When a mental health challenge strikes, healthy coping tactics can turn life’s hardships into valuable opportunities to practice emotional regulation. Fortunately, you can create your own emotional crisis support system by gathering effective mental wellness tools before you need them.
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Whether you’re seeking help for a panic attack or a bout of loneliness, a solution for rage or obsessive thoughts, planning ahead will give you options to help you cope. The 50-plus brain and mental health specialists at Amen Clinics have compiled the following resources to help you create your own mental health toolkit.
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This blog will cover the five categories of an emotional wellness toolkit—and their suggested contents—that everyone should keep on hand.
Understanding your most common emotional pitfalls—and keeping multiple tools on hand to soothe them—will make a major difference when mental health challenges strike.
While dissociation and dissociative disorders are distinct from panic attacks and panic disorder, some of their symptoms may overlap. For example, a study published in Behavioral Sciences in 2024 found that people with panic disorder may be more vulnerable to dissociation and anxiety when trauma occurs.
Meanwhile, repeated exposure to trauma can lead to complex posttraumatic stress disorder (CPTSD), which is associated with flashbacks, panic attacks, and dissociation.
In times of a mental health crisis, reach for grounding tools that help you return to the present moment. Here are some suggestions:
Anxiety or anger can seem to take over your entire body. These episodes can be especially debilitating for those with related mental health conditions, such as anxiety disorders or intermittent explosive disorder (IED).
To soothe frazzled nerves, keep tools on hand that can regulate your nervous system and lower stress hormones. Here are some suggestions for your anger or anxiety toolkit:
The brain-imaging work at Amen Clinics—over 250,000 brain SPECT scans and still growing—has shown that people who struggle with repetitive, undesired, or intrusive thoughts often have an overactive anterior cingulate gyrus (ACG).
Related: Do You Have Repetitive, Undesired, or Intrusive Thoughts and Urges?
The experts at Amen Clinics call this region the brain’s “gear shifter.” Too much activity in this region can lead to obsessive thinking patterns and getting stuck on intrusive thoughts.
Fortunately, changing your behavior can change your brain activity patterns to help balance the ACG. Certain tools can assist by activating the prefrontal cortex and interrupting thought loops. These include:
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Loneliness has been called a public health crisis by the U.S. Surgeon General. In one study published in 2024, loneliness was found to be worse for human health than alcohol abuse, obesity, or even smoking 15 cigarettes a day.
Moreover, social isolation can worsen depression and even physical pain. That’s why it’s important to build connection points in your life. Even if you feel you don’t “need” them right now, they will be imperative for when you do—such as when facing grief, loss, or other life challenges.
Related: 10 Ways to Cope With Grief and Loss
Here are some connection-building ideas for your loneliness or depression toolkit:
Emotion lives in the body—and it can get stuck there, too. Movement and physical distraction tools help release pent-up energy to work out emotions in a healthy way. They can also assist you in emerging from a freeze response after periods of threat.
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Here are some tools that promote mental wellness through movement:
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While any of the above work wonders as physical kits assembled in a box or bag at home, don’t forget to create grab-and-go versions. You can install positive reminders and notes on your phone, for example. And make sure you keep your toolkits readily available for use anywhere, anytime—in your car, purse, or desk at work.
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Life is sure to throw challenges anyone’s way, but being prepared will help you face any difficulty that arises. Understanding your most common emotional pitfalls—and keeping multiple tools on hand to soothe them—will make a major difference when mental health emergencies strike. Ready yourself now and reap the benefits when you need them most.
Start by identifying your most common emotional struggles—whether it’s anxiety, low moods, or intrusive thoughts. Then choose tools that help calm your nervous system, ground your body, or shift your mindset. The goal is to have options ready before you’re overwhelmed, so you can respond with intention rather than reaction.
Yes. While it’s not a substitute for professional help when needed, a toolkit provides immediate strategies to reduce distress, regulate emotions, and prevent spiraling. It’s like emotional first aid: the right tool in the moment can help you feel more in control and better able to ask for support if needed.
Sometimes deeper healing requires more than self-help strategies. If your symptoms are persistent or interfering with daily life, it’s important to seek help from mental health professionals. At Amen Clinics, we use brain SPECT imaging and integrative care plans to identify the root causes of emotional challenges and tailor treatment to your unique brain.
Anxiety disorders, depression, and other mental health conditions can’t wait. At Amen Clinics, we provide personalized, science-backed treatment plans designed to target the root causes of your symptoms. Our 360-approach includes brain SPECT imaging, clinical evaluations, innovative therapeutic techniques, medications (when necessary), and holistic lifestyle recommendations to promote the health of your brain, body, and mind. Speak to a specialist today at 888-288-9834 or visit our contact page here.
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The Renfrew Center website
https://www.renfrewcenters.com/services/specialized-programming/midlife
Accessed July 11, 2025
Gagne DA, Von Holle A, Brownley KA, Runfola CD, Hofmeier S, Branch KE, Bulik CM. Eating disorder symptoms and weight and shape concerns in a large web-based convenience sample of women ages 50 and above: results of the Gender and Body Image (GABI) study. Int J Eat Disord. 2012 Nov;45(7):832-44.
Hofmeier SM, Runfola CD, Sala M, Gagne DA, Brownley KA, Bulik CM. Body image, aging, and identity in women over 50: The Gender and Body Image (GABI) study. J Women Aging. 2017 Jan-Feb;29(1):3-14.
Mangweth-Matzek B, Kummer KK, Hoek HW. Update on the epidemiology and treatment of eating disorders among older people. Curr Opin Psychiatry. 2023 Nov 1;36(6):405-411.