Overcoming Anxiety with Jewish Wisdom


In 2024, 43% of adults said they feel more anxious than they did the previous year. This mental state of mind is a universal experience, a sense that something is wrong even when everything looks fine on the outside. The world is moving faster than our souls can process, and we are facing times of fear and the pressure of expectations.
We scroll, search, and self-soothe, trying everything from social media and meditation apps, to Steve Harvey comedy reruns (yes, that one got me through the pandemic). But much of what we find only quiets the noise temporarily.
What if lasting relief doesn’t come from escape but from deep reconnection?
What we are truly seeking is to discharge the negative emotions at their root – to change our core programming. How? By developing and connecting to something real: the divinity within us, which truly offers lasting healing. This is where Jewish wisdom comes in so beautifully.
Jewish wisdom offers time-tested, soul-centered tools for transforming anxiety from a source of panic into a portal for purpose, presence, and peace.
Here are six Jewish tools to help you handle anxiety – not by bypassing it, but by working with it at the root.
1. Reframe Anxiety as a Call to Purpose
Anxiety often stems from the illusion of being powerless. But what if fear is actually a signal that you’re standing on the edge of something meaningful?
Tool: Ask yourself, what if this fear is pointing me toward my mission?
Illustration: Queen Esther faced intense anxiety when asked to risk her life to save her people. Her initial fear was real. But when reminded that she may have been placed in the palace “for such a time as this” (Esther 4:14), her fear transformed into action. She fasted, prayed, and showed up with courage. The anxiety didn’t disappear but her sense of purpose gave her strength.
Reframe your fear into action. Courage is not the absence of anxiety but the willingness to act through it, grounded in higher purpose.
2. Name What You Feel and Let It Speak
When anxiety arises, our instinct is to suppress or ignore it. But it is important to name it, feel it, and even pray through it.
Tool: Give language to your emotions. Say them out loud. Write them down. Make them into prayer.
Illustration: King David did this as the author of many chapters in Psalms. He expressed his deepest fears, loneliness, and heartbreak, and also his hope and trust. His emotional honesty didn’t weaken him, it helped him stay connected to the Divine, with Psalms as his emotional roadmap. “Out of the depths, I call to You, God” (Psalm 130:1).
He offers a raw, poetic portrayal of emotional struggle where he expresses fear, abandonment, despair – but also trust, hope, and joy.
He doesn’t suppress his anxiety; he voices it and gives it language, turning his inner chaos into prayer. This is a powerful example for us, especially for those who feel they must hide their mental struggles.
3. Talk to a Friend and Talk to God Like You Would a Friend
When you have someone to talk to, such as a trusted friend, family member, or professional, the healing begins and anxiety diminishes. Additionally, you don’t need to know Hebrew or be religious to talk to God like you would a friend, you just need to be honest. Jewish spiritual masters encouraged raw, unfiltered conversations with God.
Tool: Try talking to a friend and also talking to God like He was your friend.
Illustration: Rebbe Nachman of Breslov said, “If you believe you can damage, believe you can repair.” He saw anxiety and despair as illusions of separation from God. His antidote? Talk to God. Every day.
He encouraged a practice called hitbodedut, a private, free-flowing, open conversation with God, as a therapeutic spiritual practice. He knew that anxious minds need both expression and divine reassurance and he reminds us that despair is a lie we tell ourselves; joy, even in darkness, is possible.
Try practicing daily, personal, unscripted prayer. Walk and talk with God. Whisper. Cry. Rant. Listen. Talking honestly to a trusted person and to God helps ease an anxious mind.
4. Ground Yourself in the Present Moment
Anxiety pulls us into the future. Bring yourself back to the now.
Tool: Practice presence by saying “Here I am” in moments of overwhelm. Take a breath. Come back to yourself.
Illustration: In Eckhart Tolle’s best-selling book The Power of Now, he speaks of grounding yourself in the present moment. In Jewish history, when God called to Abraham or Moses, their reply wasn’t a plan or an excuse. It was simple presence: Hineni. I am here.
This idea is echoed in Jewish mindfulness practices, such the weekly retreat, which is the gift of Shabbat from the pressures of performance. Unplug, slow down, and return to what matters most: relationships, rest, and the soul. Shabbat isn’t just a break, it’s a reset for the nervous system and soul.
Lighting candles or taking one tech-free hour can center your nervous system.
5. Connect to Others; You are not Alone
Anxiety grows in silence. Connection breaks the spell.
It’s not merely a psychological state but often reflects a deeper sense of disconnection from self, from others, and from the Divine. Connection with purpose, God, and community plays a central role in restoring inner peace.
Tool: Seek connection in community, in study, in shared meals or honest conversation.
Illustration: Jewish life thrives in community for a reason. Jewish tradition emphasizes community as a core source of support and healing. A study group, a Shabbat meal, or even an online Torah class or blog post – these aren’t just rituals, they’re grounding practices.
Anxiety isolates. Community reconnects.
6. Take One Small Action Today
Activity is a healer of anxiety.
Jewish wisdom honors the paradox as well: trust in God and tie your camel.
You can believe in God and go to therapy! We are called to take action while remembering we’re not in charge of the final outcome.
Tool: Take at least one grounded action a day. Seeking therapy, journaling, setting boundaries, even reaching out for help – these are not signs of weakness, they are acts of strength.
Illustration: Practicing commandments (mitzvot) grounds the soul in meaningful action. Even something small – a kind word, giving charity, lighting a candle, can reorient us. Daily gratitude is another powerful tool. Jewish tradition encourages beginning each morning with a simple thank-you to God for waking up (Modeh Ani prayer). Gratitude is not about ignoring pain; it’s about remembering what’s still good, even when things are hard, even when we feel anxiety creeping in.
Final Thoughts
Anxiety doesn’t mean you’re broken; it means you’re human.
Jewish wisdom doesn’t promise a life without struggle. It validates the emotional struggles we face, and offers spiritual guidance and tools to move through anxiety with honesty, connection, and purpose.
There are signposts as to how we can change our response to anxiety at our core. Anxiety is not a barrier to connection with God and with ourselves, it’s a doorway. Through trust, prayer, presence, purpose, and community, we can not only cope, but also be transformed.
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Date: April 27, 2025