
It is our turn to be adults, and everything is going in the pits. Every day, we are bombarded with headlines that make our hearts sink. Wars, diseases, kidnapped children, natural disasters, rogue presidents, femicides, the high cost of living, the list is endless. It feels like the world is spinning faster than we can keep up.
For many of us, it has become a strange routine: scrolling through devastating news while trying to get through our day as if everything is normal. We are carrying the weight of suffering we have not experienced firsthand, yet connect deeply to. We are more connected than ever yet constantly exposed to pain, fear, anger and uncertainty from every corner of the globe. It is emotionally exhausting.
If you are feeling overwhelmed, anxious, emotionally drained or simply tired of trying to process everything that’s happening in the world, you are not alone. You don’t need to stop caring; you only need to learn how to care without losing yourself in the process. Here are five powerful ways to protect your peace in this increasingly chaotic world.
1. Dance.
Our bodies often carry stress long after our minds have stopped thinking about it. As a result, the weight of the world becomes trapped inside us, manifesting as tight shoulders, a clenched jaw, and a heavy chest for reasons we can’t fully explain.
The solution, dance. Dancing reminds your nervous system that you are still alive. Research also shows that dancing can reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression. When you dance, your brain releases feel-good chemicals that improve your mood and emotional wellbeing.
When you dance, your attention shifts from the frightening future to the present moment. The music, rhythm and movement create a temporary escape from all that is happening in the world. So put on a song that makes your soul remember itself and dance.
You don’t need a choreographer, but in the privacy of your home, pretend that you are in a dance music video and channel your inner Ciara. Move your body, shake it and whine till you understand why Shakira’s hips don’t lie. Jump, and stomp your feet to the beat. Dance badly, dance awkwardly; nobody cares, but release all those pent-up emotions.
2. Journal.
Many people are drowning in thoughts they have never spoken aloud: fear, anger, helplessness, and grief. After consuming news and stories of tragedy after tragedy, we can’t expect to continue functioning as though nothing happened.
Unprocessed emotions don’t just disappear; they wait. They sit and pile up until one day you have a nervous breakdown and are forced to deal with them. Journaling is an excellent outlet for your emotions.
After years of research, psychologist James Pennebaker found that expressive writing on emotional occurrences can improve psychological and physical wellbeing. The act of putting feelings into words helps you organise overwhelming experiences into something your mind can understand.
Therefore, write your feelings down. Your journal does not need beautiful sentences; nobody is grading it. Neither will someone question you after reading it; it is simply yours. So, write the truth, the irrational fears, the experiences, the goodness and ugliness of your life, write it all. Ease begins right after a feeling leaves your chest and lands on a page.
3. Scream.
A few hundred years ago, our ancestors were only worried about their village; now we worry about the entire planet before breakfast. We are not designed to absorb this much information, and there are moments when the nervous system becomes overloaded.
And sometimes the healthiest response is not intellectual; it is primal. Scream. Scream into a pillow, inside your car, at a rooftop, at a waterfall, ocean or somewhere safe. Screaming gives your body permission to release energy that has nowhere else to go.
Screaming is one of the somatic and trauma-informed approaches used by most therapists. This approach recognises that emotions are not purely mental experiences; they are physical, too. Sometimes the body needs sound, tears, shaking and release before the mind can find calm again.
4. Pray.
For millions of people, praying is a way of surrendering burdens that feel too heavy to carry. Whether you pray to God, sit in silence with your faith or whisper into the darkness, saying a prayer creates a powerful psychological shift.
It reminds us that we are not responsible for controlling everything. That realisation matters because much of our anxiety comes from trying to manage things that are completely outside our control.
Prayers create space for humility, trust, surrender and acceptance. It helps us reconnect with meaning even when ongoing events seem meaningless. In a world that constantly demands certainty, prayers offer hope and the courage to continue despite the uncertainty. And sometimes that is enough.
5. Meditation.
Imagine carrying a backpack. Every headline adds another stone, every worry about the future, and tragedy adds another and another. Eventually, the weight becomes unbearable. Meditation is the tool that helps you put down your backpack.
Research consistently shows that meditation and mindfulness practices can reduce anxiety, psychological stress and symptoms of depression. Clinical reviews reveal moderate and meaningful improvements in emotional wellbeing among people who regularly meditate.
Learning that you are not your thoughts and that not every thought that enters your mind is worth pursuing is life-changing. With meditation, you learn that you can observe fear without embodying it. You can notice thoughts of worry without becoming worried, and you can acknowledge pain without letting it consume your identity.
Therefore, take five minutes every day to sit in silence and focus on your breath. Quiet the chatter, detach from everything and just be still.
6. Music.
Sometimes there are emotions that words simply can’t reach. Grief that sits too deep, fear that feels too complicated, joy that no words can express or sadness that creeps in like a thief in the night. In such moments when language fails, music often succeeds.
Have you ever noticed how a song can make you cry over something you thought you had dealt with? Or how a melody can make you feel understood even when you are alone? Music has an incredible ability to bypass the logical part of the brain and connect directly with our emotions.
Listening to music can reduce stress hormones, lower anxiety levels, and thus improve our moods. Studies in neuroscience show that music activates multiple regions of the brain associated with emotions, memory and rewards.
Therefore, create a playlist of your favourite music and sing along. Channel your inner Whitney Houston, scream if you must, cry along and for a few minutes, allow yourself to be carried by something other than fear.
7. Switch It All Off.
You don’t need to listen to the news every top of the hour. You also don’t need to watch the 1 pm, 4 pm, 7 pm and 9 pm news every day. Neither do you need to follow every news site on social media. Switch it all off.
Turn it off. The television, notifications, the radio, endless scrolling, constant updates and the algorithmic outrage machine. You don’t need to witness every tragedy in real time to be a compassionate human being.
We have developed a habit of doomscrolling, consuming bad news for hours while increasingly feeling powerless. Reducing social media exposure and taking digital breaks can improve attention, wellbeing and symptoms of anxiety and depression.
The news will still be there tomorrow, and the world will continue turning while you rest. You are allowed to log off, laugh, enjoy your life and experience joy while difficult things happen elsewhere. Therefore, take a break and rest, your nervous system needs it.
Final Thoughts.
If you have been feeling overwhelmed lately, take heart. The world has always been complicated, and it will always be; it’s just that now is our turn to experience it. Therefore, safeguard your peace. Use any or all of the above tips to cope with everything that is happening in the world. ♥

Mourine Warui is a media and communication expert and seasoned writer. Her goal is to empower and offer solutions to everyday girl’s problems while provoking candid and authentic conversations. Other goals are to provide inspiration and entertainment to readers through creative, thought-provoking and edgy stories.


