Coping with Anxiety is a handy, practical resource for someone interested in overcoming and coping with general and/or specific anxiety at any level whether periodic or clinical. It is a pragmatic resource for the helpee and the helper, the practitioner who seeks to offer a useful text to a client (bibliotherapy), a group or simply as a go to reference in one’s library. I highly recommend this to social workers, life coaches, chaplains, pastors, teachers and caregivers. This practical usefulness includes reflection activities, skills practice and other homework activities that would assist the committed person whether in a helping or care giving relationship or one seeking to overcome anxiety in their day-to-day life.
The text provides a host of applied and grounded advice for anyone who experiences everyday stress, tension, work-place anxiety, family or other relational issues where anxiety has become a part of the functioning as well as clinically diagnosed patients. Many of the strategies are evidenced based and some come from rich traditions that teach practices that offer self-caring support.
This workbook incorporates various mindfulness techniques as practices for cultivating improved functioning. It reinforces reality thinking versus distorted thinking and provides descriptions to support tackling phobias by way of exposure therapy and imagery.
In the final section, the workbook covers self-care topics in concentrated areas of the human body, viz., eating, sleep, exercise and recreation.
I am enjoying it as a handy reference to prepare for recommend homework assignments, coping strategies and sections to reflect on with my clients as a practitioner.