How to Describe Anxiety: Finding Words for the Indescribable
“I don’t know how to explain it. It’s like… my chest is tight? My mind won’t stop? I feel like something terrible is about to happen, but I don’t know what?”
You’ve tried describing your anxiety to your partner, your doctor, and your friend. But the words never seem adequate. How do you explain the sensation of drowning when you’re standing on dry land? How do you describe feeling terrified when there’s nothing dangerous in front of you?
If you’ve struggled to articulate what anxiety feels like, you’re not alone. Anxiety is one of the most common yet most difficult experiences to put into words. It’s not just “feeling worried”; it’s a complex constellation of physical sensations, racing thoughts, and overwhelming emotions that can feel impossible to communicate.
This guide will help you describe what anxiety feels like in your body, mind, and emotions so you can communicate it clearly, get the right support, and take steps to overcome anxiety.
What Is Anxiety?
Before we explore how to describe anxiety, it’s important to understand what you’re actually experiencing. Anxiety isn’t weakness, exaggeration, or “all in your head.” It’s a real physiological and psychological response involving:
- Brain chemistry: Imbalances in neurotransmitters like GABA, serotonin, and norepinephrine
- Nervous system: Overactivation of the sympathetic (“fight or flight”) response
- Hormones: Excessive cortisol and adrenaline flooding your system
- Brain waves: Overactive beta waves creating mental hyperactivity
- Physical sensations: Real, measurable changes throughout your body
According to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America, anxiety disorders affect 40 million adults in the United States, nearly 20% of the population. Yet only about 37% receive treatment, often because people struggle to recognize or articulate what they’re experiencing.
Understanding how anxiety manifests physically, mentally, and emotionally gives you the vocabulary to describe it accurately.
How to Physically Describe Anxiety
Anxiety often shows up through real physical sensations. Many people assume something is medically wrong because the symptoms can feel intense.
Chest and Heart Sensations
You might say:
- “My chest feels tight or heavy.”
- “My heart races even when I am sitting still.”
- “I feel a pounding in my chest.”
- “I get fluttering or skipped beats.”
What’s happening: Anxiety triggers the release of adrenaline and cortisol, increasing heart rate and blood pressure. Your cardiovascular system is preparing for physical action (fighting or fleeing) that never comes.
Breathing Symptoms
Common descriptions:
- “I can’t catch my breath, like I’m suffocating”
- “It feels like breathing through a straw”
- “My throat feels tight and constricted”
- “I’m taking quick, shallow breaths but can’t get enough air”
- “There’s a lump in my throat I can’t swallow”
- “I feel like I’m drowning on dry land”
What’s happening: Anxiety often causes hyperventilation (breathing too quickly) or a feeling of air hunger. Ironically, you’re often getting too much oxygen, not too little, but your body interprets the imbalance as suffocation.
Stomach and Digestive Symptoms
Common descriptions:
- “My stomach feels upset or in knots.”
- “I feel nauseous.”
- “I lose my appetite when I’m anxious.”
- “My digestion feels off when stress is high.”
What’s happening: The gut-brain connection is profound. Anxiety diverts blood and energy away from digestion, causing real gastrointestinal symptoms. Research shows up to 44% of people with IBS also have anxiety disorders.
Muscle Tension and Pain
Common descriptions:
- “My whole body is clenched tight”
- “My shoulders are up around my ears and won’t relax”
- “Jaw aches from grinding or clenching teeth”
- “Tension headaches wrapping around my head like a vice”
- “Trembling or shaking hands”
- “Legs feel weak and unsteady, like they might give out”
- “Neck and back pain from constant tension”
What’s happening: Your muscles tense in preparation for action. Chronic anxiety means chronic muscle tension, leading to real pain and exhaustion.
Dizziness and Sensory Changes
Common descriptions:
- “Everything feels surreal, like I’m watching life through a foggy window”
- “Dizziness or feeling lightheaded”
- “Tingling or numbness in hands, feet, or face”
- “Hypersensitive to sounds, lights, smells”
- “Vision feels strange—too bright, blurry, or tunnel-like”
- “Feeling disconnected from my body (depersonalization)”
- “Feeling like the world isn’t real (derealization)”
What’s happening: Hyperventilation changes blood pH, affecting nerve function. Heightened alertness makes your senses more reactive. Your brain is on high alert, interpreting everything as potentially threatening.
Temperature and Skin Reactions
Common descriptions:
- “Hot flashes or suddenly feeling overheated”
- “Cold sweats, clammy skin”
- “Chills running through my body”
- “Face flushing bright red”
- “Excessive sweating, especially palms and underarms”
What’s happening: Your autonomic nervous system regulates temperature and sweating. Anxiety dysregulates this system, creating uncomfortable temperature sensations.
Fatigue and Burnout
Common descriptions:
- “Wired but exhausted simultaneously”
- “Can’t relax even though I’m exhausted”
- “Drained of all energy, like I’ve been running all day”
- “Heavy limbs, everything feels like it requires enormous effort”
What’s happening: Constant activation of your stress response is energetically expensive. Your body burns through resources maintaining high alert status, leaving you depleted.
How to Describe How Anxiety Feels Mentally and Emotionally
Anxiety is not only physical. It affects how you think, process information, and respond emotionally. Many people struggle to describe it because it can feel like your mind and body are reacting to danger, even when everything looks fine on the outside.
Racing Thoughts and Mental Overwhelm
One of the most common mental symptoms of anxiety is the feeling that your mind will not slow down. You may feel trapped in repetitive thoughts, constantly replaying worries, or jumping from one fear to the next. People often describe it as “my brain won’t shut off,” “I can’t stop thinking,” or “it feels like I have too many thoughts at once.” Even simple tasks can become difficult because your attention keeps getting pulled toward worst-case scenarios.
This usually happens when your stress response stays activated, making it hard for the brain to settle into calm focus.
A Constant Sense of Dread
Anxiety can also create a strong feeling that something bad is about to happen. It may not be tied to any specific event, but the sense of danger still feels real. You might say, “I feel on edge for no reason,” “I’m waiting for something to go wrong,” or “I can’t relax because I feel like something is coming.” This is one of the most confusing parts of anxiety because the fear feels intense even when life is stable.
Trouble Concentrating and Making Decisions
Many people notice anxiety affects memory and focus. You may struggle to absorb what you read, lose track during conversations, or feel mentally scattered. Some people describe it as brain fog, while others say they feel “stuck” when trying to make decisions. Small choices can start to feel overwhelming because anxiety adds pressure, doubt, and overthinking to everything.
When anxiety is high, the brain tends to prioritize scanning for problems instead of staying focused on the present task.
Emotional Reactivity or Emotional Shutdown
Emotionally, anxiety can show up in different ways. Some people feel irritable, tense, and easily startled. Others feel overwhelmed and close to tears without understanding why. You may find yourself snapping at people you love, feeling unusually sensitive, or struggling to control your reactions. In some cases, anxiety causes the opposite response, such as feeling numb, disconnected, or emotionally distant as a form of self-protection.
It is also common to feel embarrassed about anxiety or fear you are “losing control,” even though anxiety itself is not dangerous.
Sleep Disruption
Anxiety often interferes with sleep because the mind stays active when the body needs to rest. You may lie awake replaying worries, fall asleep only to wake up in the middle of the night, or wake up feeling tired even after a full night in bed. Many people also start to dread bedtime because they expect the thoughts to return as soon as things get quiet.
Poor sleep can make anxiety worse, which is why this pattern often becomes difficult to break without support.
How to Explain Anxiety to Someone Who Has Never Had It
Explaining anxiety can be difficult. It may look like nothing is wrong on the outside, while it feels intense on the inside. The goal is to help someone understand that anxiety is not just worry. It is a stress response that can feel urgent and physical. These comparisons make anxiety easier to explain:
The smoke alarm
“It’s like a smoke alarm that goes off too easily. There’s no fire, but my body reacts like there is.”
The gas and brake
“It feels like my body is speeding up while my mind is trying to stop it. I feel restless and tense at the same time.”
The overloaded computer
“It’s like my brain has too many things running in the background. Even small tasks feel harder than they should.”
The near-accident feeling
“Remember the adrenaline rush when something almost went wrong? Anxiety can feel like that, even when there’s no clear reason.”
You can also try phrases like
- “Anxiety is a body response, not a choice.”
- “I know it may not make sense, but it feels very real.”
- “It doesn’t always match what’s happening around me.”
- “What helps most is support and patience.”
Describing Anxiety to Healthcare Providers
When seeking help, specific, detailed descriptions help doctors identify root causes and appropriate treatment.
What Doctors Need to Know
Symptom details:
- When symptoms started (sudden or gradual onset)
- Frequency and duration (constant, episodic, specific triggers)
- Physical symptoms (be specific: “heart rate feels 120+ bpm” vs. “heart races”)
- Mental symptoms (intrusive thoughts, panic attacks, specific fears)
- Impact on daily life (work, relationships, sleep, activities)
Helpful phrases for medical appointments:
- “I experience [specific symptom] [frequency], which affects my ability to [specific activity]”
- “My symptoms are worse during [time of day/situation]”
- “I’ve tried [strategies] with [result]”
- “I’m concerned about [specific worry] and would like to explore [testing/treatment]”
What a comprehensive assessment should include:
- Thyroid function tests (hyperthyroidism can mimic anxiety)
- Cortisol levels and adrenal function
- Blood sugar regulation
- Nutrient deficiencies (magnesium, B vitamins, vitamin D)
- Heart rate variability (HRV) assessment
- Brain mapping (qEEG) to identify brainwave imbalances
What are the Root Causes of Depression
Describing anxiety helps others understand what you are experiencing. However, it’s through identifying the root causes that’ll help you choose the right support.
1. Thyroid imbalance
An overactive thyroid can cause anxiety-like symptoms such as a racing heart, shaking, sweating, and feeling wired.
2. Chronic stress and stress hormone strain
Long-term stress can keep the body in a constant alert state. This often leads to restlessness, irritability, poor sleep, and feeling overwhelmed.
3. High-alert brain patterns
Some people stay stuck in mental overdrive, with racing thoughts and trouble calming down. Brain-based testing such as qEEG may help identify patterns linked to this.
4. Nervous system stuck in fight-or-flight
When the body stays in “go mode,” it can create physical symptoms like tight breathing, tension, digestive upset, and a constant sense of unease.
5. Blood sugar swings
Skipping meals, irregular eating, or blood sugar drops can trigger shakiness, fast heartbeat, irritability, and sudden anxiety.
6. Gut health issues
Digestive problems often occur alongside anxiety. When the gut is irritated or inflamed, mood and stress tolerance can worsen.
7. Nutrient deficiencies
Low levels of key nutrients can affect mood and stress resilience. Common examples include magnesium, B vitamins, vitamin D, omega-3s, and amino acids.
8. Hormone changes
Hormonal shifts can affect mood and anxiety levels. This is common during PMS, postpartum changes, perimenopause, menopause, and low testosterone.
9. Lifestyle stressors
Caffeine, alcohol, lack of sleep, inactivity, isolation, and constant pressure can raise baseline anxiety over time.
10. Trauma and learned fear patterns
Past experiences can train the brain to stay on guard. Even when life is safer now, the nervous system may still react as if danger is close.
The 3-3-3 Rule for Anxiety
When anxiety spikes and you need immediate relief, the 3-3-3 rule is a simple grounding technique:
- Look: Identify 3 things you can see around you
- Listen: Identify 3 sounds you can hear
- Move: Move 3 parts of your body (wiggle fingers, roll shoulders, tap feet)
This technique helps shift your focus away from spiraling thoughts and back into your surroundings.
Other grounding tools you can try include the 5-4-3-2-1 method, slow breathing, cold water on your face or wrists, and gentle muscle relaxation. These techniques can help in the moment, but lasting improvement often requires understanding what is driving your anxiety.
You Don’t Have to Live This Way
If anxiety has been hard to explain or manage, you are not alone. Many people deal with the same mix of physical symptoms, racing thoughts, and emotional overload.
Anxiety is not a personal failure. It often reflects patterns in the brain and nervous system that can improve with the right support.
If you are ready to understand what is driving your anxiety and start overcoming it, Dr. Mikell Parsons at The Natural Path Health Center in Fresno offers comprehensive assessment and brain-based care. Call (559) 447-1404 or visit naturalpathfresno.com to schedule your evaluation.




