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Evidence-based ways to manage fear of flying
Flight anxiety isn’t simply a psychological reaction to perceived stress. It’s also a real physiological response where your brain misinterprets a safe situation as a threat. Commercial aviation is incredibly safe and, while flight anxiety may not always be rational, for millions of people it’s very real.
The good news is that there is help available. Fearful flyers can learn practical, evidence-based techniques that can help calm your nervous system and make flying feel more manageable. Resources like Fly Above Fear combine psychological insights with practical strategies to help people understand and reduce their fear.
Breathing, grounding and mindfulness
One of the most effective ways to reduce anxiety is to work with your body rather than against it. When anxiety rises, breathing often becomes shallow and fast. This can reinforce feelings of panic, potentially leading to a panic attack.
By controlling your breathing and slowing it down, you can send strong signals to your body and brain that you’re safe.
For example, breathing in for 4 seconds, holding for 4 and exhaling for 8 can help to activate your parasympathetic nervous system. This can help to reduce stress and settle you during times of anxiety.
Grounding techniques like the 5-4-3-2-1 exercise (where you identify things you can see, touch, hear, smell, and taste) are effective at shifting your focus away from catastrophic thoughts and bringing you back to the present.
Like the breathing exercises outlined above, grounding can be powerful at breaking the anxiety cycle, which can reduce feelings of being overwhelmed.
Another effective approach is mindfulness. These techniques can help you to reframe negative thoughts while flying. Instead of trying to ignore them, mindfulness is about noticing anxious thoughts without reacting to them.
It’s about accepting anxiety is part of the experience of flight – and recognising that this is a temporary state. Doing so can help to reduce “catastrophising” (imagining terrible – but highly unlikely scenarios, like a plane crash).
In the immediate moment, mindfulness empowers you to respond calmly to potential anxiety triggers like turbulence, or unfamiliar sounds and sensations.
Take control by letting go
A key driver of flight anxiety is the feeling of not being in control. Ironically, trying to control everything can increase anxiety. Instead, some people find it powerful to accept what they can’t control and focus on what you can – including your breathing and focus. Accepting anxiety and not fighting it can help to reduce its intensity.
Another strategy you can use including focusing your attention on other things, including films, books, music (or anything else you can think of). When your mind is active and engaged, there’s less space left for negative intrusive thoughts.
We’re not born with an innate fear of flying, it’s a learned response – which means it can be unlearned. We’re all unique, so you’ll need to find the stress reduction techniques and strategies that work for you.
Combining physical calming techniques, distraction techniques, and refocusing your thoughts can help to retrain how you respond to flying. The aim isn’t to remove all anxiety, but to reduce it to acceptable levels. When you do, you can fly calmly and confidently.
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