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Worry time

Trying not to worry rarely works. Scheduled worry flips it: give worry one short, contained window, and gently postpone it the rest of the day.

Medically reviewed by Shariq Refai, MD, MBA, FAPA, board certified psychiatrist · Last reviewed June 17, 2026 · Editorial policy

A tidy calm desk with a small clock and a notebook by a window, with a teal accent
TL;DR. Scheduled worry is a cognitive behavioral technique. Rather than fighting anxious thoughts all day, you set a brief daily window for them. Paradoxically, knowing worry has an appointment reduces how much it intrudes the rest of the time.
Quick overview. Pick a length, press start, and for this window only let yourself worry on purpose. Outside the window, when a worry shows up, jot it down and tell it you will get to it at worry time. The prompts walk you through sorting what is solvable from what is not.
15:00
Press start. For this window only, let yourself worry on purpose.

Why it works

Why scheduling worry calms it down

Telling yourself to stop worrying usually backfires, because suppression keeps the thought active and adds frustration on top. Scheduled worry takes the opposite approach: it grants worry a defined time and place, which lets the brain relax its grip during the day, since the concern hasn't been ignored, just postponed.

By the time the window arrives, many worries have lost their urgency or resolved on their own. For the ones that remain, a contained window turns vague dread into a short, structured review, which is far easier to step out of than an all-day background hum.

Doing it well

How to set up your window

Choose the same time each day, ten to twenty minutes, and not right before bed, since you don't want to stir things up at lights-out. During the day, keep a quick note of worries as they appear and genuinely postpone them; the postponing is the active ingredient.

In the window, sort each worry into two piles: things you can act on and things you can't. For the actionable ones, write the single next step. For the rest, practice letting them sit without solving, which is a skill that gets easier with repetition.

Limits

What it can and can't do

Scheduled worry is a well-supported self-help tool, not therapy. It works best for everyday worry and rumination, and many people are surprised how much it helps within a week or two of consistent use. It pairs naturally with grounding and breathing for the moments a worry feels too big to postpone.

If worry is constant, disabling, or comes with panic, low mood, or sleeplessness most days, that's beyond what a timer can fix and is exactly what evaluation and treatment are for.

Frequently asked questions

Good questions, clear answers

Is this therapy?

No. It's a self-help tool based on a cognitive behavioral technique, not therapy, diagnosis, or treatment. Persistent or disabling worry deserves a clinician's help.

What if a worry feels urgent during the day?

Write it down and tell yourself you'll give it full attention at worry time. Genuine emergencies are the exception and should be handled immediately.

How long should the window be?

Ten to twenty minutes is typical. The same time each day works best, and not right before bed.

What do I actually do during the window?

Review your noted worries, sort them into solvable and not, write one next step for the solvable ones, and practice letting the rest sit without fixing them.

Won't a daily worry session make me worry more?

For most people it's the opposite. Containing worry to one window tends to reduce how much it spills into the rest of the day.

What if I can't postpone a worry?

That's normal at first. Pair worry time with the grounding or breathing tools for in-the-moment relief, and the postponing gets easier with practice.

Is anything saved?

No. The timer runs in your browser and stores nothing.

Learn more

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Medical Disclaimer: This content is provided for general educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Reading this content does not create a doctor-patient relationship with shrinkMD, Dr. Shariq Refai, or any affiliated clinician. Always seek the advice of a qualified healthcare professional regarding questions about a medical or mental health condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking care because of something you have read on this website. If you are experiencing a medical or mental health emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.

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