Inner Angle Counselling and Driving Therapy

Inner Angle Counselling and Driving Therapy Integrative counselling supporting personal growth, reflection, and change — including unique in-car sessions with a qualified driving instructor.

Inner Angle Counselling offers integrative therapeutic support to help clients explore thoughts, emotions, and behaviours in a safe, reflective environment. Unique in-car sessions combine counselling with guidance from a qualified driving instructor, providing experiential learning and practical insight. This approach helps clients reframe challenges, build self-awareness, and develop personal skills in real-life contexts. Online sessions are also available for flexibility and accessibility.

An approach that we explore with clients presenting with driving anxiety that feel comfortable with rigit rule based sys...
25/03/2026

An approach that we explore with clients presenting with driving anxiety that feel comfortable with rigit rule based systems. The goal is to adapt the system in such a way that will accommodate thinking time, lower presure and manageable anxiety.

How Meaning Shapes Anxiety: Understanding Your Inner Dialogue and Emotional ResponseHow We Make Sense of What’s Happenin...
24/02/2026

How Meaning Shapes Anxiety: Understanding Your Inner Dialogue and Emotional Response

How We Make Sense of What’s Happening Inside Us?

Most people assume they understand what is happening inside their own mind. Thoughts appear. Emotions rise. An inner voice comments, instructs, evaluates.

It feels direct and self-evident. But in clinical practice, one thing becomes consistently clear: Anxiety is rarely just a reaction to events. It is a reaction to how those events are being interpreted in real time.

This distinction matters. From a constructivist perspective — articulated most clearly by George Kelly — individuals do not passively register reality. They actively construct meaning through internal frameworks developed over time.

These frameworks guide prediction, behaviour, and emotional response. When anxiety persists, the problem is often not the situation itself, but the interpretive system being applied to it. Understanding how meaning shapes anxiety changes how we approach regulation.

Inner Dialogue and Anxiety: Not Everyone Thinks the Same Way

Many people assume everyone has a constant inner voice narrating their experience. Research into inner speech, particularly the work of Russell T. Hurlburt, shows that inner dialogue varies significantly across individuals. Some people think primarily in words.

Others think in images. Others organise experience through bodily sensation or relational positioning. Dialogical self theory, developed by Hubert Hermans, suggests that for many individuals, experience is structured through shifting internal positions — a relational awareness of “self in context” — rather than a single linear internal narrator.

Why does this matter for anxiety? Because the form of thinking influences the form of distress. In high-demand environments such as driving, inner dialogue can either support regulation or intensify cognitive overload.

When the inner voice becomes urgent, repetitive, or evaluative, attention splits. The individual is no longer simply responding to the road.

They are responding to their interpretation of the road. This is particularly visible in driving anxiety. People report: Overthinking while driving Replaying minor mistakes Anticipating worst-case outcomes Mentally rehearsing instructions

The anxiety is not just about traffic. It is about the constant internal commentary layered on top of traffic. Insight alone rarely resolves this. The structure of meaning-making must shift. Narrative Identity and Anxiety When anxiety becomes persistent, people often internalise it: “I am an anxious driver.” “I am not confident.” “I overthink everything.”

Narrative therapy, pioneered by Michael White, proposes that identity is shaped by the stories we construct about our experience.

These stories do not merely describe events. They organise future perception. If a person adopts the story “I am unsafe in traffic,” their attention will selectively scan for confirming evidence. Neutral situations become coded as risky.

Minor hesitation becomes proof of incompetence. Shifting the narrative does not deny objective risk. It changes the interpretive lens. Anxiety is often maintained because the explanatory framework remains unchanged, even when circumstances improve.

This is why reassurance frequently fails. The narrative structure absorbs reassurance and reinterprets it. To reduce anxiety, the story organising experience must be re-authored — not artificially, but in a way that aligns more accurately with lived evidence.

The language we use internally shapes how we feel.

Commands create pressure. Questions create awareness. Predictive Processing and the Amplification of Anxiety Modern neuroscience provides an additional perspective.

Predictive processing models, associated with researchers such as Karl Friston, describe the brain as a prediction-generating system. It constantly anticipates what will happen next and updates its models based on incoming information. Anxiety increases when prediction error increases.

If a person develops a rigid internal model — for example, categorising driving situations strictly as “Right” or “Wrong” — that model may not flex sufficiently to match a fluid traffic environment.

The result? Constant micro-corrections. Heightened vigilance. Persistent arousal. The individual feels tense not because something catastrophic is happening, but because their internal model cannot comfortably settle.

This is where logical coping strategies sometimes backfire. When Logical Coping Increases Driving Anxiety Many people attempt to reduce anxiety by becoming more logical. They create internal systems: Risk scales Safety checklists Structured rules Rigid thresholds for action Initially, these strategies create clarity.

They feel responsible and controlled. Over time, however, they can increase anxiety. Every moment becomes an evaluation. Every decision becomes consequential. The individual is no longer responding intuitively to traffic flow but running continuous internal assessments.

The logic remains coherent. The mismatch is contextual.

A structured system is being applied to a probabilistic environment. Driving requires adaptive prediction, not rigid categorisation. When meaning becomes too tightly structured, anxiety increases. Sometimes the very structure that once supported growth begins to constrain it.

I explore this dynamic further in a related article.

Inner Commands vs Questions: A Real-Time Intervention

Under stress, inner dialogue often shifts into command mode: Go now. Check mirrors. Don’t hesitate. You’re holding traffic up. Commands accelerate ex*****on. They narrow attention. They increase urgency.

In already demanding environments, this creates cognitive overload.

A subtle but effective intervention is shifting from commands to orienting questions: Which mirrors are relevant right now? Is this the appropriate moment to proceed? What information do I need?

Questions interrupt automatic ex*****on and re-engage evaluative processing. They slow action slightly — just enough to reduce urgency without freezing behaviour.

This is not positive thinking. It is structural reorganisation of inner language. When the form of meaning changes, the emotional response changes.

How Meaning Shapes Anxiety in Real Time

Across constructivist theory, narrative therapy, and predictive processing research, a consistent principle emerges: We do not respond directly to reality.

We respond to our interpretation of reality. Anxiety is often the signal that an interpretive system is being applied where it no longer fits.

The solution is not always exposure alone. It is not reassurance alone. It is not “thinking positively.”

It is examining how meaning is being constructed — moment by moment — and whether that structure remains adaptive. When meaning reorganises, behaviour often follows.

Regulation does not always begin with calming down. It often begins with understanding differently....

How We Make Sense of What’s Happening Inside Us? Most people assume they understand what is happening inside their own mind. Thoughts appear. Emotions rise. An inner voice comments, instructs, eval…

Sometimes anxiety is not a sign that something is wrong with us.It is a sign that the way we are making sense of a situa...
21/01/2026

Sometimes anxiety is not a sign that something is wrong with us.
It is a sign that the way we are making sense of a situation no longer fits.

I often see this while driving. People rely on logical ways of understanding traffic that once helped them feel safe. But when the environment becomes more complex and that logic does not adapt, tension builds. Not because they are doing something wrong, but because they are doing something that no longer fits.

In this piece, I reflect on how we learn through contrast, how meaning is formed, and how anxiety can emerge when we keep using the same internal logic despite new demands. I also explore what shifts when someone discovers a way of making sense that feels more aligned with their lived experience.

If this resonates, you are welcome to reflect, comment, or share.

Understanding Anxiety: When Logic Isn’t Enough In this article, I explore: How anxiety can emerge not from a lack of logic, but from relying on a way of making sense that no longer fits the s…

An interesting read and a reminder of the importance of boundaries. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17kdC8jQ7d/
22/12/2025

An interesting read and a reminder of the importance of boundaries.
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17kdC8jQ7d/

Sky News delves into the murky world of therapy - where anyone can set themselves up as a counsellor or psychotherapist without formal training, qualifications, or oversight.

Are you driving the road, or are you driving your words?Ever felt that sudden "freeze" or a spike in anxiety during a hi...
17/12/2025

Are you driving the road, or are you driving your words?

Ever felt that sudden "freeze" or a spike in anxiety during a high-pressure moment?

Most of us think anxiety is an emotional reaction we can’t control. But what if it’s actually a "bug" in your brain’s prediction engine?

In my latest article, I share a story that changed how I view human perception. I realized that our brains don't just record reality, but they project a model onto it.

The most fascinating part? The language you use in your head acts as the instruction manual for your body. If your inner words don't match your true intention, your brain creates tension.

In this post, I explore:

Why we literally "cannot see" things that don't fit our internal model.

The "Prediction Machine": How understanding, experience, and action are linked.

A simple experiment you can do today to record and listen to your "Inner Driver."

If you’ve ever felt a gap between what you want to do and how you actually react, this might be the missing piece of the puzzle.

Are you driving the road, or are you driving your inner instructions? Discover how the brain’s ‘prediction machine’ creates blind spots and anxiety—and why changing the words you use ca…

Sometimes we don’t realise how we’re feeling until the emotion becomes too big to ignore.Many of us grew up learning to ...
02/12/2025

Sometimes we don’t realise how we’re feeling until the emotion becomes too big to ignore.
Many of us grew up learning to “get on with things,” so we don’t notice the tension building in our body or mind.

It’s not weakness, it’s a pattern.
When awareness isn’t modelled to us, we don’t always recognise our emotions until they show up as overwhelm, irritability, shutdown or exhaustion.

The good news?
Emotional awareness is a skill we can build.
And small moments of noticing can completely change how we respond to stress.

How Do We Know What We Feel? Understanding Anxiety Through Everyday Awareness Key Points • Many people live in a constant state of tension without realising it because anxiety can feel familiar rat…

29/11/2025

💛 Welcome to Inner Angle

If you’re looking for support, clarity or simply a space to breathe and make sense of things, you’re in the right place. At Inner Angle, I offer counselling and psychotherapy for adults, helping you work through anxiety, stress, confidence and the emotional patterns shaped by past experiences.

Alongside online therapy, I also offer psychotherapeutic driving: a unique, optional way to explore anxiety and confidence through the driving environment when everyday life and emotional patterns show up behind the wheel.

You might be here because:

Life feels heavy, stressful or harder than usual

Past experiences are affecting how you feel today

Confidence has dipped and self-criticism is loud

Anxiety is showing up in daily situations — including driving

You want to understand yourself more deeply

You’re wondering if counselling could help

You’re an ADI or PDI looking for support with challenging learners, stress and pressure.

I’m Ioannis (Yiannis) Athanasiadis, an NCPS-accredited counsellor and approved driving instructor.
My approach is warm, respectful and collaborative — offering online sessions and, when helpful, in-car therapeutic work in a dual-controlled, fully insured vehicle.

I support people with:
• Anxiety, stress and emotional regulation
• Low confidence and self-esteem
• Driving anxiety and post-incident fears
• The impact of past experiences on present patterns
• Personal growth and life transitions
• Support for driving instructors

If you’d like to explore whether working together could help, you can find information, reflections and resources here:

👉 innerangle.co.uk

Warmly,
Yiannis

Driving anxiety is not always fixed by “just getting out there”.Exposure alone sometimes misses the deeper emotional and...
15/11/2025

Driving anxiety is not always fixed by “just getting out there”.
Exposure alone sometimes misses the deeper emotional and unconscious factors at play.

My new article explores why some people don’t improve with exposure therapy and how a more integrated approach can support real change.

Exposure therapy is often recommended for driving anxiety, but it isn’t always the right approach. This article explores why some drivers don’t improve with exposure alone — and what deeper therape…

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Brighton And Hove
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