Build a personal soothe menu

Know in advance — not when distressed — which specific soothing strategies actually work for you.

Why it works

Under distress, cognitive resources for decision-making are depleted. If someone must figure out what to do while in the emotional spike, the cognitive load competes with the soothing itself. A pre-built, personally validated menu — knowing before the event which inputs work for this person — removes the decision-making requirement at the worst possible moment.

How to do it

  1. When calm, list 3–5 things that reliably soothe you across different resource levels (time, energy, location).
  2. Be specific and honest: "a 10-minute hot shower" rather than "relaxation."
  3. Test them deliberately and note which ones actually work versus which you imagine should work.
  4. Keep the list visible where you would reach for it in distress.

Evidence

Pre-planning regulation strategies is consistent with if-then planning research and with implementation intentions work, which show that pre-deciding a response reduces the cognitive load of executing it under stress. The soothe menu applies this principle to regulation. (mechanistic)

A soothe menu must be personalized and tested — what works for one person may not work for another, and "should work" and "does work" often differ.

Sources

  • Gollwitzer & Sheeran (2006), implementation intentions meta-analysis, Advances in Experimental Social Psychology

Common mistake

Building a soothe menu of things that seem healthy or should work, rather than testing them during calm periods and including only what actually produces soothing for this specific person.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach helps you build and refine your soothe menu across sessions — noting which strategies you actually used and whether they worked, and updating the list based on real evidence rather than assumption.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).