Why Anxiety Sometimes Feels Like Self-Sabotage

Anxiety Stress and Panic Attacks

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Why Anxiety Sometimes Feels Like Self-Sabotage (and what to do about it)

Does it sometimes feel like you are self-sabotaging your attempts to overcome anxiety?

Many people in Ely and Newmarket who come to me for help with anxiety notice something confusing: They want change and to feel better – they try to move forward and make progress – yet something inside them seems to push back and hold them back.

It can feel like self-sabotage: taking one step forward and two steps back.

You start questioning yourself. Why do you hold yourself back? Why can’t you follow through?

Even more frustratingly, you may know there is no logical reason for your anxiety. And at times you may feel fine. Yet the anxiety is always lurking and can resurface at any time.

This is all very common, and it doesn’t mean you lack willpower or commitment. In fact, it often reflects how your nervous system learned to respond to threat – it’s not some sort of flaw in your character or capability.

When I used to struggle with anxiety, this sense of stop-start and forwards-backwards was a common pattern. One day could be the great and the next I was a ball of anxiety. A situation may go well and I felt positive that this was the time when everything would improve. Yet, when the next similar situation arose, the same old anxious thoughts and feelings would resurface. You start to try and hide it, avoid possible triggers and work around your anxiety.

Many people in Ely and the surrounding area describe a similar pattern – wanting progress yet feeling pulled back – and it often ties back to automatic nervous system signals rather than intentional choice.

This article covers what is happening if your anxiety sometimes feels like self-sabotage, and what to do about it.

 

What self-sabotage really feels like

Many people assume self-sabotage is a personal flaw, but it’s actually a nervous system response that evolved to protect you – not punish you.

Self-sabotage can show up as:

  • putting off opportunities
  • second-guessing yourself
  • choosing the ‘safe’ option instead of the rewarding one
  • undermining your own plans
  • focusing on what might go wrong

You might think:
“I want to do this, but I freeze.”
“I know it’s good for me, but I just can’t follow through.”

You know what to do but you somehow can’t do it.

It’s not laziness. It’s not lack of conviction.

It’s your nervous system trying to protect you from perceived threat – even when there isn’t actual danger.

If you’re exploring how anxiety affects your confidence and day-to-day decisions, you may also find my Anxiety Support Hub helpful.

 

How anxiety creates self-sabotage

Anxiety exists to keep you safe. When the brain detects threat – even an imagined threat inside your own thinking – it activates the same survival systems that once protected your ancestors.

Back then, threats would harm or kill someone and the anxiety response was useful. In modern times, thinking the worst, catastrophising and other perceived threats within your own thinking, can elicit the same response. Your mind and body prepare you for taking action to deal with the threat. It feels overwhelming and uncomfortable.

This survival response does not care whether a situation is truly safe. It responds to the expectation of danger, not reality.

So when you:

  • start to move forward
  • prepare for a change
  • imagine a new outcome
  • anticipate judgement or uncertainty

your nervous system may react as if there is a threat – not with confidence, but with alertness:

  • tension rises
  • thoughts tighten
  • discomfort intensifies

That discomfort feels threatening, and the nervous system interprets it as danger. The result? A pull back toward the familiar – even if that familiar is limiting or frustrating.

Your brain perceives the familiar as comfortable and safe, even if it doesn’t feel that way to you. Your habitual thoughts, feelings and reactions take hold.

This feels like self-sabotage, but it’s really a learned survival response.

For a related perspective on how anxiety and self-belief interact, see my article on Low Confidence and Anxiety.

 

Understanding your nervous system

The good news is this:

Feeling stuck or pulled back doesn’t mean you’re weak, broken or a failure.

It just means your nervous system is doing what it thinks it must to keep you safe.

This kind of anxiety and self=sabotage just means you are human.

Recognising this can be an important step toward:

  • reducing self-criticism
  • understanding your patterns
  • choosing actions with clarity rather than fear
  • learning how to make steady, consistent progress.

 

Overcoming self-sabotage

Rather than fighting the sensation, this kind of self-sabotage tends to ease when you:

  • reduce the physical tension in your body
  • prime your mind for positive change
  • practise small confidence-building actions
  • learn how your nervous system signals ‘threat’
  • change the way you react to discomfort

In other words, control grows when fear stops driving decisions.

 

When support can make the difference

If these patterns feel familiar and limiting, support can help you understand and change them without judgement and make choices from a place of calm confidence rather than fear.

You don’t have to be sure about therapy – a free initial consultation gives you space to talk through what you’re experiencing and explore what could help.

To your health and happiness,

Dan Regan

Anxiety Therapy and Hypnotherapy in Ely and Newmarket

 

Could you use some help with your anxiety? Struggling with anxiety, stress, worry and fear and need some help? Find out how I can help with a Complimentary Anxiety Hypnotherapy Strategy Session. Learn more here: Appointments

Find out what hundreds of other people have said after their anxiety hypnotherapy sessions with Dan: Hypnotherapy Testimonials

And check out these popular and powerful hypnosis downloads that can start helping you right away with anxiety, confidence and more: Hypnosis Downloads

 

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