9 Useful Techniques for Dealing with Anxiety in Children

Worried about your anxious child? Learn useful techniques to ease anxiety in children you can apply immediately at home.

Anxiety in ChildrenAnxiety—everyone deals with it to varying degrees. But handling anxiety in children can be a challenge because they’re still learning how to cope with difficult emotions.

Symptoms of anxiety can happen at any time, but common culprits include a change of plans. Your child might throw a fit because you have to leave the playground sooner than expected. He might have an irrational fear, like of monsters or thunder.

A new environment and meeting new people can also trigger his anxiety and send him clinging to your leg. A disruption of routine could make him feel anxious, like throwing a tantrum because he doesn’t have his lovey before nap time.

And of course, major events like experiencing natural disasters can increase his worries and affect his mental health.

To make matters worse, being supportive and calm can be difficult when our kids are anxious. We forget to put ourselves in their shoes, frustrated at their inability to manage their feelings. We’re less patient with the difficulties they experience, and want them to “snap out of it” already.

General anxiety in children is common, but sometimes if left unchecked, can worsen the situation. What can we do to help?

The first place to turn to are health professionals. His pediatrician can spot issues that you and I may not be able to, from obsessive compulsive disorder to depression. More importantly, they can provide effective treatments for many types of anxiety.

But if all checks out okay and you’re dealing with general behavior issues, take a look at these tips below.

I’ve learned a few techniques that have guided me each time I noticed signs of anxiety in my kids. These tips reminded me that anxiety is normal—however frustrating—and also manageable. My kids now know how to manage their feelings better instead of diving headfirst into anxiety.

Let’s take a look at what helped:

1. Acknowledge and relate to your child’s anxieties

Anxiety symptoms are made worse when we don’t take children’s emotions seriously. We brush it off, figuring it’s petty to be afraid or anxious about it. We’re impatient that they still throw tantrums or make life difficult for us. Sometimes we even wonder how our personalities could be so different.

Here’s where empathy and compassion play a huge role in managing anxiety. Rather than wave your child’s fears away, acknowledge the emotion and what may have caused it. Tell a story of how you’ve felt the same way and how you managed.

Not only do you reassure him that his feelings are normal, but you’re also letting him know that you felt something similar as well. Acknowledging his feelings doesn’t encourage him to keep feeling anxious. It lessens his anxiety when he knows you’re on his side.

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2. Don’t avoid the experiences that triggered anxiety

Let’s say you put your toddler on the slide for the first time. You expected him to feel thrilled and exhilarated, but instead, he’s terrified of going down again. After his meltdown, it’s tempting to vow never to place him on another slide ever again. Why bother, you think, when he’ll just freak out every time?

But don’t completely avoid the experiences that triggered his fears and anxieties. Doing so lets his fear “win” and teaches him to deal with his anxieties through avoidance. This only reinforces his anxiety and confirms his suspicions that he should avoid slides so he doesn’t feel afraid again.

Instead of avoiding the triggers, help him find a better way to face or manage them.

I don’t suggest putting him on a slide every day until he “gets over it.” That strategy uses fear and doesn’t respect his genuine feelings. But try a gradual approach: introduce the slide a few weeks later and see how he handles it then.

Read what to do when your child is scared during extracurricular activities.

Child Is Scared at Extracurricular Activities

3. Describe what your child can expect

Set expectations so your child feels more prepared for what’s ahead. Even with a new environment, your preparation can help him anticipate and relate what he experiences to what you told him earlier.

Let’s say he’s going to an event he’s never attended. Let him know who’ll be there, what the activities are, and when you can expect to leave. Maybe he’s about to start a new summer camp, art classes, or even taking photos with Santa. Describe what he might expect to see and do.

You might review the summer camp agenda and remind him what time you’ll pick him up. You can describe the awesome activities he’ll do at art classes, or that he’ll see Santa and take a quick photo with him.

Having expectations reassures him because the events won’t come as too much of a surprise.

4. Have your child practice coping methods

How can you teach your child to face her childhood anxieties? Help her practice coping methods.

Let’s say you’re hosting a family party. She might face new people, and some of these adults can even be overwhelming (think aunts who demand kisses and uncles who tease).

Say, “You can go to your room when it feels like too many people are out here, okay?” Suggest other ways she can cope with his feelings, from carrying her favorite teddy bear to finding a quiet space for herself.

And be mindful of her signals. When you see her not enjoying himself, lead her to a quiet space so she can catch a break. You’re helping her build confidence in her ability to cope. As scary or unpleasant as these feelings might be, she can learn that she can manage them.

Get tips on teaching coping skills for kids.

Coping Skills for Kids

5. Reassure your child and follow through consistently

One common emotion your child might feel is separation anxiety, the distress from being apart from you. Symptoms of separation anxiety can even point to a healthy parent-child relationship, but dealing with her behavior during these social situations can be difficult.

She needs your reassurance—and follow-through—to keep her fears at bay.

Let’s say she’s starting preschool. Except she’s struggling with the transition of being away from you and developing stranger anxiety.

Reassure her that you’ll pick her up right after school, even giving her a time she can count on such as 3pm or after snack time. Then, follow through consistently, sticking to a routine so she can count on you always picking her up at that time.

At social gatherings, stay nearby. Wandering off to chat with your cousins isn’t going to help her anxieties. Keep her close by until she warms up enough to her new environment.

Read more about coping with separation anxiety.

How to Deal with Separation Anxiety

6. Don’t instill unnecessary fear or anxiety

Are you scared of spiders? Watch your reaction when you see one in front of your child. Shrieking in intense fear sends the message that spiders are terrible and feared.

Or let’s say you’re outside with him and a person walking their dog is approaching. Assuming the dog is under control, you don’t need to shield him from every dog as if it’s ready to bite. Instead, say, “Look at the cute dog!” and phrase it positively.

Let’s say the dog is too feisty or the owner isn’t a “pack leader.” Pick up your child or step in front of him while remaining friendly to the dog and dog owner. An overreaction teaches him to feel scared instead of discerning, curious, or brave.

7. Advocate and stand up for your child

Social settings can be one of the most difficult challenges for an anxious child. While you don’t want to hover, step in when you see family and friends overwhelming her.

Maybe an uncle is playing too rough, or your friends are clamoring to talk to her or hug her. Establish space to help her adjust to this new environment and warm up to others.

And don’t force her to hug everyone—it violates her personal space and can make her more anxious.

8. Praise your child for handling anxiety

Praising positive behavior is far more effective than correcting negative ones. Find moments when you notice your child behaving positively and acknowledge her for her choices.

This is especially encouraging when your praise is unexpected and unplanned. You’re simply noticing the ways she’s already doing a great job.

And praise her for even the smallest of progress! Maybe she finally jumped into the pool (or even dipped her toe in the water). Or you noticed she got her teddy bear when her siblings got too overwhelming. Praising her for ways she manages anxiety encourages that behavior to keep going.

Children's Books about Positive Behavior

9. Be patient when your child doesn’t meet your expectations

It can be frustrating when it seems like your child is the only one who doesn’t do X, Y, and Z. She’s afraid of this and that when other kids can’t stop talking about it.

Remind yourself that every child is different. Just because many kids enjoy going down the slide doesn’t mean everyone does. Instead, think of the things your child has braved that other kids would shy away from.

Then, remember that even kids who seem to be brave about everything have their quirks and fears as well. They might shy away from meeting new people or can’t seem to calm down from a panic attack. You won’t always know this about other kids, and it’s easy to assume yours is the only one with anxieties.

Accept her for who she is, with the hope that she can grow the coping skills necessary to overcome her anxieties. Be realistic about your expectations as well. Keep her temperament in mind—shopping for five hours can take a toll on her.

And never withhold your love or attention as a form of erasing her anxiety.

Young children don’t need much in this world, but love is one of them. Withholding affection is not an effective way of teaching her not to be afraid, but rather does the opposite. It lets the anxiety win when it’s powerful enough to make mom and dad upset.

Read more about accepting your children for who they are.

Accepting Your Children for Who They Are

Conclusion

Disclosure: This article contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

We all have our fears and quirks, our anxieties and apprehensions. Children haven’t had the same practice we’ve had to reassure themselves everything will be all right. As children are inexperienced with the world, they face more new experiences than we do.

Help him cope with his feelings by acknowledging them as normal and manageable. Don’t avoid his triggers, or instill unnecessary fears. Let him know what he might expect in new environments, and practice coping methods beforehand.

Follow through with your word consistently for reassurance, and advocate for him should you need to. Praise him for the times he does make progress, and finally, be patient with him when he doesn’t meet your expectations.

Anxiety in children is common, but now you have the tools to help your child cope with it.

p.s. Check out I Can Handle It by Laurie Wright, a fantastic children’s book to help your child overcome everyday anxieties:

I Can Handle It by Laurie Wright

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2 Comments

  1. Hi Nina! Thanks for all your motivational writing it’s so supportive!

    The school nurse rang me last week. My 5-year-old’s class had their hearing and sight checked one day in school and the nurse said of all the kids, he was the only one who said I’m scared I’m feeling a bit nervous. Maybe he’s just unsure in new situations. I asked her what she recommends and she said get him involved in plenty of team sports. He’s always out and about mixing with others and loving it. Just wondering what are your thoughts? I’m an anxious adult and I hope I’m not passing this onto him. I was very shy as a kid and he is the total opposite in that respect. He’s straight up to other kids, mixing with them, and getting involved. It’s just that I suppose the his “anxious” trait doesn’t seem to match his personality. Have u experienced this before?

    1. Nina Garcia says:

      I’d say that this sounds like a one-off thing, especially if it just happened once out of all his other moments in his life. Think of it this way: we ALL get anxious, even the most confident and outgoing of us. No one is immune to it, and it’s a normal part of life. Getting his hearing tested is a strange deviation from his day, which could’ve made him nervous.

      One thing you can do is to prepare him ahead of time for future things or different scenarios. If you’re going to go to a new place, explain and describe what he might see, so that when he’s there, he isn’t as nervous. But more than likely, he just felt scared and nervous, as we all do from time to time.

      Of course, bring it up to his pediatrician if it becomes a problem or to put your mind at ease, but that’s what I think is happening here.