What is anxiety in everyday life?
Anxiety is the body’s natural response to potential dangers. It ensures that we remain alert and can act quickly. Without anxiety, our survival would be much more difficult.
In everyday life, however, anxiety often arises not from acute dangers, but from worries, uncertainties, or stressful life situations. If these anxieties become chronic, they can significantly impair quality of life.
1. Why anxiety is fundamentally useful
Anxiety activates the nervous system and prepares the body for a challenge. Heart rate and breathing increase, alertness rises, and the body becomes more ready to perform.
2. When fear becomes a burden
Fear becomes problematic when it is disproportionately intense or constantly present. Those affected often feel chronically tense and find themselves dwelling on the same worries over and over again.
Causes and triggers of anxiety
Anxiety rarely stems from a single factor. Most often, personal experiences, life circumstances, and biological factors interact.
1. Stress and pressure to perform
Professional demands, constant availability, or family obligations can permanently increase stress levels. As a result, the nervous system reacts more sensitively to stress.
2. Worries and uncertainty
Financial burdens, concerns about the future, or major changes such as a move, a job change, or a breakup can intensify feelings of uncertainty.
3. Negative experiences
Past traumatic experiences can lead to certain situations being perceived as threatening. The brain does this in an attempt to avoid future dangers.
4. Biological factors
Genetic predispositions, hormonal changes, or changes in certain neurotransmitters in the brain can also influence feelings of anxiety.

Anxiety can be exacerbated by stress, worries, traumatic experiences, or biological factors. Often, multiple triggers interact simultaneously.
Typical symptoms of anxiety
Anxiety affects not only the mind but often the entire body as well.
1. Physical symptoms
Typical physical symptoms include a racing heart, sweating, trembling, shallow breathing, muscle tension, or gastrointestinal issues.
2. Emotional signs
Many people report feeling nervous, restless, irritable, or constantly tense.
3. Rumination and overthinking
Worries often revolve around the same topics. Constant rumination can make it difficult to relax or make decisions.
4. Sleep problems
Persistent tension can make it difficult to fall asleep and stay asleep. This often creates a cycle of fatigue and even greater susceptibility to stress.
What helps in everyday life?
Even though anxiety cannot be completely avoided, there are various ways to relieve the nervous system.
1. Conscious breathing
Slow and controlled breathing can help reduce the body’s stress response and bring your focus back to the present moment.
2. Regular exercise
Walking, cycling, yoga, or other forms of exercise support stress relief and can promote well-being.
3. Reduce stimuli
News, social media, and constant availability can intensify feelings of being overwhelmed. Conscious breaks help many people get back to.
4. Write down your thoughts
Keeping a journal or writing down your worries can help you organize stressful thoughts and gain some perspective.
5. Accept support
Talking to friends, family, or professionals can provide relief and open up new perspectives.

Conscious breathing techniques, exercise, digital breaks, and social support can help relieve stress on the nervous system and better manage anxiety and tension in daily life.
Natural support and medicinal plants
Medicinal plants have been traditionally used for centuries to support people during stressful life phases. Plants associated with relaxation, inner peace, and support for the nervous system play a particularly important role in naturopathy. Although they do not replace medical or psychotherapeutic treatment, they are often used as a complementary measure to support emotional well-being.

Traditionally used medicinal plants and naturopathic essences are frequently employed to help manage inner tension, support the nervous system, and promote emotional balance.
- Angelica is traditionally used and is often associated with inner stability and resilience.
- Annual mugwort is traditionally used in naturopathy and is considered a versatile medicinal plant with a long history of use.
- Gold is frequently associated in naturopathic concepts with confidence, emotional balance, and mental strength.
- Oats are traditionally used to support the nervous system and are often associated with regeneration and resilience.
- Cuprum sulfuricum is frequently used in naturopathy for nervous tension and stress-related complaints.
- Kava-kava is traditionally used to promote relaxation and inner peace and is one of the best-known plants associated with emotional stress.









