When Waking Up, at Night, and More
Feeling Anxious: When Waking Up, at Night, and More
Does anxiety hold you back in life? Even when you cope well, anxiety can be painful and tiring. Below, learn what causes anxiety and what strategies can reduce it.
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On Thanksgiving, I found my cat nestled among the groceries, chewing contemplatively on the yellow netting that surrounded a quintet of lemons. I shooed her off the counter while my partner transferred the lemons to a bowl and threw away the netting. Even so, I felt a twist in my stomach as I imagined the plastic doing something medically unfortunate to her feline digestive tract. Even as I dug into a slice of fudgy chocolate cake after dinner, these mental pictures distracted me. I wondered whether I should pop back to the house to check on my cat. |
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What Does Feeling Anxious Feel Like? (A Definition)
Anxiety can also manifest cognitively with symptoms such as worries, racing thoughts, rumination, and loss of concentration. For example, the worries about my cat’s health that made it hard for me to present for parts of Thanksgiving dinner. Anxiety might also appear as seemingly endless trains of “what if?” questions.
I’ve summed up anxiety to friends as “basically the conflict of, ‘I can’t, but I must’—but usually at least one of those assumptions is wrong.” Anxiety is linked to our fight-or-flight response and can help us prepare for real threats. For example, if you feel anxious before an important exam, you might study more and earn a higher score than you otherwise would have. If anxiety becomes chronic and disruptive, however, it can be part of a psychological disorder such as generalized anxiety disorder or panic disorder. In the video below, Dr. Jen Gunter explains the difference between normal anxiety and anxiety disorders.
Video: What’s Normal Anxiety–And What’s an Anxiety Disorder?
Opposite of Feeling Anxious
Anxiety usually happens when you care about the outcome of a situation, so apathy can also be considered the opposite of anxiety. If you genuinely stop caring about test grades, for example, you might not feel anxious as you walk into a midterm.
Examples of Feeling Anxious
- Noticing your hands shaking the morning leading up to a professional licensing exam.
- Imagining all the ways a first date could go wrong.
- Checking that your stove is off and your front door is locked—twelve times.
- Repeatedly asking your doctor for reassurance that you don’t have a fatal disease.
- Refusing to go outside because there might be a spider out there.
- Snapping at your friends because you’re anxious about an upcoming meeting with your boss.
Causes of Feeling Anxious
Anxiety can also have physiological causes. For example, sleep deprivation or excessive caffeine intake can cause or exacerbate anxiety. It’s also possible that some people inherit a predisposition to experience more frequent or intense anxiety than average. Even if you’re especially anxiety-prone or have a family history of anxiety, there’s nothing wrong with you. But you might find strategies to manage your anxiety helpful.
How to Stop Feeling Anxious
If you’re in an abusive, chaotic, and/or unpredictable environment, such as a particularly intense job, your best bet may be to leave for a better environment. Of course, leaving is not always (immediately) possible and may not be your preferred solution. If you’re a member of a marginalized group, racist, homophobic, misogynistic, classist, ableist, or otherwise discriminatory environments may (understandably) contribute to your anxiety, but it’s probably not feasible to move beyond the reach of systemic oppression. Pockets of safety (like a good support group) might be the best remedy.
When anxiety becomes a problem, self-help, seeking professional help, or a mix of both approaches might resolve or reduce your symptoms. Numerous workbooks, articles, podcasts, online communities, etcetera exist to support people with anxiety. If you prefer to work with a professional (or if self-help approaches don’t work well for you), many therapists specialize in anxiety treatment. You can also talk with a psychiatrist or general practitioner about medication options.
If money is a barrier to seeking treatment, you might be able to find free, low-cost, or sliding-scale services in your area–for example, local universities may run free or low-cost clinics staffed by counseling and/or clinical psychology students. Non-profit hospital systems may also offer financial aid for medically necessary services, which can include outpatient behavioral health services. (When my finances were at their worst, I applied for financial aid from my local hospital system to help with a roughly $500 bill, and I received a 100% discount. So I recommend getting in touch with the financial aid or billing departments of your healthcare providers to see whether you can work out discounts, sliding scales, or payment plans.)
Feeling Anxious When Waking Up
If you experience morning anxiety, you can try tracking its patterns to see if there’s a trigger in your life. For example, do you wake up feeling anxious on days when you’re planning to see a certain friend? Do you feel more anxious on workdays than on days off? On days when you sleep in? On rainy days? My cat usually curls up in bed next to me, but when she decides to do her own thing, I often wake up feeling more anxious than usual. I also feel more morning anxiety when I travel, or when my partner travels.
If you can identify a trigger (or triggers), you can brainstorm ways to address them. If plans with that one friend are making you anxious, maybe it’s time to distance yourself from that friend or talk to them about the negative aspects of your relationship. If work is fuelling your morning anxiety, you can consider whether to switch jobs, change careers, or adjust the way you work to mitigate the anxiety. You may not be able to influence cats or the weather, but you might be able to balance them with stress-relieving additions like a weighted blanket, a noise machine, or stuffed animals.
Feeling Anxious at Night
Feeling Anxious After Eating
Anxiety after eating can be a symptom of an eating disorder or digestive issue. If you’re experiencing symptoms of an eating disorder, I recommend seeking the help of a therapist who specializes in their treatment. If left untreated, eating disorders can cause long-term or permanent damage to your physical health.
If your anxiety after eating isn’t related to an eating disorder, it might be worth tracking patterns to see whether your anxiety could be linked to a food sensitivity (or conflict with your dining companions). As a teenager, I suffered from chronic gastrointestinal issues that often caused pain. I felt anxious after eating while I waited to find out how my system would react to my meal. In my case, identifying, learning about, and treating my conditions restored my trust in my body and relieved my anxiety.
Feeling Anxious in a Relationship
Feeling Anxious at Work
Depending on employee and anxiety characteristics, anxiety can either improve or worsen work performance (Cheng & McCarthy, 2018). Chronic anxiety can interfere with work by draining employees’ emotional resources (Cheng & McCarthy, 2018). Employees who are emotionally intelligent, motivated, and good at their jobs may perform better with anxiety, however (Cheng & McCarthy, 2018). Even though anxiety need not be a career-killer, I don’t recommend it as a career-booster (unless it’s temporary anxiety that helps your thinking, rather than derailing it).
Feeling Anxious Before A Period
Many people experience anxiety associated with their menstrual cycles. If you already have an anxiety disorder (including OCD and PTSD), your symptoms might get worse the week before and the week during your period (Green & Graham, 2021; Nillni et al., 2021). Again, tracking your anxiety symptoms might be your best first step–this way, you can find out whether and how fluctuations in your anxiety map onto your menstrual cycle. The ability to predict your anxiety symptoms can help you prepare for them. You can also bring your observations to a doctor or therapist, who may be able to offer additional medical or psychotherapeutic support during the most anxious times of your cycle.
Feeling Anxious After Drinking
Hangover anxiety, or “hangxiety,” might happen because of alcohol’s effects on GABA, the brain’s main inhibitory neurotransmitter (Moyer, 2022). Because alcohol simulates the effects of GABA, after a night of drinking, the brain may try to reestablish equilibrium in neurotransmitter signaling by reducing GABA and increasing signaling of an excitatory neurotransmitter called glutamate (Moyer, 2022). Drinking might also increase next-day anxiety by disrupting quality sleep (Moyer, 2022).
Feeling Anxious for No Reason
PTSD is a possible (though by no means the only) explanation for feeling anxious “for no reason.” In her memoir What My Bones Know, Stephanie Foo discusses the “dread” that is her near-constant companion (2022). She explains that this initially inexplicable dread is probably the product of a multiplicity of triggers–with hundreds of traumatic events in her past, she likely has thousands of triggers, most of which she may not consciously recognize.
Quotes on Feeling Anxious
- “To venture causes anxiety, but not to venture is to lose one’s self…. And to venture in the highest is precisely to be conscious of one’s self.” — Søren Kierkegaard
- “A brain scan may reveal the neural signs of anxiety, but a Kokoschka painting, or a Schiele self-portrait, reveals what an anxiety state really feels like. Both perspectives are necessary if we are to fully grasp the nature of the mind, yet they are rarely brought together.” – Eric Kandel
- “Anxiety is part of creativity, the need to get something out, the need to be rid of something or to get in touch with something within.” – David Duchovny
- “A mistake in judgment isn’t fatal, but too much anxiety about judgment is.” – Pauline Kael
- “I think anxiety is dangerous, but it makes you think it’s your friend.” – Noah Baumbach
- “The best therapists can do with sadness, anger, and anxiety is to help patients live in the more comfortable part of their set range.” – Martin Seligman
Articles Related to Feeling Anxious
Books Related to Feeling Anxious
Final Thoughts on Feeling Anxious
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References
- Cheng, B. H., & McCarthy, J. M. (2018). Understanding the dark and bright sides of anxiety: A theory of workplace anxiety. Journal of Applied Psychology, 103(5), 537.
- Foo, S. (2022). What My Bones Know: A Memoir of Healing from Complex Trauma. Ballantine Books.
- Green, S. A., & Graham, B. M. (2021). Symptom fluctuation over the menstrual cycle in anxiety disorders, PTSD, and OCD: a systematic review. Archives of women’s mental health, 1-15.
- Konkel, L. (2021, March 26). What is anxiety? Symptoms, causes, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention. Everyday Health.
- Levine, A., & Heller, R. (2010). Attached: the new science of adult attachment and how it can help you find–and keep–love. Penguin.
- Moyer, M. W. (2022, October 6). Hang-xiety? How a night of drinking can tank your mood. The New York Times.
- Nillni, Y. I., Rasmusson, A. M., Paul, E. L., & Pineles, S. L. (2021). The impact of the menstrual cycle and underlying hormones in anxiety and PTSD: what do we know and where do we go from here? Current psychiatry reports, 23(2), 1-9.
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