Herbs for Teenage Anxiety: How to Deal with Stress
Oct 23, 2024Some people call anxiety the queen of mental health struggles, especially in the U.S. where millions of people get diagnosed with anxiety every year. Anxiety happens for a wide variety of reasons, and it afflicts as many as 40 million adults in the U.S. alone. Unfortunately, anxiety disorders, including ADHD, are common among adolescents, too, with nearly 1 in 3 teens experiencing some form of anxiety by the age of 18​.
There are ways to ease anxiety (and we’re talking natural ways without pharmaceutical meds). Here, we’ll explore mindfulness, exercise, and top of the list: why your kitchen might just be the best tool you’ve got.
Mindfulness to Ease Anxiety for Teenagers
Mindfulness is like tapping the pause button on the chaos in your brain. It’s a thinking technique that can allow you to “blur the edges” so things aren’t so sharp. It’s about focusing on the now, rather than letting your thoughts spiral into the future or past. Think of it as training your mind to stay in one spot, like a loyal golden retriever, instead of letting it run wild.
How can you start? Try this: when you feel anxiety creeping in, stop and take three deep breaths, and just notice how your body feels. Are your shoulders tense? Is your jaw clenched? Relaxing your body can help send signals to your brain that you are safe and it doesn’t need to activate all the flight-or-flight mechanisms it’s ready to unleash.
Exercise to Ease Tension
Exercise magic can happen with just 30 minutes of moderate exercise (like brisk walking, dancing, or even gardening). Why? Because exercise releases endorphins, the feel-good chemicals in your brain that can help balance out stress hormones like cortisol.
Herbs or Foods to Ease Anxiety for Teens
What’s more, the ultimate way to fight anxiety could be hiding in your pantry? It’s true, the foods you eat and the herbs you use can have a huge impact on how you feel. This is especially important for teens.
As an herbalist, I study and teach how herbs and nutrients chemically act in the brain. In my online, on-demand course Herbs for the Brain Beginner, I teach you how to use foods and herbs that naturally ease anxiety. The following herbs are some of the dozens of herbs and foods that can help you focus your thoughts positively, ease your response to stress, and feel better and more relaxed.
Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera)
This Ayurvedic herb calms nerves, reduces anxiety and eases how you react to stress. It helps you chill​, and it can even be mildly sedative meaning it can help you sleep. If anxiety is keeping you up at night, try a teaspoon of ashwagandha powder in a cup of hot milk before bed.
Chamomile (Matricaria recutita)
Chamomile tea is soothing, fragrant and relaxing. Hot chamomile tea is known to help with anxiety and, as a mild sedative, can help you sleep. It’s also mildly bitter, meaning it is a good herb for digestion. This combination of gently sedative and bitter makes chamomile a great herb for when you’re so anxious you get butterflies in your stomach or you feel nauseous​.
Lavender (Lavandula spp.)
High in fragrant essential oils, lavender can reduce feelings of panic and calm your senses. You can use lavender oil in a diffuser or add the flowers to tea, especially when you’re drinking something with catnip, nettles, or oatstraw—other herbs I describe in the Herbs for the Brain courses that are wonderfully nourishing and brain-supportive.
Motherwort (Leonura cardiaca)
In the mint family, this herb’s leaves taste wildly bitter, so motherwort doesn’t make a good tea (but check out this blog for how to make delicious honey-based herbal remedies). However, nibbling on one single leaf can help avert a panic attack, and taking it as a tincture (an herbal concentrate) can quickly ease feelings of anxiety and worry.​
Learn how to use herbs for anxiety
If you’re a beginner, or someone curious about this topic and you want to support yourself or loved ones, check out Herbs for the Brain Beginner online course, which will provide you a solid overview, a look at dozens of herbs and foods, downloadable resources, and a 24-recipe e-book to help you create an action plan.
If you are a nurse, acupuncturist, social worker, herbalist, aromatherapist, or other health care professional interested in diving deep into botanical and nutrient-based therapies for herbal and mental health, see the Herbs for the Brain Certificate comprehensive certificate course, with 8.5 hours of video instruction, a Student Workbook, Student Coursebook, and up-to-date scientific and research-based case studies.
Nothing on this page or website is intended to treat, diagnose, cure or prevent any disease. This page and website is for information and educational purposes only.