Managing Anxiety in Uncertain Times

March 7, 20257 min readAnxiety Management
Bloom Psychology - Managing Anxiety

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A comprehensive, science-backed guide to navigating uncertainty with confidence and building lasting resilience


When Uncertainty Triggers Anxiety

You're not alone if any of these scenarios feel familiar:

  • You check the news compulsively, each headline sending your heart racing and your mind spiraling through worst-case scenarios
  • A vague text from your boss sends you into a tailspin of catastrophic thinking about your job security
  • You lie awake at night running through every possible outcome of a decision, unable to settle on any of them
  • A change in routine, even a small one, leaves you feeling unmoored and panicky for the rest of the day
  • You avoid making plans because the uncertainty of whether they'll work out feels unbearable
  • Financial uncertainty keeps you in a constant state of low-grade dread, even when things are objectively okay

We can't control external circumstances, but we can develop powerful skills to manage anxiety and build resilience in the face of uncertainty.


How Anxiety Manifests: Recognizing Your Patterns

Anxiety is fundamentally your body's natural response to perceived threats. When facing uncertainty, your mind often fills in the blanks with worst-case scenarios, an evolutionary mechanism that once kept us safe from predators but now gets triggered by tax deadlines and unanswered emails.

Anxiety rarely looks the same from person to person, but it tends to follow recognizable patterns:

  • The Ruminator: You replay conversations, decisions, and scenarios on a loop, analyzing every angle without ever reaching resolution. Your mind feels like a browser with 47 tabs open.
  • The Controller: You cope by over-planning, micromanaging, and trying to anticipate every possible outcome. When something falls outside your plan, the anxiety spikes hard.
  • The Avoider: You put off decisions, dodge difficult conversations, and procrastinate on anything that feels uncertain. The relief is temporary, but the anxiety compounds.
  • The Perfectionist: You set impossibly high standards and feel crushing anxiety about falling short. "Good enough" doesn't exist in your vocabulary.
  • The Somatic Responder: Your anxiety lives in your body: tight chest, clenched jaw, stomach knots, tension headaches, or insomnia. You might not even recognize these as anxiety at first.
  • The People-Pleaser: You manage your anxiety by managing other people's emotions, saying yes when you mean no and absorbing everyone else's stress as your own.

Research shows that anxiety disorders affect approximately 40 million adults in the United States each year, making them the most common mental health condition. Yet only about 37% of those suffering receive treatment. Recognizing your patterns is the critical first step.


The Psychology Behind Uncertainty: Understanding Your Brain's Anxiety Patterns

What makes uncertainty particularly challenging is that it strikes at our fundamental need for control and predictability. Our brains evolved to detect patterns and predict outcomes; it's a survival mechanism. When we can't predict, our threat-detection system goes into overdrive.

Your amygdala, the brain's alarm system, doesn't distinguish between a physical threat and an uncertain future. It sounds the same alarm for "there might be a predator in those bushes" and "I don't know what's going to happen with my career." The result is the same flood of cortisol and adrenaline, the same racing heart, the same urge to fight, flee, or freeze.

The Intolerance of Uncertainty Model suggests that people who struggle most with anxiety tend to find uncertainty itself threatening, regardless of the actual likelihood of a negative outcome. It's not the specific worry that drives anxiety; it's the not knowing. Understanding this distinction is key because it means the solution isn't eliminating uncertainty (impossible) but changing your relationship with it.


3 Evidence-Based Strategies for Managing Uncertainty Anxiety

Research has identified powerful approaches for managing anxiety during uncertain times. These aren't quick fixes; they're skills that strengthen with practice, building your capacity to navigate whatever comes next.


Cognitive Reframing: Challenge Anxious Thoughts

Your anxious thoughts aren't facts; they're interpretations. Cognitive reframing helps you examine these interpretations with curiosity rather than accepting them at face value.

The Core Technique:

  • Examine the evidence: What concrete facts support this thought? What facts contradict it? If a friend told you they were having this exact thought, what would you say to them?
  • Identify the cognitive distortion: Are you catastrophizing (jumping to the worst-case scenario)? Mind-reading (assuming you know what others think)? Fortune-telling (predicting the future with certainty)? All-or-nothing thinking (seeing things as entirely good or entirely bad)?
  • Generate alternatives: What are three other possible interpretations of this situation? What's the best-case scenario? What's the most realistic scenario?
  • Test the thought: Ask yourself, "Will this matter in five years? Have I survived situations like this before? What's my actual track record of handling difficult things?"

Try This Tonight:

Write down your biggest worry. Then answer these three questions:

  1. What evidence do I have that this will actually happen? (Not feelings, actual evidence.)
  2. What's the most realistic outcome? (Not the worst case, not the best case, but the most likely.)
  3. If the worst did happen, what would I do? (You almost certainly have more coping resources than your anxiety gives you credit for.)

You'll often find that simply writing the worry down and examining it objectively takes away much of its power.


Mindfulness and Present-Moment Awareness

Anxiety pulls you into an imagined future full of danger. Mindfulness brings you back to the only moment where you have actual agency: right now.

Why This Works:

When you're fully present, anxiety about the future can't take hold. You're giving your nervous system a break from constant threat-scanning, which reduces the physiological stress response. Research consistently shows that regular mindfulness practice physically changes the brain, shrinking the amygdala and strengthening the prefrontal cortex (your rational decision-making center).

The 5-4-3-2-1 Grounding Technique

When anxiety spikes, work through your senses to bring yourself back to the present:

  • 5 things you can SEE: Look around and name them out loud. The crack in the ceiling. The blue pen on your desk. The shadow on the wall.
  • 4 things you can TOUCH: Feel the texture of your shirt, the cool surface of the table, your feet pressing against the floor, the weight of your phone in your hand.
  • 3 things you can HEAR: The hum of the refrigerator, a car passing outside, your own breathing.
  • 2 things you can SMELL: Your coffee, the soap on your hands, fresh air from an open window.
  • 1 thing you can TASTE: The lingering flavor of toothpaste, a sip of water, a piece of gum.

By the time you reach "1," your nervous system has had time to downshift from panic to presence.

Start Small: 3-Minute Breathing Practice

Set a timer for 3 minutes. Focus entirely on your breath: in through your nose (count to 4), hold (count to 4), out through your mouth (count to 6). When your mind wanders (it will), gently guide it back. That's the practice.

Don't judge yourself for losing focus. The moment you notice your mind has wandered and bring it back, that is the exercise. That's your attention muscle getting stronger.


Acceptance: Making Peace with Uncertainty

This isn't about giving up or becoming passive. Acceptance means recognizing what you can and cannot control, then focusing your energy where it can actually make a difference.

The Paradox of Control:

The more you try to eliminate all uncertainty, the more anxious you become. Accepting that uncertainty is inevitable actually reduces anxiety because you stop fighting reality. It's like quicksand: the more you struggle, the deeper you sink. When you stop struggling, you float.

Focus Your Energy Exercise

Draw two columns on paper. Label them:

Within My Control

  • My actions and responses
  • My boundaries
  • How I spend my time
  • Who I ask for support
  • How I talk to myself
  • My daily habits and routines

Outside My Control

  • Others' opinions of me
  • The economy
  • Global events
  • Past decisions
  • Other people's choices
  • The timeline of outcomes

Now look at where you've been spending your mental energy. If most of it has been in the right column, you've found a major source of your anxiety. Gently redirect your focus to the left.


Anxiety vs. Intuition: How to Tell the Difference

One of the most confusing aspects of anxiety is distinguishing it from genuine intuition. Both can feel urgent and important, but they come from very different places and deserve different responses.

Anxiety tends to:

  • Feel frantic, panicky, and scattered
  • Spiral into multiple worst-case scenarios at once
  • Be accompanied by physical tension, racing heart, and shallow breathing
  • Grow louder and more insistent the more you engage with it
  • Shift from topic to topic (once one worry is resolved, another takes its place)
  • Be rooted in "what if" thinking about the future

Intuition tends to:

  • Feel calm, steady, and clear, even when the message is uncomfortable
  • Present as a quiet knowing rather than a loud alarm
  • Stay consistent over time without escalating
  • Be specific and focused rather than scattered
  • Come with a sense of groundedness in your body
  • Point toward a clear direction, even if that direction is difficult

When in Doubt, Wait

If you're unsure whether it's anxiety or intuition, give it time. Anxiety intensifies with waiting ("DO SOMETHING NOW!"), while intuition remains steady. Sleep on it, go for a walk, talk to someone you trust. True intuition will still be there when the anxiety quiets down.

A helpful test: after doing a grounding exercise or calming your nervous system, check in with the feeling again. If it's still there with the same quiet clarity, it's likely intuition. If it faded along with the adrenaline, it was anxiety.


Building Structure in Uncertain Times

When the external world feels unpredictable, creating internal structure becomes even more important. Routines aren't about rigidity; they're about creating anchors of predictability that help your nervous system feel safe.

Morning Anchors

Before Reaching for Your Phone

Start with gentle movement (stretching, yoga, or a short walk). This signals to your body that you're in control of how the day begins, not external demands or notifications.

Practice Gratitude

Write down three things you appreciate right now. This isn't toxic positivity; it's training your brain to notice what's working alongside what's uncertain.

Set Realistic Intentions

Choose 1-3 priorities for the day. When everything feels urgent, nothing actually is. Narrow your focus to what genuinely matters today.

Midday Resets

Regular Anxiety Check-Ins

Set reminders (phone or sticky notes) to pause and assess: "How am I feeling right now? What do I need?" Catching anxiety early makes it easier to manage.

Movement Breaks

Anxiety lives in your body. Stand up, stretch, do 10 jumping jacks, walk around the block. Physical movement metabolizes stress hormones that build up during anxious periods.

Connection Points

Text a friend, have lunch with a colleague, call a family member. Social connection is one of the most powerful anxiety buffers we have. Use it intentionally.

Evening Wind-Down

Brain Dump Journaling

Spend 10 minutes writing down everything on your mind: worries, to-dos, random thoughts. This externalization helps your brain stop ruminating overnight.

Progressive Muscle Relaxation

Tense and release each muscle group (feet to face) for 5 seconds each. This releases the physical tension anxiety creates and signals to your nervous system: "We're safe now."

Prepare for Tomorrow

Lay out clothes, prep breakfast basics, write tomorrow's top 3 priorities. Reducing morning uncertainty reduces morning anxiety. It's that simple.

Routines don't need to be rigid. Think of them as a framework that provides stability while still allowing for flexibility: anchors, not chains.


Your Anxiety First Aid Kit: 10 Tools for When Crisis Strikes

When anxiety hits hard, you need immediate relief strategies. Here's a curated toolkit of evidence-based techniques you can use anytime, anywhere:

1. Box Breathing Inhale for 4 counts, hold for 4, exhale for 4, hold for 4. Repeat 4 times. This activates your parasympathetic nervous system.

2. Cold Water Splash Splash cold water on your face or hold ice cubes in your hands. The sudden temperature change interrupts the panic response.

3. Name It to Tame It Say out loud: "I'm feeling anxious right now." Research shows that labeling emotions reduces their intensity by engaging your prefrontal cortex.

4. Physical Movement Do 20 jumping jacks, run in place for 60 seconds, or go for a brisk walk. Movement metabolizes stress hormones flooding your system.

5. The "54321" Technique Name 5 things you see, 4 you can touch, 3 you hear, 2 you smell, 1 you taste. This grounds you in the present moment.

6. Bilateral Stimulation Tap alternating shoulders (left, right, left, right) while taking slow breaths. This mimics EMDR therapy and calms your nervous system.

7. Hum or Sing Humming stimulates the vagus nerve, which regulates your body's relaxation response. Sing a favorite song out loud if you can.

8. Grounding Objects Keep a smooth stone, stress ball, or textured fabric with you. Focus all your attention on how it feels in your hand.

9. Self-Compassion Statement Say: "This is a moment of suffering. Suffering is part of life. May I be kind to myself." Research shows self-compassion reduces anxiety.

10. Call Your Support Person Reach out to someone who understands. Social connection is one of the fastest ways to regulate your nervous system.


When to Seek Professional Help

Self-help strategies are powerful, but they're not always enough. Anxiety becomes a clinical concern when it significantly interferes with your daily functioning, relationships, or quality of life.

Consider seeking professional help if you're experiencing:

  • Persistent anxiety that doesn't improve with self-help strategies
  • Panic attacks or intense physical symptoms (chest pain, dizziness, difficulty breathing)
  • Avoidance of everyday activities, places, or situations due to fear
  • Difficulty functioning at work, in relationships, or as a parent
  • Sleep disruption that lasts more than a few weeks
  • Using alcohol, food, or other substances to manage anxiety
  • Intrusive thoughts that feel disturbing or hard to control
  • Feeling like you're "going crazy" or losing touch with reality
  • Thoughts of self-harm or not wanting to be here

If any of these resonate, reaching out to a mental health professional isn't a sign of weakness. It's one of the bravest, most self-aware decisions you can make.

Evidence-Based Therapy Approaches

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) Best for: Generalized anxiety, social anxiety, and panic disorder. CBT helps you identify and restructure distorted thought patterns that fuel anxiety. It's highly structured, typically short-term (12-20 sessions), and has decades of research supporting its effectiveness. You'll learn to catch anxious thoughts in real time and replace them with more balanced, realistic ones.

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) Best for: Anxiety accompanied by avoidance, difficulty with emotions, or feeling "stuck." ACT doesn't try to eliminate anxiety; instead, it teaches you to make room for uncomfortable feelings while still moving toward what matters to you. It's especially powerful for people who've tried to control or suppress their anxiety and found it only gets worse.

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) Best for: Anxiety rooted in past trauma, PTSD, and phobias. EMDR uses bilateral stimulation (typically guided eye movements) to help your brain reprocess traumatic memories that are fueling present-day anxiety. Many people experience significant relief in fewer sessions than traditional talk therapy.

Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) Best for: OCD, specific phobias, and severe avoidance patterns. ERP gradually and safely exposes you to the situations or thoughts that trigger your anxiety while preventing the usual avoidance or compulsive behaviors. Over time, your brain learns that the feared outcome doesn't happen, and the anxiety naturally decreases.

Finding the Right Therapist

Look for licensed professionals (LCSW, LMFT, PsyD, PhD) who specialize in anxiety disorders. Don't hesitate to "shop around." Finding the right fit matters more than finding the perfect technique. Most therapists offer free consultation calls to see if you're a good match.


Reframing Uncertainty as an Opportunity

Here's something most anxiety guides won't tell you: uncertainty isn't just something to endure; it can be a catalyst for growth, creativity, and resilience.

Every major period of growth in your life likely started with uncertainty. Starting a new job, entering a relationship, becoming a parent, making a major life change: none of these came with guaranteed outcomes. And yet, you moved forward. You adapted. You grew.

Uncertainty is where possibility lives. When you don't know exactly how things will turn out, there's room for outcomes better than anything you could have planned. The goal isn't to love uncertainty; it's to stop letting it paralyze you and start letting it open doors.

You've made it through 100% of the uncertain times in your life so far. You have evidence that you can handle hard things.

The anxiety you feel in uncertain times is real, and it deserves compassion, not judgment. But it doesn't get to run the show. With the right tools, the right support, and a willingness to sit with discomfort, you can move through uncertainty not just intact, but stronger.

You don't have to figure this out alone. And you don't have to figure it all out today.

Just the next step. That's enough.

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Jana Rundle

Jana Rundle

Licensed Clinical Psychologist

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