Anxiety is the body's natural alarm system — a response designed to protect you from perceived threats. When we feel anxious, the nervous system releases stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline, triggering physical sensations: a racing heart, tightened chest, shallow breathing, or a sense of dread. These responses made evolutionary sense when threats were immediate and physical. The difficulty is that our nervous systems haven't caught up with modern life, and can fire the same alarm for a difficult conversation, a looming deadline, or even an uncertain future.
Anxiety exists on a spectrum. Mild anxiety can sharpen focus and motivate action. But when it becomes frequent, intense, or disproportionate to the situation — or when it starts shaping decisions, like avoiding things you'd otherwise want to do — it signals that the system is running on overdrive. Many people live with this kind of anxiety for years without naming it, assuming it's just "how they are."
One of the most helpful shifts is learning to observe anxiety rather than fight it. Resistance — telling yourself "I shouldn't feel this way" — often amplifies the feeling. Noticing it with some distance ("I'm feeling anxious right now, and that makes sense") can interrupt the cycle. This doesn't make anxiety disappear, but it changes your relationship with it.
- Anxiety is a normal nervous system response — not a character flaw or weakness.
- Physical symptoms (racing heart, tight chest) are part of the anxiety cycle, not signs of danger.
- Observing anxiety without fighting it is often more effective than trying to suppress it.
- Persistent anxiety that limits your life is worth discussing with a professional.