Why Anxiety Feels Physical Even When You Know Nothing Is Wrong
Reassurance feels like the sensible response to anxiety. When you feel worried, it makes sense to seek certainty: asking someone you trust, checking symptoms, replaying conversations, or mentally reviewing decisions. In the moment, reassurance often works. The tension eases. The worry softens.
Yet for many people, the relief doesn’t last. Within minutes, hours, or days, anxiety returns — sometimes more intensely. This can lead to frustration, self-criticism, or the belief that something must be seriously wrong.
This article explains why reassurance doesn’t calm anxiety for long, not because reassurance is bad or weak, but because of how anxiety learns — and how a different, more supportive response can gradually change the pattern.
What Reassurance Looks Like in Everyday Life
Reassurance isn’t always obvious. It can show up in many subtle ways, including:
Asking others for certainty or repeated opinions
Googling symptoms or outcomes
Checking bodily sensations
Re‑reading messages or emails
Mentally reviewing conversations or decisions
Seeking guarantees about the future
All of these behaviours share the same intention: to feel safe again.
Why Reassurance Works — Briefly
Reassurance works because it temporarily reduces uncertainty. The nervous system settles when it believes a threat has been resolved. This is why reassurance can feel so compelling and necessary.
In the short term, reassurance calms anxiety at a thinking level. You receive information, confirmation, or comfort — and the mind relaxes.
The problem isn’t that reassurance works. It’s that it works too well, too briefly.
How Anxiety Learns From Reassurance
Anxiety is not just a set of thoughts; it is a learning system. Each time reassurance reduces discomfort, the brain learns:
“When I feel anxious, I need certainty to be safe.”
Over time, this teaches the nervous system to stay alert for the next potential threat — because safety now feels dependent on checking or reassurance.
Instead of anxiety fading, it becomes more sensitive.
Why the Calm Doesn’t Last
Reassurance works at a cognitive level, but anxiety is largely driven by the nervous system. Once the reassurance fades, the body remains primed for threat. The mind then searches for the next question, doubt, or possibility.
This creates a familiar cycle:
Anxiety appears
Reassurance is sought
Temporary relief follows
Anxiety returns
The cycle continues not because you are doing something wrong, but because your system is trying to protect you using the tools it knows.
Why This Isn’t a Personal Failing
Many people feel ashamed of needing reassurance. They may tell themselves they should “know better” or “just stop worrying”. This often adds another layer of distress.
Reassurance‑seeking is not a weakness. It is a learned response to uncertainty. Your brain is attempting to regulate discomfort — not create problems.
Understanding this is often the first step toward change.
Why Trying to Stop Reassurance Rarely Works
Being told to “stop seeking reassurance” can feel invalidating or frightening. Without an alternative way to feel safe, removing reassurance can increase anxiety rather than reduce it.
Change doesn’t come from forcing reassurance away. It comes from helping the nervous system learn that safety can exist without certainty.
How Solution‑Focused Hypnotherapy Helps
Solution‑Focused Hypnotherapy is not about talking yourself out of anxiety or using relaxation as a quick fix. While relaxation may be part of the process, the core focus is on changing how the brain and nervous system respond to uncertainty.
SFH supports change by:
Reducing reliance on reassurance over time
Helping attention move away from constant monitoring
Supporting tolerance of uncertainty in small, manageable steps
Allowing the nervous system to experience safety without checking
Strengthening confidence in coping, rather than certainty
Rather than analysing the past, SFH focuses on what helps anxiety ease in the present and future - and how those responses can be strengthened.
What Change Often Looks Like
Change rarely arrives as a sudden absence of anxiety. Instead, people often notice:
Reassurance feels less urgent
Anxiety passes more quickly
Less checking is needed
Confidence in coping increases
Uncertainty becomes more tolerable
These shifts happen gradually, as the nervous system learns a new pattern.
If reassurance‑seeking has become exhausting or limiting, support can focus on helping you respond differently when anxiety shows up — gently, without pressure, and without reliving the past. You’re welcome to explore whether this approach feels right for you.
Solution-Focused Hypnotherapy is a complementary approach for emotional wellbeing. It does not replace medical or psychological care and is not intended to diagnose or treat medical conditions. Anyone with concerns about their physical or mental health is encouraged to seek appropriate professional advice.
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Support with anxiety and wellbeing
I’m Andy Selway-Woolley, a Solution-Focused Hypnotherapist based in Upper Heyford, near Bicester, Oxfordshire. I offer in-person sessions from my local therapy room as well as online hypnotherapy across the UK.
My work focuses on supporting people with anxiety, overthinking, confidence difficulties, sleep-related issues, and related wellbeing concerns using a calm, practical, solution-focused approach.
I’m a registered and accredited member of Complementary & Natural Healthcare Council (CNHC), Association for Solution Focused Hypnotherapy (AfSFH) and National Council for Hypnotherapy (NCH).
You can view the full range of areas I support on my website.
If you’d like to explore whether solution-focused hypnotherapy feels right for you, you’re welcome to get in touch or book an initial consultation.