By Samantha Chater | 12th December 2025.
Anxiety can creep into everyday life slowly, until one day you realise it’s been sitting beside you like an unwanted companion. Many people come to counselling for anxiety because they’re exhausted from trying to “just get on with it” while their body and mind feel like they’re stuck on high alert.
If that sounds familiar, you’re not alone. This blog explores what anxiety feels like, why it shows up, especially in midlife, and how counselling helps anxiety in a steady, manageable way.
Understanding Anxiety
People often think anxiety is “just worrying”, but it’s far more than that. Anxiety is your body’s built-in alarm system. It reacts when it senses danger — even when there isn’t any real threat.
This is one of the simplest ways to understand anxiety and the nervous system:
- Something triggers your alarm
- Your heart races, breathing changes, your stomach tightens
- Your thoughts spiral because your body is telling you something’s wrong
- The alarm stays switched on
This is why understanding anxiety is such an important part of healing. It’s not a personality flaw — it’s your body trying to protect you, just a little too much.
Common Symptoms of Anxiety
People often come to me thinking they’re “just stressed” or “not coping,” when in reality they’re living with daily, unrecognised anxiety symptoms, such as:
- overthinking everything
- feeling constantly on edge
- struggling to relax
- difficulty sleeping
- physical symptoms like a tight chest or nausea
- feeling wired and exhausted at the same time
These are very common in people seeking anxiety support or simply wanting a space to understand what’s going on inside them.
Why Anxiety Often Shows Up in Midlife
A lot of people are surprised when anxiety appears out of nowhere during midlife. But when you step back, it makes complete sense.
Anxiety in midlife is often linked with:
- huge life transitions
- shifting roles in family life
- menopause
- career changes
- ageing parents
- years of carrying everyone else’s needs
Old coping strategies don’t always stretch far enough to cover new pressures. If you’ve spent years holding everything together, your body may finally be saying, “I can’t keep running at this pace.”
The Emotional Impact of Living With Anxiety
Beyond the physical sensations, anxiety affects how you see yourself.
Many people say:
- “I feel silly for worrying about everything.”
- “Why can’t I cope like everyone else?”
- “I should be stronger than this.”
But when we look at what anxiety feels like, it’s clear that nobody could cope endlessly under that kind of pressure. Anxiety shrinks your confidence, narrows your world, and makes everyday tasks feel bigger than they are.
You’re not weak, you’re just tired of carrying too much.
Anxiety and the Nervous System
Your nervous system has different states: calm, alert, focused, stressed, and shutdown.
When anxiety takes hold, people often get stuck in:
- Fight: irritability, tension
- Flight: restlessness, overworking
- Freeze: overwhelm, numbness
Counselling helps your nervous system return to a more balanced place, so the alarm doesn’t go off so quickly.
This is at the heart of managing anxiety where you can learn how to support your system rather than fight against it.
How Counselling Helps Anxiety
Coming to counselling for anxiety isn’t about learning how to “stop” anxiety altogether. It’s about feeling understood, calmer, and more in control.
Here’s how anxiety therapy can help:
1. Making sense of your anxiety
We explore the patterns, triggers, and life experiences that shaped your alarm system.
Once you understand anxiety, it becomes far less frightening.
2. Easing the physical tension
You learn grounding and breathing techniques that calm your nervous system and reduce anxiety symptoms.
These tools help with managing anxiety day to day.
3. Exploring the deeper layers
Sometimes anxiety comes from buried emotion, loss, change, or years of putting others first.
Therapy gives you space to unpack what’s underneath.
4. Rebuilding your sense of self
Long-term anxiety can make you feel like you’ve disappeared under the weight of responsibility.
Counselling helps you reconnect with your values, needs and identity.
This is why many people describe counselling for anxiety as the first time they’ve truly been listened to.
You can read more about how I work on my counselling page.
You Don’t Have to Manage Anxiety Alone
Anxiety makes life feel smaller — plans are cancelled, decisions feel heavy, and the future feels foggy. But it doesn’t have to stay that way.
With the right support, anxiety becomes something you understand and work with, not something that rules your life.
If you’d like to know a bit more about me and how I work, you can read more about me here
If you recognise yourself in any of this and want to explore whether counselling might help, you’re welcome to book a free consultation with me.
It’s a relaxed chat where you can ask questions and get a feel for what anxiety therapy might look like for you.
No pressure just space for you.
