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How to Support Someone With Anxiety Without Making It Worse

By Kavita Patel, MA • 4/19/2025


Nobody wakes up one morning and decides to struggle with how to support someone with anxiety without making it worse. It creeps in gradually, like a volume knob being turned up so slowly you don't notice until everything is deafening.

Moving Forward

This is where things get interesting — and where most generic advice falls short.

The research here is actually more encouraging than you might expect. A landmark study at UC Berkeley found that people who practiced these techniques for just 10 minutes daily showed measurable changes in their stress biomarkers within three weeks.

What I've Seen Work

This is the part most people skip, but it might be the most important section.

I had a client — let's call her Meera — who struggled with exactly this for years. She'd tried everything the internet suggested. The apps, the journals, the morning routines. Nothing stuck. What finally made a difference was surprisingly simple: she stopped trying to fix herself and started trying to understand herself.

The Nuance Nobody Mentions

A 2023 meta-analysis in the Journal of Clinical Psychology looked at this exact question. Here's what they found.

The research here is actually more encouraging than you might expect. A landmark study at UC Berkeley found that people who practiced these techniques for just 10 minutes daily showed measurable changes in their stress biomarkers within three weeks.

Why This Matters More Than You Think

Okay, let's get practical. Enough theory.

The approach I recommend to most clients follows this sequence:

Week 1-2: Awareness. Don't try to change anything. Just notice when it happens. What triggered it? What were you doing? What time of day? Track it in your phone.

Week 3-4: Experimentation. Try one new coping strategy each week. See what resonates. Discard what doesn't.

Week 5-8: Consistency. Take the strategies that worked and build them into your daily routine. Attach them to existing habits (after brushing teeth, during commute, before bed).

Ongoing: Adjustment. What works changes over time. Stay flexible. Give yourself permission to try new approaches.

If I could leave you with one thing, it's this: you're not failing at feeling better. You're learning. And learning is messy and slow and frustrating. But it works, eventually, if you keep showing up.

NEHA is here to support your wellness journey, but we always encourage connecting with a licensed professional for ongoing mental health concerns.