Tag: anxiety relief

  • Healing Anxiety: The Comfort of Familiar Sounds

    Healing Anxiety: The Comfort of Familiar Sounds

    The Science Behind Familiar Comforts and Calming Sounds

    ⚠️ Trigger Warning: This post includes discussion of anxiety, emotional overwhelm, and self-soothing behaviors.
    📌 Disclaimer: I am not a licensed therapist or doctor. This blog reflects my personal experience living with anxiety and includes publicly available information from credible sources.

    When I’m anxious, I don’t want surprises.
    I don’t want loud or bright or unexpected.
    I want something I already know — like a favorite show I’ve seen a hundred times.
    I want rain, soft clouds, and quiet air.
    And you know what? That’s when my anxiety feels the lowest.

    If you’re nodding along right now — you’re not broken.
    You’re regulating.


    📺 Why People with Anxiety Rewatch the Same Shows

    Rewatching the same show or movie over and over again is a comfort strategy that many of us use — especially on high-anxiety days.

    It’s not laziness or avoidance. It’s protection.

    “When life is uncertain and unpredictable, rewatching familiar shows can provide a sense of control, comfort, and emotional safety.”
    — Dr. Pamela Rutledge, Media Psychologist (TIME Magazine)

    Here’s why it works:

    • Predictability lowers stress. You already know what happens — no plot twists, no emotional spikes.
    • Cognitive ease: Your brain doesn’t have to process anything new. It relaxes.
    • Emotional safety: These shows become soft, safe places to land when the world feels overwhelming.

    “Familiar media provides a predictable and controllable experience, which is key for people whose lives or minds feel chaotic.”
    — Dr. Krystine Batcho, Professor of Psychology (NBC News)

    So if you’re rewatching The Office, Grey’s Anatomy, SpongeBob, or whatever makes you feel okay — you’re not weird.
    You’re coping. And it’s valid.


    🌧️ Why Rain, Clouds, and Gloomy Weather Calm Anxiety

    Me personally? When it rains, my body relaxes.
    Cloudy skies and the sound of raindrops do something no amount of caffeine-free tea or journaling can touch.

    This isn’t just preference — it’s physiological.

    “Rain sounds activate the parasympathetic nervous system — the part of the body that slows the heart rate and promotes relaxation.”
    — Dr. Kelley Kitley, Licensed Clinical Social Worker (Healthline)

    Here’s what’s happening:

    • Rain mimics white noise, blocking out harsh sounds and creating a rhythmic, soothing backdrop.
    • Cloud cover reduces light, which softens visual input for overstimulated brains.
    • There’s no pressure to go out and perform — the world slows down, and your nervous system follows.

    “Rain helps people with anxiety because it provides a sensory cue that’s safe and steady — something the brain can anchor to.”
    — Dr. Chloe Carmichael, Clinical Psychologist (Verywell Mind)


    💬 Why This Matters

    If you’ve ever:

    • Rewatched your comfort show for the 12th time this month
    • Felt deeply relaxed on a rainy day
    • Preferred quiet routines over new stimulation

    You are not alone. And you are not broken.
    Your brain is trying to regulate chaos in the best way it knows how.


    🧠 It’s Not “Just in Your Head” — It’s Your Nervous System

    Your nervous system craves safety.
    Familiar shows, rainy days, soft sounds — these are nervous system cues that say:

    “You’re okay. You’re safe. You can breathe.”

    And that? That’s healing in its own right.

    — Shanice, Anxiety Momster


    💜 Create Your Own Calm Corner

    Grab my free Peace Over Panic Journal + Tracker to help you reflect, reset, and document what works best for your anxiety.

    👉 Download it here

    Includes:

    • Daily check-ins
    • Coping tool logs
    • Mood charts
    • Grounding rituals
    • Space for grace, not perfection