This mental tool involves changing the way you look at a stressful situation, like viewing a difficult conversation as an opportunity to grow rather than a threat.
What is cognitive reframing?
This emotional red flag involves snapping at loved ones, losing your temper over tiny inconveniences, or feeling constantly "on edge."
What is irritability (or low patience)?
This mental habit happens when you assume the worst possible outcome will happen, like thinking, "If I fail this test, my life is over."
What is catastrophizing?
This core mindfulness practice involves simply sitting quietly and focusing 100% of your attention on the sensation of air moving in and out of your nose or chest.
What is mindful breathing?
This term refers to the automatic survival mechanism that prepares your body to either confront a threat or run away.
What is the Fight or Flight response?
This practice involves building a reliable group of friends, family, or professionals you can lean on when life gets too heavy to handle alone.
What is a support system?
This behavioral red flag happens when you start declining invitations, avoiding phone calls, and pulling away from friends and family.
What is social withdrawal (or isolation)?
This "all-or-nothing" mindset makes you view things as either perfect or a total failure, with no middle ground.
What is black-and-white thinking?
This active coping strategy involves getting your body moving—like taking a brisk walk or cycling—to naturally burn off stress chemicals.
What is physical exercise?
The primary hormone released during a stressful event, which increases your heart rate and sharpens your focus.
This boundary rule means deciding ahead of time what responsibilities you will take on, and which ones belong to other people to solve.
What is emotional detachment (or staying in your own lane)?
This cognitive red flag makes it incredibly difficult to focus on a single task, read a page of a book, or make simple daily decisions.
What is brain fog (or poor concentration)?
This habit means focusing entirely on the one thing that went wrong while completely ignoring everything that went right.
What is mental filtering (or focusing on the negative)?
This specific physical technique requires you to squeeze a specific muscle group tightly for 5 seconds, notice the tension, and then completely let it go.
What is Progressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR)?
This type of shallow, rapid breathing often happens automatically when a person gets overwhelmed or panics.
What is hyperventilation (or overbreathing)?
This self-talk shift involves replacing phrases like "I have to do this" with this much more empowering, choice-based phrase.
What is "I get to do this" (or "I choose to")?
This physical red flag involves a sudden change in your daily patterns, such as sleeping 10+ hours a day or barely being able to sleep at all.
What is a change in sleep habits?
Mood disorder that involves prolonged feelings of dejectedness, sadness, and lack of interest with everyday activities.
What is depression?
This mental practice involves closing your eyes and vividly imagining a safe, peaceful location—like a beach or a forest—using all five of your senses.
What is guided imagery (or visualization)?
This common bedtime issue is often caused by a racing mind and stress, making it incredibly difficult to fall or stay asleep.
What is insomnia (or sleep trouble)?
This mindset shift means accepting that you cannot control external events, and choosing to focus 100% of your energy only on this.
What is your own reaction?
This severe emotional red flag is a feeling of total emotional numbness, where you feel completely disconnected from things that usually bring you joy.
What is anhedonia (or emotional detachment)?
This trap happens when you use words like "should," "must," or "ought to" to pressure yourself, leading to guilt and stress.
What are "Should" statements?
This famous sensory grounding technique helps pull your mind out of a panic by having you systematically name 5 things you see down to 1 thing you taste.
What is the 5-4-3-2-1 technique?
This deep sense of exhaustion occurs when chronic stress completely drains your energy, leaving you wiped out even if you haven't done physical work.
What is fatigue?