Postpartum Anxiety: 9 Gentle Coping Strategies

The first mistake is trying to calm a body that is already on alert
Postpartum anxiety often shows up at the exact moments you cannot avoid, night feeds, the baby’s cry in the dark, being alone in the house, a nappy change when you are already exhausted. That is why so many well-meant coping strategies fail. They assume you can sit quietly, breathe slowly, journal neatly, and think your way back to calm.
You usually cannot, not in the middle of a panic spike, and not when you are running on broken sleep. If you have had new mum anxiety that feels bigger at 2 am than it did at 2 pm, that does not mean you are doing it wrong. It means your nervous system is working overtime.
For many women, the hardest part is not the anxiety itself. It is the shame that comes with it. You start wondering whether you are overreacting, whether other mothers cope better, whether you should feel grateful instead of frightened.
You do not need to earn support by being at breaking point. And you do not need to “push through” symptoms that are getting in the way of feeding, sleeping, or caring for your baby safely.
What postpartum anxiety actually looks like
Postpartum anxiety is not just feeling a bit worried. It can look like:
- racing thoughts that jump from one worst-case scenario to the next
- checking the baby repeatedly because your brain will not settle
- tight chest, shaky hands, nausea, dizziness, or a sense that something bad is about to happen
- intrusive thoughts that feel disturbing, unwanted, and hard to shake
- avoiding sleep because the quiet makes everything louder
- feeling unable to relax even when the baby is settled
Some mothers notice it starts in the first week, when adrenaline is still high and sleep is fragmented. Others feel it kick in after the first “safe” period, when everyone has gone home and the reality of caring for a tiny baby lands.
There is a difference between normal new-parent vigilance and anxiety after birth that keeps escalating. Normal worry tends to ease when the baby settles or when you get reassurance. Postpartum anxiety keeps returning, often stronger, and can begin to shape what you do, where you go, and how much you trust yourself.
The coping strategies that help, and the ones that quietly backfire
Not every calming technique is useful in the middle of postpartum anxiety. Some make you feel more watched by your own body. Some are only helpful once the wave has passed a little.
| Strategy | Helps when | Can backfire when |
|---|---|---|
| Slow breathing | You are mildly activated and can still follow a rhythm | You are in a panic spike and focusing on breath makes you feel more trapped |
| Grounding with senses | You feel scattered or disconnected | Intrusive thoughts are loud and the exercise becomes another thing to “do correctly” |
| Journalling | You have a few uninterrupted minutes | You are sleep-deprived and the page becomes a place to spiral |
| Reassurance seeking | You need a one-off check from a trusted person | You need repeated reassurance and the relief lasts only minutes |
| Avoidance | You are protecting yourself from a known trigger briefly | You start avoiding normal baby care, sleep, or being alone |
The goal is not to use every coping strategy. The goal is to use the right one for the state you are in.
Key takeaway: When postpartum anxiety is high, the most effective support is usually the least complicated one, the thing that helps your nervous system settle without asking your brain to perform.
1. Start with the body, but keep it practical
When a panic spike hits, breathing exercises often break first. Not because breathing is useless, but because a woman in acute anxiety can become hyper-aware of every inhale, every pause, every flutter in the chest. Instead of calming down, she feels more monitored by her own body.
Experienced practitioners often switch from “deep breathing” to something more mechanical and less inward-facing:
- plant both feet on the floor
- press your hands firmly into the mattress, bench, or wall
- name five things you can see, but keep it brief
- sip cold water
- hold something cool, like a face washer from the fridge
- count backward by 7s or recite a familiar list, such as suburb names or the days of the week
These are not magic tricks. They work because they give your brain a job that is simple, external, and hard to argue with.
If breathing makes you feel more aware of the panic, stop forcing it. Switch to movement or pressure instead. Walk to the kitchen and back. Sit on the floor with your back against a wall. Put one hand on your baby’s cot and one on your own chest, not to “fix” the feeling, just to stay present through it.
2. Make the unavoidable trigger less lonely
Some triggers cannot be avoided. Nighttime checks. Feeding. Being alone with the baby while your partner is at work. The mistake is trying to eliminate the trigger entirely, which usually just makes the world smaller.
Instead, reduce the sense of isolation around it.
If nights are the worst, build a tiny repeatable sequence:
- turn on a dim light before you pick the baby up
- drink water before the feed, not after you are already shaky
- keep a chair, wrap, nappy cloth, and burp cloth in the same place every night
- use the same phrase each time, such as “This is the hard part, and it passes”
- after the feed, do one small reset, like hand cream on dry hands or a quick splash of warm water on your face
That last step matters more than people think. A familiar sensory cue can tell your body the task is over.
A soft pillow spray such as Celestial Pillow Mist can also help some mothers mark the difference between “night duty” and “rest time”. It will not treat postpartum anxiety, but a small ritual can make the return to bed feel less like falling back into alert mode.
3. Treat intrusive thoughts as noise, not instructions
Intrusive thoughts are one of the most frightening parts of postpartum anxiety because they can feel so vivid and so out of character. A lot of mothers do the same thing at first, they try to argue with the thought, prove it wrong, or reassure themselves repeatedly that they would never act on it.
That usually backfires.
Why? Because the brain learns that the thought is important. The more attention you give it, the more it returns. The more you try to “solve” it, the stickier it becomes.
What tends to work better is a different response:
- label it, “intrusive thought”
- do not debate it
- do not test whether you are a bad mother
- return to the next physical task in front of you
If the thought is about harm, safety, or contamination, people often start avoiding the baby’s bath, the kitchen, the cot, or being alone with the infant. That avoidance can shrink life very quickly. After a few failed attempts at reassurance, the real adjustment is usually this: less checking, less mental arguing, more structured support and more predictable routines.
For example, a mother who keeps checking the baby’s breathing may do better with one agreed check, then a timer, then a handover to her partner for the next 20 minutes. Not because the fear is silly, but because repeated checking feeds the loop.
4. Use shorter calming techniques when you are sleep-deprived
If you slept in fragments, long journalling prompts and ten-minute meditations are often unrealistic. They sound sensible on paper and useless at 3.40 am.
When sleep deprivation is part of the picture, the strategies that actually work are short, repeatable, and low-effort:
- one sentence in your notes app, not a full journal entry
- a 30-second shoulder drop while the kettle boils
- a glass of water before you decide what the next problem is
- sitting down for the feed instead of hovering and bracing
- asking someone else to take over one repetitive task, like sterilising bottles or folding singlets
The goal is not perfect calm. It is reducing the load on an already overloaded nervous system.
This is also where practical postnatal help matters. A service like [5-Week In-Home Visits Postnatal Recovery Support] can be useful when you need ongoing, in-home guidance rather than one-off advice. Sometimes the fastest way to lower anxiety after birth is not a better breathing technique, it is having another calm adult help you carry the day.
5. Do not accidentally feed the anxiety loop
A few coping strategies seem comforting at first and then quietly make things worse.
These are the common culprits:
- repeated Googling of symptoms at night
- asking for reassurance every time the fear spikes
- avoiding sleep because you are afraid of what you might feel when you wake
- over-monitoring the baby’s breathing, colour, or movements
- trying to “test” whether the thought is true
After the first few failed attempts, most mothers do not need more information. They need less stimulation and more containment.
That might mean:
- one trusted person gets the anxiety update, not five
- you decide in advance what counts as a real concern and what does not
- you stop checking the same thing over and over
- you use a written plan for nighttime so you are not deciding everything while panicked
If you are a partner or family member, this is important. Reassurance is kind, but endless reassurance can keep the cycle alive. A steadier response is, “I can see you are distressed, and I am here. Let’s follow the plan we made.”
6. Build around the trigger, not against it
A lot of advice tells new mothers to “avoid stress” or “make time for self-care”. That sounds lovely until you are holding a crying baby with one free hand and a racing heart.
A better question is, what parts of the trigger can be softened?
If being alone is hard, plan the most anxious window so you are not improvising.
- Have a meal within reach.
- Keep your phone charged.
- Set up a seat, water, and snack before your partner leaves.
- Let someone text at a set time, not every ten minutes.
- Use a simple checklist for feeds, nappies, and medication if your mind goes blank under stress.
If nights are rough, protect the transition back to bed. Dim lights. Minimal conversation. No scrolling. No symptom checking in the dark.
If the trigger is a specific task, like bathing the baby or handling a crying spell, practise it once when you are not already overwhelmed. Familiarity lowers threat.
7. Use support that matches the level of distress
There is a point where coping strategies are not enough on their own. That is not failure. It is just the shape of the problem.
You should seek extra help if:
- the anxiety is happening most days
- you are avoiding normal care tasks
- panic is interfering with feeding, sleep, or rest
- intrusive thoughts are frequent or terrifying
- you feel detached, numb, or unable to enjoy anything
- you are not improving after a couple of weeks of trying to manage it
For some families, gentle in-home help is the bridge between “barely coping” and “breathing again”. Overnight support or infant settling help can give a very sleep-deprived mother enough relief to actually use the coping strategies that work.
If you are looking for structured postnatal anxiety support, a calm, clinically informed service can make a real difference. Mumma Sue’s [Sleep and Sanity Support and Education] is designed for exactly that early period where exhaustion and anxiety feed each other.
8. Keep the plan small enough to use at 2 am
The best coping plan is the one you can actually remember when your brain is foggy.
Write down three steps only:
- what I do first when panic starts
- who I contact if it keeps climbing
- when I need medical help
Put it somewhere visible, not buried in an app folder. On the fridge. Beside the bed. In your phone lock screen notes.
A simple plan might say:
- sit down
- cold water and feet on the floor
- text partner or support person
- if I feel unsafe, call my GP, midwife, or local mental health line
That is enough. You do not need a perfect routine. You need a reliable one.
9. Know when it is more than “normal adjustment”
A fair amount of anxiety in the first days after birth is common. What usually makes postpartum anxiety worse in the first few weeks is the combination of sleep loss, hormonal shifts, pain, feeding stress, and too much advice from too many directions.
Even sensible advice can backfire when you are depleted. “Sleep when the baby sleeps” is not helpful if your body is too keyed up to rest. “Just breathe” is not helpful if you are in a full panic response. “Trust your instincts” is not helpful if your instincts feel hijacked by fear.
What helps is specific, steady, and kind.
If you are a clinician, this is a good time to screen with the GAD-7 or EPDS, ask directly about intrusive thoughts, sleep, panic, and avoidance, and normalise that anxiety after birth can look very physical. If you are a partner, notice whether the fear is narrowing her world. If you are the mother, notice whether you are still able to rest, feed, and move through the day without constantly bracing.
The next step
Choose one trigger, usually the one that hits hardest at night, and build a two-minute plan around it. Write down what you will do when the wave starts, who can take over if it does not settle, and which signs mean you need more support.
If you want help putting that plan in place, book a free 1:1 postnatal support call with Mumma Sue. It is a calmer way to work out what is normal, what is not, and what support will actually make the next few weeks feel more manageable.

Mumma Sue


