There is a specific kind of moment that people dealing with intense emotions know well. Something happens, or sometimes nothing specific happens at all, and suddenly the distress is too high to think clearly. The skills that seemed manageable in a calm moment feel completely out of reach. The goal shifts from making progress to simply getting through the next hour without doing something that makes things worse.
DBT has a whole module dedicated to exactly this kind of moment. It is called distress tolerance, and within it, one of the most immediately useful strategies is self-soothing through the five senses. It is not a cure and it is not therapy in itself. But it is a practical, portable tool that can bring down the intensity of a crisis enough for the thinking brain to come back online.
Why the Senses Matter During Emotional Distress
When a person is in a state of high emotional distress, the body’s threat response system is activated. Heart rate increases, breathing changes, the prefrontal cortex, which handles reasoning and decision-making, becomes less accessible. In that state, trying to think your way out of the distress is working against the biology of what is happening.
The senses offer a different entry point. They are immediate and physical. They do not require complicated reasoning. When you engage a sense deliberately during a moment of crisis, you are giving the nervous system a direct, concrete input that can begin to bring physiological arousal down. This is why breathing exercises work, why cold water on the face works, why certain sounds can shift a mood quickly. The body responds to sensory input in ways that can interrupt the spiral of escalating distress.
The Five Senses as Anchors
In the self-soothing framework used in DBT, each of the five senses, sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch, offers its own set of possible anchors. The goal is to identify, in advance, specific things within each category that you personally find calming or grounding. That preparation matters, because in the middle of a crisis you do not have the bandwidth to come up with ideas from scratch.
Building Your Own Portable Crisis Kit
The idea of a crisis kit is straightforward. It is a collection of items, or a list of accessible experiences, organized around the five senses, that you can turn to when distress peaks. Portable means that the components are things you can have with you or access quickly, not things that require special conditions.
Here is what that looks like across each sense.
Sight
For sight, the focus is on visual input that you personally associate with calm or comfort. This is different for everyone. Some people find images of open water or natural landscapes settling. Others do better with something more concrete, like a specific photograph, a piece of art, or even a particular color. The practical version of this for a kit might be a small printed photo kept in a wallet, a calming image set as a phone wallpaper, or a list of specific YouTube videos that reliably help.
Sound
Sound is one of the most immediate sensory anchors available. Music is the obvious option, but the specific effect depends entirely on the individual and the situation. Some people need something slow and instrumental. Others find silence more settling than any sound. Nature sounds, white noise, or recordings of rain are commonly effective. Having a specific playlist already prepared means you are not trying to choose music when you are too distressed to make decisions.
Smell
Smell is the sense most directly connected to the limbic system, which is involved in emotional processing. Certain scents can trigger a calming response quickly and without much conscious effort. Lavender is commonly cited, but the most effective scents are usually the ones tied to personal associations with safety or comfort. A small bottle of a familiar scent, a certain lotion, or even a piece of fabric that smells like home can serve this function. This is easy to keep in a bag or a pocket.
Taste
For taste, the goal is not about eating for comfort in the way that phrase is usually used. It is about using specific taste experiences as sensory anchors. Something intensely flavored, sour candy, a strong mint, or tea with a specific familiar taste can draw attention into the body and away from the mental spiral of distress. It can also slow things down physically, particularly if it involves sipping something slowly.
Touch
Touch may be the most grounding of the senses because it is the most direct connection to the physical body. Cold water on the hands or face, a specific texture that feels settling, holding something with some weight to it, or even the physical sensation of pressing your feet flat against the floor can bring a person back into their body when emotional distress is pulling them out of it. A smooth stone, a soft fabric, or a stress ball kept in a bag are all simple, accessible options.
How Distress Tolerance Fits Into Broader Treatment
Self-soothing is a distress tolerance strategy, which means its purpose is to help a person survive a crisis without making things worse, not to solve the underlying problem. In programs like Southside DBT, clients learn to see distress tolerance tools as a first layer of response, something to reach for when emotional intensity is too high for the other skills to work effectively. Once the crisis has passed, the deeper work can continue.
Building your kit before you need it is the most important part. When distress is low, spend some time going through each sense and identifying two or three things that work for you. Write them down. Assemble the physical items if possible. That preparation is itself a form of taking your own emotional needs seriously, which is something a lot of people in DBT are learning to do for the first time.






