02/03/2026
One of the most damaging ideas people carry about anxiety is this:
“There’s something wrong with me.”
They look at other people who seem relaxed.
They compare themselves.
They wonder why they can’t just switch off, calm down, or stop overthinking.
So they assume it’s a flaw.
A weakness.
A personality defect.
A failure of resilience.
But what if that isn’t true?
What if your anxiety isn’t evidence that you’re broken…
But evidence that, at some point, you adapted?
The nervous system is remarkably intelligent.
If you grow up in unpredictability…
If you feel responsible for other people’s emotions…
If you experience criticism, pressure, or instability…
If you have moments where you don’t feel fully safe…
Your system learns.
It learns to scan ahead.
To anticipate problems.
To stay alert.
To stay prepared.
And those patterns can become automatic.
Years later, the original situation may be gone.
But the pattern remains.
Not because you’re damaged.
Because you learned something very well.
Anxiety, in this sense, is often a sign of a nervous system that has been trying to protect you.
And protection is not pathology.
The beautiful part?
What has been learned can be gently updated.
Not through force.
Not through shame.
But through creating experiences of safety that your system can recognise and trust.
Over the coming weeks I’ll be sharing more about how these patterns form — and how people begin to loosen them.
If you’ve quietly believed you were broken, I hope this offers a different lens.
You make sense.