Sienna Miller has said that her early experiences of fame were "anxiety-inducing" and left her feeling "out of control" of her life.
"Early experiences of fame were defiantly anxiety inducing."
— BBC The One Show (@BBCTheOneShow) April 12, 2022
Sienna Miller opens up about anxiety and the trick she uses to help that she's now passed on to her daughter.
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The actress, 40, rose to fame with her roles in the 2004 films Layer Cake, where she starred alongside Daniel Craig, and romantic comedy Alfie, playing the love-interest of Jude Law.
Speaking to BBC's The One Show about her experiences of anxiety alongside fellow guest Will Young, she noted that they both became well known in a "very different world".
Miller said: "Early experiences of fame are definitely anxiety-inducing and just feeling completely out of control of your life, really.
"And Will and I were probably a similar age and at a similar time when we became well known and it was a very different world and it was quite overwhelming.
"And all sorts of different ways in which were wrong of trying to just navigate that, you just felt out of control.
"But life does tend to settle down and I agree that breathing really helps."
She noted that she does breathing techniques with her daughter when she is struggling to sleep, which she feels "definitely works" to help calm her.

Leave Right Now singer Young recalled a Vogue photoshoot he did early on in his career which caused him to have an anxiety attack.
He said: "I just felt like, 'Oh my God, everyone's relying on me'.
"There was such a massive crew there and I thought 'If I'm not on what's going to happen?'
"And that was my first sort of panic attack.
"But I've learned a lot of techniques now to deal with that."
The singer has used his own experience of mental health troubles to help him write his latest book titled Be Yourself and Happier: The A-Z Of Wellbeing.
Miller will play Sophie Whitehouse, the wife of parliamentary minister James Whitehouse, after her husband is accused of a scandalous crime in the upcoming psychological courtroom drama Anatomy of a Scandal.
Big Little Lies creator David E Kelley and House of Cards showrunner Melissa James Gibson are behind the six-part adaptation of Sarah Vaughan's best-selling novel of the same name.
Source: Press Association