WellBEing Wins w/ Debbey Woodruff – Stay Informed Without Sacrificing Your Peace

Reading the News Without the Stress Spiral

Be honest—how do you feel when you read the news?

Calm and grounded?
Or tense, irritated, maybe even a little panicky after just a few headlines?

Today’s media landscape is designed to grab attention, and fear is one of its most reliable tools. Sensational, extreme headlines—on both sides of the aisle—pull us in fast. The problem? What you read in a few minutes can impact the tone of the rest of your day.
Your nervous system stays on high alert. And suddenly, it’s consuming your thoughts and energy. 

The good news: you can stay informed without sacrificing your mental and physical health. It starts with how—and when—you engage.

Why the News Hits So Hard

Our brains aren’t wired for constant crisis. When headlines trigger fear or outrage, your body often reacts as if the threat is personal and immediate—tight shoulders, a clenched jaw, a racing heart.

Left unchecked, this cycle can:

  • Increase stress and anxiety
  • Disrupt sleep
  • Make you reactive rather than thoughtful
  • Drain your energy for what actually matters in your life

Staying informed doesn’t require staying activated.

6 Practical Strategies to Read the News Without the Stress Spiral

1. Set an Intention Before You Read

Ask yourself one simple question:
How do I want to feel while reading the news?

Allow yourself to feel that way before you open the news. Try to maintain that focus (thoughts follow focus) while reading.

2. Get Grounded First

Before reading the news:

  • Take 3 slow, deep breaths
  • Relax your shoulders and jaw
  • Soften your face
  • Invite a sense of calm into your body

Starting from a regulated state changes how the information lands.

3. Pause When You Feel Triggered

Notice yourself getting riled up? Stop reading.
Close your eyes and bring attention to your body:

  • Where do you feel tension—neck, chest, stomach, head?
  • Send the air / breath into that area
  • Don’t try to get rid of it—just invite relaxation

When your body settles, then decide whether to keep reading or step away.

4. Never Read the News Before Bed

Your nervous system needs calm to sleep well.

Evening is for:

  • Doing something enjoyable – like a hobby
  • Peaceful or uplifting content

5. Shift From Judgment to Neutral Observation

Instead of labeling everything as good or bad, try simply noticing:

  • “This is what’s happening.”

Reducing the story around the event helps you stay clear-headed; not emotionally hijacked.

6. Focus on What You Can Control

You have limited control over governments, systems, and other people.

You do have control over:

  • Your reactions
  • Your actions
  • Where your attention goes

From a calm place, ask:
What—if anything—is the right next step for me, in alignment with my values?

This approach reduces “panic mode.”

This Isn’t About Denial—It’s About Protecting Your Own Health

Staying calm doesn’t mean:

  • Ignoring 
  • Denying hard truths
  • Silencing concern

It means choosing not to suffer longer than necessary.

You can acknowledge reality without letting it consume you. You can care deeply without being emotionally flooded. And you can act from love, clarity, and compassion instead of fear.

The Takeaway

Peace doesn’t come from avoiding the world—it comes from learning how to meet it differently.

When you train your brain to pause, regulate, and choose where it focuses, you protect your health, your energy, and your ability to respond wisely—even in the midst of the storm.

And that, in itself, is a powerful act of wellness.

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