These 7 Strategies Help Psychologists Survive Their Most Overwhelming Days


Maybe it’s piled-up housework, looming work deadlines, or negative news stories. Whatever the cause, feeling overwhelmed can seriously affect your mental state — and your physical health, too.

“Overwhelm isn’t just ‘in your head.’ It activates deep stress circuits in the brain, which can result in flooding the body with [stress hormones like] cortisol and adrenaline,” says Hayley Nelson, PhD, a neuroscientist and the founder of The Academy of Cognitive and Behavioral Neuroscience, an online education platform, in Downingtown, Pennsylvania.

In the short term, this sharpens your focus and primes you for action. But when stress lingers, it can impair memory and learning, disrupt sleep, weaken immunity, and even reduce brain volume over time. “This is why it’s so important to recognize and address feelings of overwhelm early,” Dr. Nelson says.

Here are the strategies psychologists employ themselves to regain control in moments of overwhelm.