Generation Calm
  • Home
  • Calm Chronicles
  • Videos
  • Contact
Close
Generation Calm
Close
  • Home
  • Calm Chronicles
  • Videos
  • Contact
Using Driving Affirmations for Driving Anxiety
Anxiety Relief, Video February 1, 2020 Generation Calm

Using Driving Affirmations for Driving Anxiety

Affirmations are positive statements about yourself.

They are well researched in Health Psychology (think smoking cessation) and Sports Psychology (the USA Volleyball Team advocates positive self-talk using affirmations to work through stressful situations).

Affirmations, alongside other techniques, can be used to reduce anxiety and stress. When feeling anxious, your thoughts can get in the way of progress.  You can get stuck in your head with negative thoughts and replaying old mistakes. This can lead to analysis paralysis where you don’t take action.

An affirmation can help to interrupt your usual pattern of negative thoughts.

If you have a phobia such as driving anxiety, you likely have frequent negative thoughts about getting lost, having a crash or losing control of the car.  Those thoughts can stop you from driving. Using positive driving affirmations can help to interrupt those thoughts to allow you to take action, go for your drive and build up your confidence.

Even if you don’t believe the positive statements yet, they make room for the possibility that there are different facts other than your automatic thoughts.

Driving affirmation

Driving Affirmations

I’ve created some affirmations for driving anxiety designed to interrupt your normal pattern of negative thoughts about your driving skills.

Here are a selection of them.

  • I feel calm and confident of my actions behind the wheel.
  • No matter the destination, I drive with confidence and ease.
  • I am a safe driver.
  • My driving gets better every day.
  • I relax and flow with the traffic.

How to use positive affirmations for driving anxiety

  1. Listen to a recording of affirmations (try my affirmation video). Either repeat each affirmation silently to yourself or speak them out loud. Other people might say you need to be more passive and that they’ll seep into your subconscious, but I think you should try them on for size because some may not suit you.
  2. Pick one or two that resonate for you or design your own affirmation that is more relevant to you.
  3. Write these affirmations down and read them before your next drive. Or place them somewhere in the car (dashboard or center console) where you’ll be able to see them when you stop at a traffic light.
  4. Recite the affirmations often so that when you are in a stressful situation you can recall them easily. You may choose to say them silently in your mind, say them aloud (have you ever heard tennis players give themselves a pep-talk on-court?), write them down daily, chant them or move with them (Mantras in Motion).
  5. Every now and then, reflect on whether you’ve outgrown your affirmation and need a new one and start the process again.

Using driving affirmations will improve your confidence and ease your anxiety.  They are not meant to replace your automatic thoughts. But a positive affirmation will interrupt your negative thoughts to allow you some peace while you practice your driving skills.

If you like this blog post, pop on over to my YouTube channel and check out my playlist for driving anxiety.

Tags: affirmations anxiety driving anxiety fear of driving
Share:

Popular Posts

  • What Are the Benefits of Progressive Muscle Relaxation?
    What Are the Benefits of Progressive Muscle Relaxation?
    Anxiety Relief, Mind-body connection, Stress Management, Video

    After a tense and emotionally-charged situation, have you ever noticed how you’re holding...

  • How To Be Enough – Overcoming Perfectionism
    How To Be Enough – Overcoming Perfectionism
    Anxiety Relief, Positive Psychology, Stress Management
  • Why Your Doctor Wants You To Take Care of Your Stress: Five Simple Stress Remedies
    Why Your Doctor Wants You To Take Care of Your Stress: Five Simple Stress Remedies
    Journaling, Mind-body connection, Stress Management
  • How Do I Know I’m Having A Panic Attack?
    How Do I Know I’m Having A Panic Attack?
    Anxiety Relief, Meditation, Stress Management
sign up today to become part of Generation Calm
sign up today to become part of generationCALM

Generation Calm

Disclaimer: The information provided on generationcalm.com should not be used for diagnosing or treating a health condition or disease and is not intended as a substitute for consulting with your physician or healthcare provider.

Copyright © generationCALM