Chansky offers some very useful ideas for how to deal with anxiety. She highlights these four major steps:
1)Pause and Relabel (or don't trust everything you think). This is about not stopping the anxious thought, but realizing that it doesn't hold power over you, and that it comes from questionable authority. She offers a few suggestions on how to do this: sorting worry into "junk mail", renaming the narrator (I especially liked the tip of hearing the worry in a different voice, like spongebob), separating yourself from the thought (my worry is telling me that...), "throwing back the boot" or ignoring extreme thoughts, and downgrading the worry by scaling it.
2) Get Specific (or narrow down the problem to what really matters). Sometimes our worry leads to a downward spiral or a worry "flash mob" where one bad thought leads to lots of bad thoughts. The steps for fighting that are: taking the "what ifs" to "what is," fighting all or none thinking, turning negative statements into questions, thinking of the absolute worst thing that could happen to the point of ridiculousness, not jumping from worry to worry, not thinking in absolutes "never or always," thinking in isolated events "it was a bad day," and doing a red pen edit with your thoughts. She also advocates fitting your problems into the smallest box possible.
3)Optimize (broaden your choices and rethink what's possible). This is something I didn't think of before. Sometimes we narrow down our choices to one unreachable option, and we need to broaden our thinking. Or we see the situation through our fears. Steps for solving this are: instead of thinking something is impossible ask questions and go on a fact finding mission, consult a "possibility panel" of people in your mind, walk through a new door to the room of compassion, use absurdity again, fast forward to the end of the story, switch views of the situation from all wrong to all right, switch shoes with other people, and switch views from what if to if then.
4) Mobilize (don't just stand there, do something). This step advocates moving forward on our situation and not getting stuck or overwhelmed. Strategies for that are: Walking away from the situation for a while, starting on the problem with small acts, figuring out what's ours to control, skipping the parts we don't like and finding the moving part, cheating motivation by just doing something, mapping out steps to the bigger goal, brainstorming possibilities, asking others for help, and mentally rehearsing the situation.
Chansky also offers specific advice for each anxiety disorder, and gives additional tools for overcoming anxiety including accepting negative feelings, rounding up your strengths, managing your expectations, and cultivating compassion and gratitude. She also has a chapter on perfectionism which I found useful.
It took me a while to get through though because everything is so detailed and...not very compelling. But maybe I'm just not a self help kind of reader. Even so, it was recommended to me by my doctor and had a lot of good advice.