Researchers conducted semi-structured interviews to explore the experience of accepting anxiety. The study included 26 participants from a non-clinical sample who had prior experience with mindfulness-based anxiety interventions. These individuals described their personal journeys through anxiety episodes in detail.
The main finding was a comprehensive five-stage dynamic model of acceptance. Stage one involved observing through the body with attentional focus on interoceptive experience. Stage two was identifying and acknowledging anxiety. Stage three involved validating and normalizing the experience through validation and self-compassion. Stage four was not reacting, characterized by decentering and nonreactivity. Finally, stage five was staying with the experience via exposure. The study also identified various facilitating factors that support engagement in this acceptance process.
No adverse events or safety concerns were reported because this was an interview-based study rather than a clinical trial. Readers should understand that this work describes a conceptual framework rather than testing a specific treatment. While it offers a structure for developing more targeted clinical interventions, it does not yet show that following these steps reduces anxiety. More research is needed to determine if this model works for everyone or only for those with prior intervention experience.