Living with Anxiety: When Worry Becomes More Than Just Stress

Living with Anxiety: When Worry Becomes More Than Just Stress

There’s a version of anxiety that most of us are familiar with — the jittery feeling before a job interview, the restless night before a big presentation, the knot in your stomach when you’re waiting for important news. That kind of anxiety is normal. It’s even useful. It sharpens our focus, pushes us to prepare, and passes once the moment does.

But then there’s a different kind of anxiety altogether. The kind that doesn’t pass. The kind that shows up without warning, follows you into quiet moments, and slowly starts limiting the life you want to live. That’s when anxiety stops being a natural response to stress and becomes a condition that deserves real attention.

As a psychiatrist here in New Jersey, I want to walk you through what anxiety disorders actually look like, why they’re more common than most people realize, and what effective treatment can genuinely do for your quality of life.

Anxiety Disorders Are Not ‘Just Stress’

One of the most common things I hear from patients is: ‘I didn’t think it was serious enough to see a doctor about. I thought everyone felt like this.’ The truth is, anxiety disorders are the most prevalent mental health condition in the United States. Yet they remain chronically underdiagnosed and undertreated — largely because people assume what they’re experiencing is just stress, or a personality trait, or something they should be able to push through on their own.

Anxiety disorders are real medical conditions. They have identifiable patterns, neurological underpinnings, and research-backed treatments. You wouldn’t tell someone with asthma to ‘just breathe through it.’ The same respect should apply to anxiety.

Types of Anxiety Disorders

Anxiety isn’t a single, uniform experience. It comes in several distinct forms, and understanding which type you’re dealing with matters for treatment:

Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)

Persistent, excessive worry about multiple areas of life — work, health, family, finances — that’s difficult to control and present more days than not. People with GAD often feel chronically tense, fatigued, and on edge.

Panic Disorder

Recurrent panic attacks — sudden surges of intense fear that peak within minutes, often accompanied by heart pounding, shortness of breath, dizziness, and a terrifying sense that something is very wrong. Many people end up in the ER convinced they’re having a heart attack.

Social Anxiety Disorder

Far beyond shyness, social anxiety involves intense fear of being judged, humiliated, or rejected in social situations. It can make everyday interactions — eating in front of others, speaking in meetings, making phone calls — feel overwhelming or impossible.

Specific Phobias

An intense, irrational fear of a specific object or situation — flying, heights, medical procedures, certain animals. The fear is disproportionate to actual danger and leads to active avoidance.

Separation Anxiety Disorder

Though often thought of as a childhood condition, separation anxiety can persist into or develop during adulthood, causing significant distress around separation from attachment figures.

What Anxiety Feels Like From the Inside

People who haven’t experienced clinical anxiety sometimes struggle to understand why it’s so debilitating. The body’s stress response — the ‘fight or flight’ system — is supposed to activate temporarily in response to real threats. In anxiety disorders, this system fires too easily, too intensely, and often without a clear trigger.

Here’s what that can feel like day to day:

  • Physical: muscle tension, headaches, stomach problems, racing heart, fatigue, difficulty sleeping
  • Cognitive: intrusive ‘what if’ thoughts, difficulty concentrating, catastrophizing, mental fog
  • Behavioral: avoiding people, places, or situations that trigger anxiety; canceling plans; withdrawal
  • Emotional: dread, irritability, a persistent sense of impending doom with no clear reason

Over time, avoidance — which temporarily relieves anxiety — actually reinforces it and gradually shrinks the world a person feels safe in. This is one reason early treatment matters so much.

Anxiety in Children and Teens

Anxiety doesn’t only affect adults. In fact, it’s the most common mental health condition in children and adolescents. But it often looks different in younger patients — and gets missed as a result.

An anxious child might refuse to go to school, have frequent stomachaches with no medical cause, cling to parents, become perfectionistic about schoolwork, or struggle enormously with transitions. Teens with anxiety may withdraw socially, underperform academically, or turn to avoidance behaviors that look like laziness or attitude from the outside.

Identifying anxiety early in children gives us a meaningful window to intervene before avoidance patterns become deeply entrenched. As a child and adolescent psychiatrist, this is work I find especially important.

Treatment That Actually Works

Anxiety disorders are among the most treatable mental health conditions. With the right care, the majority of people experience significant improvement. Treatment typically involves some combination of:

  • Evidence-based psychotherapy, particularly Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), which directly targets the thought patterns and avoidance behaviors that fuel anxiety
  • Medication management — SSRIs, SNRIs, and other medications that help regulate the neurological systems involved in anxiety
  • Lifestyle and behavioral strategies — sleep, exercise, and stress management that support brain health
  • Family involvement, especially when treating children or adolescents

Our anxiety disorder treatment in NJ at Complete Care Psychiatry is designed around a thorough understanding of each patient’s specific experience. There is no generic anxiety plan — because anxiety doesn’t come in one shape, and neither do the people who live with it.

When Should You Reach Out?

If anxiety is consistently interfering with your work, your relationships, your sleep, or your ability to do things you want to do — that’s a signal worth taking seriously. You don’t need to be in crisis to deserve care. You don’t need to have had a panic attack. You don’t need to have ‘hit rock bottom.’

If anxiety is quietly narrowing your life, that’s enough reason to talk to someone.

The goal of treatment isn’t to eliminate all worry — some worry is healthy and human. The goal is to get anxiety back to a level where it’s manageable, where it doesn’t make decisions for you, and where you have your life back.

Complete Care Psychiatry serves patients of all ages in New Jersey. To schedule a psychiatric evaluation, reach us at drazfar@cc-psychiatry.com or (702) 900-8831. We’re currently accepting new patients.

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