Tag: anxiety

  • The Mental Health Cost of  High-Functioning Anxiety in Women

    The Mental Health Cost of High-Functioning Anxiety in Women

    She’s productive. She’s dependable. She looks calm under pressure, even when her mind never stops racing. High functioning anxiety in women is often praised, rewarded, and overlooked. From the outside, it looks like ambition and discipline. On the inside, it can feel like constant tension, overthinking, and emotional exhaustion.

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    What is high-functioning anxiety?

    High-functioning anxiety isn’t a clinical diagnosis, but it’s a widely recognized experience, especially among women.

    It describes people who:

    • Appear successful, organized, and composed
    • Meet deadlines and responsibilities consistently
    • Function well in work and relationships
    • Experience chronic anxiety beneath the surface

    Women with high-functioning anxiety often push through their symptoms rather than outwardly struggling. Because they’re still “doing well,” their anxiety frequently goes unnoticed even by themselves.

    Why high-functioning anxiety is so common in women

    Women are often socialized to be:

    • Accommodating
    • Emotionally aware
    • Responsible
    • High-achieving without appearing overwhelmed

    From a young age, many women learn that anxiety is acceptable as long as it fuels productivity. Worry becomes preparation. Fear becomes motivation. Stress becomes normal. For most women, over time, anxiety isn’t seen as a problem; it becomes part of their identity.

    What high-functioning anxiety looks like day to day

    High-functioning anxiety doesn’t always involve panic attacks or avoidance. Instead, it often shows up as:

    • Overthinking every decision
    • Replaying conversations in your head
    • Difficulty relaxing or resting
    • Perfectionism and fear of failure
    • Constant mental to-do lists
    • People-pleasing tendencies
    • Trouble sleeping despite exhaustion

    Many women don’t recognize these patterns as anxiety because they’re so intertwined with success.

    The mental health cost no one talks about

    While high-functioning anxiety may help women perform, it often comes at a significant mental health cost.

    Chronic Stress and Burnout

    Living in a constant state of alertness puts the nervous system under pressure. Over time, this leads to:

    • Emotional fatigue
    • Brain fog
    • Irritability
    • Decreased motivation
    • Physical symptoms like headaches or stomach issues

    Burnout often sneaks up on high-functioning women because they’re used to pushing through discomfort.

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    Anxiety Turning Inward

    Because high-functioning women appear capable, they often internalize their anxiety instead of expressing it.

    This can lead to:

    • Self-criticism
    • Feelings of inadequacy despite success
    • Guilt for resting
    • Fear of disappointing others

    You may look confident externally while battling constant self-doubt internally.

    Depression Hidden Behind Productivity

    High-functioning anxiety can coexist with depression, especially when women feel trapped in a cycle of performance without fulfillment.

    You might still show up and succeed, but feel:

    • Emotionally numb
    • Disconnected from joy
    • Like you’re just going through the motions
    • Unmotivated once the pressure is gone

    Because productivity continues, the emotional struggle is easy to dismiss.

    Why women with high-functioning anxiety rarely ask for help

    Many women delay seeking support because:

    • They don’t want to feel like a burden
    • Others rely on them
    • They fear losing control
    • They’re praised for being strong
    • They don’t want to seem ungrateful or weak

    There’s also a fear that slowing down means everything will fall apart, so they keep going, even when it’s hurting them.

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    When anxiety becomes a personality trait

    One of the most dangerous aspects of high-functioning anxiety is when it becomes normalized.

    You may hear:

    • “You’re just driven.”
    • “You always handle things so well.”
    • “You’re so on top of everything.”

    Eventually, anxiety feels inseparable from success. Rest feels uncomfortable. Calm feels unfamiliar.

    Healing without losing your ambition

    Healing from high-functioning anxiety doesn’t mean giving up your goals. It means redefining how you pursue them.

    Support and healing can look like:

    • Therapy or counseling
    • Learning nervous system regulation
    • Setting boundaries without over-explaining
    • Allowing rest without guilt
    • Challenging perfectionist thinking
    • Letting yourself be supported

    You don’t have to wait until you’re falling apart to deserve help.

    You don’t have to be anxious to be successful

    One of the biggest lies high-functioning women believe is that anxiety is the reason they succeed.

    In reality:

    • You can be disciplined without being stressed
    • You can be ambitious without being anxious
    • You can be successful without being constantly overwhelmed

    Your worth is not tied to how much pressure you can endure. High-functioning anxiety in women is often invisible, but its impact is real.

    If you see yourself in this, know this:
    You are not weak for struggling. You are not dramatic for needing rest, nor are you broken because anxiety followed you into success.

    You deserve peace and purpose — not one at the expense of the other.

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  • The Art of Meditation: How to Manage Anxiety and Stress 

    The Art of Meditation: How to Manage Anxiety and Stress 

    Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

    Why I chose to manage my stress and anxiety

    These past two years while living in a global pandemic have been stressful and a trying time for everyone around the world. From losing loved ones to COVID-19, losing jobs, losing faith and sometimes yourself. Not to mention the affordable housing crisis, gas prices increasing, and so much more. All of which can be the main cause of anxiety and stress. Today, I will be talking about meditation and how it has helped me. In hopes that is will help you too.


    I’ve struggled with stress management and anxiety since seventeen years old. Now that I am 24, for seven years straight I have tried just about everything. I, like the rest of the world in 2020, was anxious, heartbroken, and stressed for many reasons. Two of the major reasons was (1), not being able to graduate college in person until the following year due to the virus, and (2) the fear of “what’s next?”.

    My wake up call was when I started having severe chest pains and wasn’t sleeping well because my thoughts were constantly racing. Looking back, quarantine made me finally sit down and take care of myself. While in school it was ingrained into me to have the best grades, be involved, ”stay the course”,always be “on go”.

    Now, I had all the time in the world, so I decided to Google “Best Ways to Manage Anxiety and Stress.” Of course, meditation, yoga, exercise, a good sleep schedule, and a balanced diet were all staring back at me. Everything seemed doable, so I began to do research on meditation because before I do anything I like to gain as much knowledge on the topic possible.

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    What is Meditation?


    Meditation is an ancient practice that originated in India thousands of years ago. The goal of meditation is to focus your mind on a particular object, thought, or activity – to train attention and awareness, and achieve a mentally clear and emotionally calm and stable state.

    At the beginning of my journey to meditation, I found it to be a little difficult. As I stated, I have a pretty busy mind therefore, sitting by myself not saying anything felt pointless because my mind would just race. I was so determined to get everything I was feeling under control, so I went back to Google.

    My meditation style

    With there being so many different ways to meditate I finally found the best one for me, which is mindfulness meditation. Which teaches you to slow down racing thoughts, let go of negativity, and be one with your mind, body and spirit. Moving forward I decided to give it another go, but this time I set the scene. I turned my phone off, lit candles, put lavender oil in my essential oil lamp, turned on a meditation playlist, and began.

    I laid down on my floor, closed my eyes, and focused on my breaths. Inhale in …exhale out …Inhale in…exhale out. After focusing on my breaths and becoming one with my breathing, I mentally took myself to my favorite place to relax: the beach! I heard the waves, the sounds of the seagulls, the smell of the salt water. As I felt so relaxed, I didn’t realize 45 minutes had gone by. When I sat up and opened my eyes, I felt calm, loose, and my worries were in the wind.

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    Now, I know not everyone has the time to do a full meditation set up everyday, but in those moments where you feel the tightness in your chest, the lump in your throat, the pit in your stomach…take time to breathe and go to the place that brings you calmness. Especially before and after doing something that typically brings you stress.

    Meditating on limited time

    If you don’t always have the opportunity to do the full meditation setup, there are other ways to do so. Could be practicing your breathing on your commute to and from work, in between zoom calls, in between classes, before bed, when you wake up, or even after a workout. The options are endless; it’s whatever style works best for you. However, if you can make the time and space to do a full ritual, do it. We have one life, one body, and in my opinion, taking care of your mental, physical, and spiritual state is a must. Not managing anxiety and stress properly can eat away at your body little by little and we all deserve a calm and joyous life.
    Here are some links to help start your journey to serenity:

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    @adorelex._