Love Yourself Through Your Anxiety
Anxiety doesn’t knock
politely. It barges in, fast heartbeat, racing thoughts, that tight feeling in
your chest.
And most of us respond
the same way: we fight it.
“Not now.”
“Go away.”
“I shouldn’t feel like this.”
But what if, instead
of pushing it away, you met it with something unexpected?
Kindness.
Think of anxiety not
as an enemy, but as a signal, a part of you trying, in its own clumsy way, to
protect you.
When you lie in bed
and your mind starts spinning, place a hand gently on your chest. Breathe. And
say, quietly, “I’m here.”
You don’t need to fix
everything in that moment. You don’t need to solve every fear.
You just need to stay
with yourself.
This is where real
strength lives, not in avoiding fear, but in refusing to abandon yourself when
it shows up.
And here’s the truth
many people miss: anxiety passes faster when it’s not resisted.
Sometimes in minutes.
Sometimes a bit longer. But always, it moves.
Each time you respond
with patience instead of panic, you are retraining your mind. You are teaching
it that fear does not equal danger.
And slowly, those
nighttime battles become quieter.
You’re not broken.
You’re learning.
And that learning
leads to rest.