Make a physical card and practice reading it when calm
A card you’ve never read when calm will not be read when anxious — rehearse it so it becomes reflexive.
Why it works
In a crisis, you will not work through novel cognitive steps — you will retrieve practiced responses. Reading the card daily when calm encodes the rational response as a familiar, accessible memory trace. When the hot thought fires under stress, the card’s content is a primed competitor rather than a novel, effortful alternative requiring working memory.
How to do it
- Write or print the card in a readable format — front: the hot thought and rational response; back: coping steps or grounding prompts.
- Read it every morning for two weeks until you have internalized the content.
- Keep it somewhere you will see it at trigger moments: wallet, phone lock screen, desk drawer.
- Rehearse reading it in a calm moment and then again immediately after a mild anxious episode.
Evidence
Memory reconsolidation and priming research shows that frequently rehearsed content is more accessible under high-load conditions than new information — directly supporting the practice-before-crisis design. (mechanistic)
The specific dual-rehearsal protocol (calm + mild anxiety) is a clinical refinement rather than an independently trialed design; the underlying priming mechanism is well established.
Common mistake
Writing a card and carrying it without reading it until a crisis — at which point it feels alien and requires effortful reading you cannot do under high arousal.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach stores your coping cards and delivers a daily review prompt, ensuring the content is practiced in calm so it is accessible under stress.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).