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Self-Care & Coping Toolkit: Daily Strategies

Self-Care & Coping Toolkit

Daily strategies for survivors — tap any section to open it

Self-care isn’t only bubble baths and face masks. At its heart, it’s survival — getting through the day, doing what you need to keep going. Some days that’s getting out of bed. Other days it’s setting a boundary, or crying in the shower, or laughing with a friend.

You don’t have to do everything here. Pick what resonates, try what feels manageable, and adapt as you need to.

You’re doing better than you think you are.

🌿In a panic attack or flashback

The 5-4-3-2-1 grounding method

When panic rises or a flashback takes hold, this brings you back to the present. Stop, and slowly notice:

5things you can seethe clock, a plant, the floor, your hands
4things you can touchyour clothes, the chair, your hair
3things you can heartraffic, birdsong, your own breathing
2things you can smellcoffee, soap, fresh air, a scent you imagine
1thing you can tastea mint, some water, the taste in your mouth

Other gentle ways to re-anchor

Movement: stamp your feet and feel the floor, shake out your hands, stand and feel your weight settle through your legs.

Touch: hold something textured — a soft jumper, a smooth stone, a pet’s fur. A weighted blanket on your lap can feel steadying.

Sound & focus: play familiar music and follow it, describe a detailed picture out loud, or count slowly backwards from 100.

💨Breathing exercises
Press start

Follow the circle — it grows as you breathe in, holds, then shrinks as you breathe out.

Box breathing

In · 4Hold · 4Out · 4Hold · 4

Repeat four or five times.

4-7-8 breathing

In through nose · 4Hold · 7Out through mouth · 8

Repeat about four times.

Belly breathing

One hand on your chest, one on your belly. Breathe in slowly through your nose and feel your belly — not your chest — expand. Breathe out slowly through your mouth, and continue for a few minutes.

🌅Getting through the day
A gentle morning. Wake softly, take three slow breaths before getting up, and remind yourself: I am safe. It’s a new day. Drink a glass of water, move in any way that feels good, and set one small intention — today I’ll eat three meals, or today I’ll be kind to myself. If messages or news set a stressful tone, you don’t have to check them first thing.
Through the day. Check in now and then: How am I feeling? What do I need? When did I last eat or drink? Take breaks, step outside for five minutes, eat something small even without appetite, and keep water nearby. “I need a break” is a complete sentence.
Winding down. Change out of day clothes, dim the lights, ease off screens. Make your sleeping space feel safe in whatever way works for you. Then, if you’d like: a short journal entry, three small gratitudes, a sleep story.
I survived today. I did the best I could. I am safe right now.
🧭Managing triggers

Triggers differ for everyone — a smell, a raised voice, an anniversary, a feeling of being trapped. Keeping a short log (what triggered you, where, what helped) reveals patterns, and patterns let you prepare.

A trigger action plan

  • Notice early signs — tension in your shoulders or jaw, racing heart, shallow breathing.
  • Use grounding — practise your techniques while calm so they come easily when you’re not.
  • Create distance — excuse yourself, step outside, leave if you can. You’re allowed to.
  • Reach for support — keep two or three trusted people to call or text.
  • Self-soothe, then process — be gentle; being triggered isn’t a failure. Triggers lessen with time.

And it’s completely okay to avoid triggers while you heal — to skip an event or say no to something that’s too much. You can work through them with a therapist when you’re ready.

📓Journaling & creative expression

Writing helps you process emotion, track progress, and notice patterns. There’s no right way — sentences, lists, doodles, letters you’ll never send. If safety is a concern, use a password-protected app or keep a journal well hidden.

Prompts to start with

  • How am I feeling right now? What was hard today? What am I proud of?
  • One thing I did to care for myself. A moment I felt strong.
  • What I’d tell my younger self. The ways I’ve survived.
  • Where do I want to be in a year? What small step can I take tomorrow?

Trauma often lives in parts of the brain that don’t deal in words, so creative expression helps too — art, poetry, music, dance, gardening, baking. No talent required. This is about expression, not perfection.

🌊Your safe place

A “safe place” visualisation gives your mind somewhere calm to go when the present feels too much. It can be real or imagined — a beach, a forest clearing, a cosy room, a hillside. Settle somewhere comfortable, take a few slow breaths, and build it with your senses:

1Choose your place. Picture somewhere you feel completely safe and at ease. No one else needs to be there unless you want them to be.
2Look around. What can you see? The colours, the light, what’s near and far. Let the details fill in slowly.
3Add sound and scent. Waves, birdsong, a crackling fire; salt air, pine, fresh bread. The more senses, the more real it becomes.
4Notice how your body feels. The ground supporting you, a gentle warmth, the air on your skin. Let your shoulders drop.
5Stay a while. Breathe slowly and let yourself simply be here. You can return to this place any time — it’s yours.

It can help to give your place a name or a word. Saying it quietly to yourself can become a shortcut back whenever you need it.

🤍Being kinder to yourself

After abuse, the inner critic is often loud — frequently echoing words that were once said to you. You don’t have to believe it. When you notice harsh self-talk, pause and ask: is this true? is it helpful? would I say it to someone I love? Then try gently reframing it.

I should be over this by now.
Healing has no timetable. I’m moving at the pace I need.
I’m being weak and dramatic.
My reactions make sense given what I’ve lived through.
It was my fault.
I am not responsible for how someone chose to treat me.
I’m failing at everything.
I’m doing my best in genuinely hard circumstances — and I’m still here.

A simple practice for hard moments: place a hand on your heart, and offer yourself what you’d offer a friend — this is really hard right now. I’m doing the best I can. May I be gentle with myself. Self-compassion isn’t letting yourself off the hook; it’s the steadier ground that healing grows from.

You are not what was done to you.
🫶Body & emotional care

Trauma lives in the body, so physical care helps rebuild safety. Rest even when sleep is hard, eat regular meals even if small, and move in ways that feel good rather than punishing. Keep up with your GP and any medication. Be mindful that alcohol and drugs tend to make trauma symptoms worse over time — if coping is becoming difficult, that’s worth reaching out about, without shame.

Releasing tension

Progressive muscle relaxation: gently tense each muscle group for a few seconds, then release and notice the difference, working from toes to head. Gentle self-massage, trauma-informed yoga, or a body-scan meditation can help you reconnect at your own pace.

Letting emotions move

All emotions are valid — including numbness. You don’t have to “get over it” on anyone’s timeline. When feelings overwhelm, try a container visualisation: picture a strong box, place the feelings inside, close it securely, knowing you can open it later when you’re ready. Then: name it, validate it, breathe through it, reach out if needed.

🛡️Boundaries & connection

Boundaries are the limits you set to protect your wellbeing. Identify what you need, communicate it clearly (“I need…”, “I’m not comfortable with…”), and don’t feel you must over-explain — no is a complete sentence. Enforce them consistently, and expect some pushback from people used to you having none; pushback doesn’t mean the boundary is wrong.

Common boundaries after abuse: not discussing what happened with certain people, limiting contact with those who defend the person who harmed you, declining last-minute plans when you need predictability, and blocking or muting on social media. Boundaries are self-preservation, not selfishness.

For connection, quality matters more than quantity — a small, supportive circle is plenty. Solitude to recharge is healthy; isolation that quietly disconnects you from everyone is worth noticing. If you feel cut off, reach out to someone you trust.

When self-care isn’t enough

Self-care is powerful, but it’s not a substitute for support when things are serious. Please reach for more help if you’re having thoughts of suicide or self-harm, can’t manage daily tasks, feel unsafe, or notice your symptoms worsening. Needing help isn’t failing — recognising it is a strength.

Emergency999
Samaritans (24/7)116 123
SHOUT crisis texttext SHOUT to 85258
National Domestic Abuse Helpline0808 2000 247

Ongoing support: your GP, NHS Talking Therapies (free self-referral in England), a private therapist, or a survivor support group.

Be patient with yourself. Keep what works, let the rest go. Your practice will evolve as you heal. You are surviving. You are doing enough.
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A note on identity

NAAVoices was originally founded under a pseudonym to protect my identity. With time and healing I have come to realise that reducing stigma does not come from staying hidden — it comes from openness. Domestic abuse, mental health difficulties, and the need for advocacy happen to people from every walk of life. Speaking openly is an important part of normalising these conversations so that others feel safe to do the same.

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