3 Ways to Help Kids Feel Safer With Anxiety – And why it’s critical for building brave

Whenever there is something important, brave, new, or hard, there will always be anxiety. Think about the last thing you did that was hard, or new, or important to you. How did you feel before it? Nervous? Stressed? Terrified? Overwhelmed? All of these are different versions of anxiety – because whenever there is something brave, new, or hard we need to do, anxiety will be right behind it, coming in hot. It’s the anxiety that makes it brave. Courage is never about ‘no anxiety’. It’s about handling the discomfort of anxiety.

We’ll never ‘get rid’ of anxiety, and we don’t need to. Our job as their important adults isn’t to protect kids from the discomfort of anxiety. Our job is giving them the experiences, as gently as we can, to show them that they can handle the discomfort of anxiety. What’s important is helping them feel as safe and as cared for as we can while they move through anxiety.

Anxiety is like a wave. It will come and then it will go. When our kids are on that wave it can be scary, but we don’t need to lift them off. In fact, if we lift them off the waves that come their way, they’ll never have the experience they need to be able to ride those waves themselves – and they will need to ride plenty. 

If we can ride the wave with them, with stillness and presence, rather than needing to change it, they will feel the safety of our calm, rather than our anxiety about their anxiety.

The problem with avoidance.

The temptation to lift our kiddos out of the way of anxiety can be spectacular. Here’s the rub though – avoidance has a powerful way of teaching them that the only way to feel safe is to avoid. This makes sense, but it can shrink their world.

We also don’t want to go the other way, and meet their anxiety by telling them there’s nothing to worry about. They won’t believe it anyway.

The option is to ride the wave with them. As long as they are safe, breathe, be still, and stay in the moment so they can find their way there too. This is hard – an anxious brain will haul them into the future and try to buddy them up with plenty of ‘what-ifs’ – the raging fuel for anxiety. Let them know you get it, that you see them, and that you know they can do this. They won’t buy it straight away, and that’s okay. The brain learns from experience, so the more they are brave, the more they are brave – and we know they are brave.

The wave won’t break them. When we believe it, they can start to believe it too.

3 ways to help them feel safer while they’re ‘riding the wave’

New, hard, important, brave things will always come with anxiety. It’s the anxiety that makes these things brave.

The only way for kids to never experience anxiety is for us to never put them in front of anything growthful, new, hard, brave. They’ll never feel the discomfort of anxiety, but they also won’t grow and strengthen against it.

We’ll never get rid of anxiety and we don’t need to. Our job as their important adults isn’t to lift them out of the way of the discomfort of anxiety. It’s to give them the experiences they need to show them that they can handle the discomfort of anxiety. The key to strengthening young people against anxiety lies in helping them feel safer with it.

Here are 3 ways to do that. First though, and most importantly, establish that they are actually safe. Felt safety happens on two fronts – relational safety (feeling safe, seen, and cared for), and that they feel safe in their bodies (free from threat, hunger, pain, exhaustion, sensory overload or underload, feeling confined).

1. Take avoidance off the table.

Avoidance makes anxiety worse by teaching the brain that the only way to stay safe is to avoid. Little steps matter – any step, even the tiniest, is better than none.

If they aren’t able to make the first brave step, that’s okay. Stay with them on the edge of it – in that space that’s just beyond comfortable. This in itself is building their brave. Strengthening against anxiety is about handling the discomfort of anxiety. It doesn’t matter how much or for how long – any time they spend in the discomfort that comes with the handling of anxiety counts. It all matters.

What might this look like practically? If they are in the car and not able to get out, wait in that space with them. You don’t need to lift them out of it. This might sound like:

‘I can see it’s tricky for you to get out of the car. That’s okay. I’m going to wait here with you until you’re ready. Take your time. Your not in trouble. And we’re not going home.’

In this statement you’ve done a few things:

  • You’ve held you’re boundary – ‘we’re not leaving’. A boundary is something we do to hold relational and physical safety, and to hold steady where we are. It’s about what we do, not about what we want them to do. With a boundary, we don’t really need them to do anything at all. We recognise that right now, they don’t have the resources to give us what we’re asking, so we wait, while we hold them in that brave space – the space where the building of brave happens.
  • You’ve attended to the relationship – ‘I’m here with you. You’re not in trouble.’
  • You’ve created the experience they need to show them they can handle the discomfort of anxiety. This is the work. This is the strengthening against anxiety. Next time it might be harder, and next time harder still. That’s how anxiety works. It tends to get worse before it gets better. But it will always get better.

    If you knew it would take 100 of these uncomfortable (sometimes truly awful – I hear you) times and then their world will open up, they’ll see how amazing they are, and they’ll be able to do this hard, new, important thing – wouldn’t you go through this for them, and with them? Wouldn’t you be the one to say, ‘Leave it to me. I can hold you in this space. I’m going to show you that you can do this, and that you have so much brave in you. You won’t believe me when I tell you, and that’s okay. Because I’m going to show you.’

    Trust that they’ll get there, because they will. And unless you trust they are capable, there’s no way they’ll believe it. It’s not enough to tell them we believe in them, we have to show them. By staying there with them, you’re showing them. What’s important is that they’re safe and they don’t feel alone and unseen in it. 

2. Show them you can handle their anxiety and the big feels that come with it.

This might sound like:

‘Of course you feel anxious. You’re doing something big. How can I help you feel brave?’

Or, ‘I know this feels big, and it feels like you can’t. I know you are safe and I know you can. You don’t need to believe it because I know it enough for both of us. I know you won’t believe it until you see it for yourself. That’s okay, that’s what I’m here for – to show you how amazing you are and that you can do hard things. I can take care of you through the ‘big’ of it all. What’s one little step you can take? Let’s take it together. And don’t say ‘no steps’ because that’s not an option.’

3. Help them understand why they feel the way they do when they are anxious.

The symptoms of anxiety will continue to drive anxiety until we make sense of them. Sick tummies, sore tummies, racy heart, clammy skin, big feelings – these are all a sign of anxiety. If we don’t explain this, it’s normal and understandable that these symptoms will be interpreted as a sign of deficiency or potential disaster. It isn’t. It’s a sign of a brain and body trying to protect them, at a time they don’t need protecting.

As long as they are safe, the need to avoid is often more about needing to avoid the thoughts, feelings, and physiology of anxiety, rather than avoiding the thing itself. This is why the physiology of anxiety will continue to drive anxiety until we make sense of it. (If you’re wanting a hand to help them understand their symptoms,  ‘Hey Warrior’ will help you do this.)

One Comment

Julie B

This is a great article, thank you. I work in schools and am struggling to help parents realise that their child’s tendency to want to control them (do only what they want to do) and avoid special classes like mini lit or extra reading or tuition classes is not helping their child. The parents are saying that their child does not want to feel different. I get that they don’t want to feel different from their peers and this make them feel anxious but in time they will feel more different as they fall behind. I find that parents are rescuing their child and telling them and the school that they don’t have to attend such tuition. This maybe then becomes a cycle intertwined with the adults own anxieties and social pressure to be emotionally responsive to our children. I get it but there is a fine supportive, goal/future orientated line between being responsive and enabling avoidance

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We know there are too many kids struggling right now, including those from loving, responsive families and in loving, responsive schools. 

One of the places these struggles will show themselves is at school, even in the most loving responsive ones. Sometimes these struggles show themselves with a roar, sometimes with nothing at all.

Too many kids are feeling no sense at all that they matter. They don’t feel they are doing something that matters, and they don’t feel that they matter to others.

Too many of them will go weeks at school without hearing their name in a way that makes them feel seen, cared for, and valued.

Too many of them are showing up at school but are noticed more when they don’t, even if only by the unticked box beside their name.

For too many kids, we are asking them to show up when they don’t feel like they have anything to offer, or anything at all to show up for. Why wouldn’t they struggle?

This week I had the greatest privilege of speaking to a room of 300 school well-being staff about how to support all children, how to catch the ones who are struggling, and what we can do to buffer, protect and heal all young people at school.

If you are a parent of a young person who is struggling, I want you to know that schools are working hard to hold them, lovingly and safely.

I know there are also many parents who haven’t had this experience, and your children haven’t got what they need. I know that. I want you to know that change is happening. I want you to know what I see when I work with the wellbeing staff at these schools. They care. They really do. They are so invested in supporting your children, seeing the child behind the student and showing up big for all of them. The work is happening. There’s a lot to do, but it’s happening.

Yes we need more resources, and yes more people, and yes we’re asking more of our schools and teachers than ever, and yes the world is asking more of our kids than ever, but the work is happening.

Thank you to the Department of Education Queensland for working with me, and thank you to the wellbeing staff, teachers, and leadership who are giving everything they can to be there for our children. You matter.♥️
Over the past the past 24 hours, I’ve been in Devonport, Tasmania to deliver two sessions to parents and carers - ‘Big Feelings, Connection, and Confidence’, then later an open Q and A where parents brought their real life questions - and we talked.

Thank you for welcoming me so warmly, and for trusting me with your questions, your stories, and your vulnerability. 

This was an openness where real change begins. Parenting is hard - beautiful and messy and hard. In the last 24 hours, I’ve been moved by the openness and honesty of parents I’ve shared space with. This is where generational patterns start to shift.

So many of the parents I met are already doing this deep, brave work. The questions asked were honest, raw, and profoundly human — the kind of questions that can feel heavy and isolating until you hear someone else ask them too.

Our children will grow in the most incredible ways if we allow them the space, and if we hold that space with love and leadership and a curious mind. And, if we open ourselves to them, and are willing to shift and stretch and grow, they will grow us too.

Thank you to @devonportevents for everything you’ve done to make these events happen.♥️
Can’t wait for this! I’ll be in Devonport, Tasmania next week to present two talks for parents and carers. 

The first is on Monday evening 19 May for a talk about how to support big feelings, behaviour and regulation in young people. This is not just another anxiety talk. You’ll walk away feeling hopeful, empowered, and with strategies you can start using straight away. 

Then, on Tuesday morning 20 May, I’ll be giving another talk for parents and carers but this will be a Q&A. Bring your questions to me! Even if you don’t have questions, the ones I answer will be loaded with practical information that will support you in your parenting journey. 

So grateful to @devonportevents for organising the events. They are public talks, open to everyone. 

Tickets available at Humanitix - search Devonport events and scroll down until you find me! 

Would love to see you there.♥️

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