxiety and anxiety attacks. Indeed, the relationship between blood sugar and anxiety is strong.

There’s an additional link between sugar and anxiety. When you consume too much sugar, the amount of a protein called brain-derived neurotropic factor (BDNF) decreases. BDNF plays an important role in reducing anxiety, panic, and stress reactions, so a deficiency can exacerbate these conditions.

Sugar and anxiety are connected, with sugar making your anxiety symptoms worse by affecting the stability of your blood sugar levels and interfering in the production of BDNF. Sugar disrupts the body’s natural physiology, and one of the consequences is anxiety and even panic attacks.

What To Do About Sugar and Anxiety

The bottom line: eat less sugar and more nutritious foods for anxiety. While that’s the goal, it’s helpful to look at in pieces and create a plan for reducing sugar gradually. This way, you avoid intense cravings that can sabotage your progress.

With a plan in mind to gradually eliminate sugars from your diet and add healthier foods for anxiety, you can choose one or two types of sugary foods to eliminate. This list of sugary foods that can make your anxiety symptoms worse can help you know what to change and in what order you want to make those changes.

  • Soda, including diet soda
  • Fruit juice (it has more nutrients than soda, but still lots of sugars)
  • Caffeinated, sugary beverages (like coffee drinks – a double whammy of sugar and caffeine)
  • Bread made with refined flours
  • Pasta that isn’t whole grain
  • Tortillas made with white flour
  • Really, any carbohydrate that isn’t made with whole grains
  • Refined snacks like cupcakes, doughnuts, pies, cookies, candy, ice cream, etc.

Watch ingredients labels for the word “sugar” as well as it’s hidden cousins. Anything with “­-ose” in it is a sugar (fructose, sucralose, etc.). Agave, while natural, is considered a sugar that is bad for you. Honey is better for you, but it is sugary, so moderation is important.

Also, while there’s a proven connection between sugar and anxiety, everyone is different. What affects you greatly might not affect your friend and visa versa.

If you have anxiety, it might be worth it to decrease the amount of sugar in your diet. It makes quite a difference for many people (again, everyone is different, so personal responses vary). Choose something to taper, and then gradually eliminate other foods that cause, trigger or worsen anxiety as well. You might discover that your anxiety almost completely disappears without all the sugar interfering in the workings of your brain.

article references

APA Reference
Peterson, T. (2021, December 21). Sugar and Anxiety: How Sugar Can Make Your Anxiety Symptoms Worse, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2025, April 29 from https://www.healthyplace.com/anxiety/food-and-anxiety/sugar-and-anxiety-how-sugar-can-make-your-anxiety-symptoms-worse

Last Updated: January 6, 2022

Do Foods Play a Role in Anxiety and Panic Attacks?

Foods for anxiety attacks. They exist. Find out the role food plays in anxiety and panic attacks and which foods can reduce them on HealthyPlace

Foods play a big role in anxiety and panic attacks. While these experiences are complex with multiple contributing factors, they do have a significant physiological role. This brain-based component of panic is driven largely by nutrition. Research demonstrates the indisputable fact that foods play a role in anxiety and panic attacks.

The Role of Foods in Anxiety and Panic Attacks

Dr. Fernando Gomez-Pinilla is a researcher at the UCLA School of Medicine and works in the departments of neurosurgery and physiological sciences. He sees firsthand how important a role foods play in anxiety and panic attacks.

Says Dr. Gomez-Pinilla, “Newly described influences of dietary factors… have revealed some of the vital mechanisms that are responsible for the action of diet on brain health and mental function.”

To a large degree, we are what we eat. As food is digested, the body extracts the important molecular components and distributes them via the bloodstream to the brain. The materials that the brain needs to operate correctly and well come from the foods we eat; therefore, our experiences with brain-based anxiety and panic attacks are related to our nutrition.

Two very important conditions are needed by the brain to prevent anxiety and panic attacks:

  • Stable blood sugar levels
  • Production of calming neurotransmitters like serotonin

Blood sugar management happens through proper diet. Eating simple carbohydrates—refined and processed sugars—destabilizes our blood glucose levels, causing them to rapidly spike then crash. We can stabilize the ups and downs of the blood sugar roller coaster by consuming complex carbohydrates. They digest more slowly and steadily, creating a steady stream of nutrients and energy to the brain.

Another contributing factor to anxiety and panic attacks is insufficient neurotransmitters such as serotonin. Serotonin is known as a calming neurotransmitter, and a lack of this chemical is associated with anxiety and panic attacks. The brain makes its serotonin using the amino acid tryptophan as well as nutrients found in complex carbohydrates. Where does it obtain its supply? From the foods we eat, in this case, proteins.

Eating calming foods for anxiety and panic attacks that stabilize blood sugar and supply proteins to produce neurotransmitters is essential for living anxiety- and panic-free. Let’s take a closer look at foods for anxiety attacks.

Foods That Play a Role in Anxiety and Panic Attacks

To promote brain health and decrease anxiety and panic, seek foods that stabilize blood glucose levels and facilitate the production of calming neurochemicals. Think in terms of balance. Rather than looking for one super-nutrient that the latest craze says is an instant anxiety cure, go for a daily nutritious diet that will reliably provide the brain what it needs so you can reduce panic long-term.

Great sources of nutrients and the best foods for anxiety and panic attacks include:

  • Complex carbohydrates
  • Dairy
  • Fruits and vegetables
  • Fatty fish and lean meats
  • Water (for sufficient hydration)

Foods play a role in reducing anxiety and panic attacks. Conversely, they can play a role in initiating and sustaining them. Your brain must work with what you feed it, and there are certain foods and beverages that either overstimulate the brain or rob it of nutrients so it can’t work properly.

Some such foods that play a contributing role in anxiety and panic attacks are

Together, anxiety-triggering foods cause blood sugar to fluctuate erratically, spiking and crashing in a cycle that leads to an anxious brain. Harmful foods also block the production of calming neurotransmitters that would otherwise minimize anxiety and panic attacks.

What you eat and don’t eat, then, is connected to anxiety and panic. However, it’s not just what you eat but how you eat it.

How You Eat Impacts Anxiety and Panic Attacks

Like the type of food you eat, how you eat affects both your blood sugar levels and the brain’s production of neurotransmitters. The brain must have a regular stream of the right nutrients. Your eating habits can contribute to or detract from your brain’s nourishment.

Consider these dos and don’ts:

Do:

  • Eat regular meals, small meals eaten frequently are helpful
  • Create structure so you avoid grabbing chips and other junk food here and there when you feel hungry
  • Opt for quality nutrition: complex carbs, protein, produce, nuts and seeds, Omega-3 Fatty Acids
  • Create rituals so you are calm and relaxed when you eat; always being on the go can increase anxiety and panic attacks

Don’t:

  • Skip meals
  • Use fad diets that advocate extremes (for example, diets that restrict carbohydrates and increase protein are shown to harm physical and mental health, including increased anxiety and panic attacks)

The role of foods in anxiety and panic attacks is significant. The healthier and more wholesome you eat, the more stable your blood sugar will be and the more able your brain will be able to produce the necessary calming neurochemicals. Make gradual dietary adjustments and watch your anxiety and panic improve over time.

article references

APA Reference
Peterson, T. (2021, December 21). Do Foods Play a Role in Anxiety and Panic Attacks?, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2025, April 29 from https://www.healthyplace.com/anxiety/food-and-anxiety/do-foods-play-a-role-in-anxiety-and-panic-attacks

Last Updated: January 6, 2022

Natural Foods for Anxiety: Can They Help?

Natural foods for anxiety can help a great deal. Discover how and find out which natural foods for anxiety help the most on HealthyPlace.

Eating natural foods for anxiety is one of the best things we can do for our brain to reduce all types of anxiety. Not only does nutrition in certain food help reduce anxiety, but healthy, natural foods keep the brain running smoothly so anxiety stays away. Feeding your brain natural foods for anxiety is a long-term strategy for improved mental health and wellbeing.

Of course, proper nutrition doesn’t help anxiety by itself. It’s a component of a strategic approach to anxiety management. The most effective way to get rid of anxiety is to eat well, change thought patterns and emotional reactions to stressors, and create new actions and behaviors. This multi-tiered approach to mental health is what it takes to reduce anxiety. Natural foods are a key component of this anxiety-beating strategy.

Natural Foods for Anxiety and the Brain

Natural foods can help anxiety. How, though, do they do it? Natural foods give the brain what it needs to do its job.

The entire brain is involved in our experience of anxiety. This abbreviated list highlights some of the ways the brain and anxiety are intertwined:

  • The neocortex/prefrontal cortex is involved in anticipating and planning actions, such as ways to avoid anxiety
  • The limbic system is the emotional area of the brain and signals us to feel anxious whether or not there is something to fear
  • The reptilian brain is our fight-or-flight center, and in an anxious brain, it’s almost constantly stimulated
  • Brain structures (amygdala, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, hippocampus, and brain stem) create hormones and neurotransmitters like cortisol, serotonin, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), dopamine, and others; if these aren’t present in the right amounts, we can experience any form of anxiety.

This brief overview only touches on part of what the brain does and how it can cause, contribute to, or worsen anxiety. The takeaway isn’t memorizing terms of neurology or the working of the brain but is to see that the human brain is behind a lot of anxiety. The bran can only operate on the fuel and nutrients we give it.

When we feed the brain processed and refined junk foods (including beverages), we don’t give it what it needs to work well. The brain doesn’t get enough of the good nutrients, and it also receives food that can make it ill.

Therefore, natural foods for anxiety can help a great deal.

Finding Natural Foods for Anxiety

When you’re already dealing with anxiety and stress, piling one more thing on your plate can be overwhelming. Do you have to worry about what to eat? Absolutely not.

Natural foods are foods that aren’t refined and processed, with added sugars (real or artificial), and full of saturated fat or trans fats. They’re foods that are as close to their natural, original state as possible.

A grilled or baked chicken breast is healthier for the brain than chicken nuggets. Slicing a sweet potato, drizzling it with olive oil, and baking it creates French fries that the brain needs and craves; contrarily, fries from a fast food place are almost fully devoid of nutrients and full of salt and the wrong kind of fat.

Natural food doesn’t, however, mean extreme foods. You don’t have to forage for exotic mushrooms on a mountaintop to give your brain natural foods for anxiety (unless, of course, you like to do that).

Think balance, taste, and convenience. Strive for a steady and balanced stream of nutrients, choose things you like, and pick things that are easy to shop for rather than anxiety-provoking and stressful.

For fighting anxiety, the brain needs specific nutrients to help it operate smoothly. Natural foods for anxiety contain these nutrients:

  • Protein
  • Omega-3 Fatty Acids
  • Complex Carbohydrates
  • Low-Glycemic Foods (in addition to complex carbs)
  • B Vitamins
  • Antioxidants
  • Magnesium
  • Zinc

Lean meats, fatty fish, fruits and vegetables, legumes, whole grains, nuts, and seeds are excellent sources of the nutrients that keep the brain running well and anxiety-free.

Natural Foods: Beverages Count, Too

Sodas, fruit juices, and other sugary drinks cause fluctuations in blood sugar and anxiety spikes. Unstable blood glucose levels contribute significantly to anxiety.

Also, these drinks can be dehydrating when they contain caffeine (and caffeine can induce anxiety on its own). Dehydration is a culprit behind mental- and physical health problems, including anxiety.

It’s important to drink water, a natural food, throughout the day. This simple addition to your healthy lifestyle can help your anxiety.

Do natural foods for anxiety help your anxiety? They’re not a cure by themselves, but they most definitely help.

article references

APA Reference
Peterson, T. (2021, December 21). Natural Foods for Anxiety: Can They Help? , HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2025, April 29 from https://www.healthyplace.com/anxiety/food-and-anxiety/natural-foods-for-anxiety-can-they-help

Last Updated: January 6, 2022