Once you have a sense of whether you are experiencing anxiety, dissociation, or both, it can be easier to identify strategies that may help.
No strategy works for everyone. The goal of this tool is not to provide a perfect answer but to help you identify approaches that may be worth trying.
If anxiety is more prominent
Anxiety often involves feeling overwhelmed by experience.
Common signs:
- racing thoughts
- excessive worry
- panic
- physical tension
- hypervigilance
- catastrophizing
- feeling constantly on guard
Strategies that may help:
Reduce nervous-system activation
- diaphragmatic breathing
- progressive muscle relaxation
- slowing your pace
- reducing stimulation
Orient to present-day safety
- notice what is actually happening right now
- distinguish current situations from anticipated dangers
- identify evidence of safety
Address anxious thinking
- identify fears
- challenge catastrophic predictions
- focus on what is known rather than imagined
If dissociation is more prominent
Dissociation often involves feeling disconnected from experience.
Common signs:
- emotional numbness
- feeling unreal
- feeling detached from your body
- feeling detached from your surroundings
- memory difficulties
- feeling disconnected from emotions
Strategies that may help:
Increase present-moment awareness
- orient to your surroundings
- notice sensory details
- identify colors, sounds, textures, and smells
Increase connection
- movement
- stretching
- body awareness exercises
- grounding activities
Increase continuity
- review recent events
- use notes or journals
- reconnect with system communication if applicable
If both are present
Many trauma survivors experience both anxiety and dissociation.
Often the pattern looks like:
- anxiety increases
- distress becomes overwhelming
- dissociation activates
Strategies may include:
- reducing overwhelm first
- using grounding alongside anxiety-management skills
- pacing yourself
- focusing on stabilization rather than immediate resolution
Questions to consider
- Am I feeling overwhelmed, disconnected, or both?
- What seems to have triggered this state?
- What has helped in the past?
- What tends to make the situation worse?
- What would increase safety right now?
Related Resources
- Anxiety, Dissociation, or Both?
- How to Recognize When You’re Dissociating
- What Is Dissociation? Symptoms, Causes, & How It Feels
Continue Exploring CommuniDID
CommuniDID includes nearly 1000 pages of educational content about DID, trauma, dissociation— including articles, Q&As, guides, and practical resources organized by topic.
New content is added regularly.
Browse All TopicsHave a Question?
Email subscribers can submit questions for Alicia to answer in the newsletter. Each issue includes a reader question and response, along with new resources and content updates.
Join the Email List
Have a question this page didn’t answer? Click “Yes” or “No” below and a comment box will appear where you can leave your question. Comments are reviewed but not made public.
