On Paper, Youโre Thriving. Inside, Youโre Exhausted.
From the outside, it looks like you have it together.
Youโre meeting deadlines. Showing up to meetings. Answering emails. Managing responsibilities. Maybe even advancing in your career.
But internally, itโs a different story.
Your mind doesnโt shut off. You replay conversations. You overthink decisions that shouldnโt feel this heavy. Thereโs a constant pressure to stay on top of everythingโbecause if youโre not, something might slip.
And most people donโt see that part.
Anxiety in high-functioning professionals doesnโt always look like panic. More often, it looks like competence.
It shows up as over-preparing, staying mentally โonโ long after the workday ends, and holding yourself to a standard that keeps moving just out of reach. You might have a hard time relaxing without feeling guilty, or find yourself questioning whether youโre doing enoughโeven when thereโs plenty of evidence that you are.
People experiencing high-functioning anxiety often appear capable and successful on the outside, while internally managing ongoing pressure, worry, and self-doubt (NewYork-Presbyterian, 2023). In a lot of ways, it blends in so well that it can be hard to recognizeโeven for the person experiencing it.
Part of what makes this so tricky is that in many corporate environments, these patterns are reinforced. Being detail-oriented, responsive, and always available is often rewarded. You might be known as reliable, driven, or someone who always delivers.
But whatโs underneath that performance often gets missed.
Thereโs a quiet cycle that can develop over time: you feel anxious, so you push harder. You succeed, which reinforces the idea that the anxiety is necessary. And slowly, that pressure starts to feel like the thing holding everything together.
Because youโre still functioningโoften at a high levelโitโs easy to tell yourself nothing is really wrong. But research and clinical insight continue to show that many professionals maintain high levels of performance while experiencing significant internal stress, often without ever seeking support (McLean Hospital, 2025; Starner, 2024).
A lot of people in these roles donโt talk about their anxietyโnot because it isnโt there, but because of what it might mean to admit it.
Thereโs often a quiet narrative running in the background: I should be able to handle this. This is just part of the job. If I slow down, everything will fall apart.
And in leadership or high-responsibility roles, there can be an added pressure to appear steady, capable, and in control. Conversations around executive mental health are starting to acknowledge just how common anxiety is at higher levels of responsibility, even if itโs rarely talked about openly (Starner, 2024; Hyder, 2021).
So instead, you keep going.
Even when youโre exhausted.
At some point, though, it starts to show up in other ways. Your mind wonโt shut off at night. You feel tense even during downtime. Youโre physically present, but mentally still working through your to-do list. Small things start to feel heavier than they should.
High-functioning anxiety tends to run on a loopโwhere productivity temporarily relieves the anxiety, but never actually resolves it (Anderson, 2025). So you keep doing more, thinking it will eventually feel easier.
But it usually doesnโt.
Most high-functioning professionals donโt need more strategies for doing more. What they often need is space to step out of constant pressure.
That can start with noticing when anxietyโnot intentionโis driving your decisions. It can look like practicing boundaries without immediately labeling them as failure, or learning how to slow down without guilt taking over.
It also means beginning to untangle the idea that your worth is tied to how much you produce.
And thatโs not always an easy shiftโespecially if pushing yourself is whatโs helped you get where you are.
Therapy in this space isnโt about taking away your ambition or lowering your standards. Itโs about helping you function without relying on constant pressure as your baseline.
That might look like learning how to respond differently to anxious thoughts, reducing the mental load youโre carrying, and creating a more sustainable way of showing upโnot just at work, but in your life overall. Approaches like CBT and mindfulness-based strategies can be especially helpful in reducing anxiety while still supporting high levels of functioning (NewYork-Presbyterian, 2023).
You can be successful and struggling at the same time.
Both can be true.
And if youโve been holding it together on the outside while feeling overwhelmed on the insideโyouโre not the only one.
You donโt have to wait until things fall apart to take your anxiety seriously.
References:
Anderson, M. (2025). Managing high-functioning anxiety in professionals. https://drmalcolmanderson.net/2025/08/13/managing-high-functioning-anxiety-in-professionals/
Hyder, S. (2021). How conquering executive anxiety can make you a better, happier leader. Forbes. https://www.forbes.com/sites/shamahyder/2021/03/29/how-conquering-executive-anxiety-can-make-you-a-better-happier-leader/
McLean Hospital. (2025.). The silent strain: Top mental health concerns among executive leadership. https://www.mcleanhospital.org/news/silent-strain-top-mental-health-among-executive-leadership
NewYork-Presbyterian. (2023). What is high-functioning anxiety? https://healthmatters.nyp.org/what-is-high-functioning-anxiety/
Starner,T. (2024.). Heavy is the head that wears the crown: The state of CEO mental health. https://worldatwork.org/publications/workspan-daily/heavy-is-the-head-that-wears-the-crown-the-state-of-ceo-mental-health
From the outside, it looks like you have it together.
Youโre meeting deadlines. Showing up to meetings. Answering emails. Managing responsibilities. Maybe even advancing in your career.
But internally, itโs a different story.
Your mind doesnโt shut off. You replay conversations. You overthink decisions that shouldnโt feel this heavy. Thereโs a constant pressure to stay on top of everythingโbecause if youโre not, something might slip.
And most people donโt see that part.
Anxiety in high-functioning professionals doesnโt always look like panic. More often, it looks like competence.
It shows up as over-preparing, staying mentally โonโ long after the workday ends, and holding yourself to a standard that keeps moving just out of reach. You might have a hard time relaxing without feeling guilty, or find yourself questioning whether youโre doing enoughโeven when thereโs plenty of evidence that you are.
People experiencing high-functioning anxiety often appear capable and successful on the outside, while internally managing ongoing pressure, worry, and self-doubt (NewYork-Presbyterian, 2023). In a lot of ways, it blends in so well that it can be hard to recognizeโeven for the person experiencing it.
Part of what makes this so tricky is that in many corporate environments, these patterns are reinforced. Being detail-oriented, responsive, and always available is often rewarded. You might be known as reliable, driven, or someone who always delivers.
But whatโs underneath that performance often gets missed.
Thereโs a quiet cycle that can develop over time: you feel anxious, so you push harder. You succeed, which reinforces the idea that the anxiety is necessary. And slowly, that pressure starts to feel like the thing holding everything together.
Because youโre still functioningโoften at a high levelโitโs easy to tell yourself nothing is really wrong. But research and clinical insight continue to show that many professionals maintain high levels of performance while experiencing significant internal stress, often without ever seeking support (McLean Hospital, 2025; Starner, 2024).
A lot of people in these roles donโt talk about their anxietyโnot because it isnโt there, but because of what it might mean to admit it.
Thereโs often a quiet narrative running in the background: I should be able to handle this. This is just part of the job. If I slow down, everything will fall apart.
And in leadership or high-responsibility roles, there can be an added pressure to appear steady, capable, and in control. Conversations around executive mental health are starting to acknowledge just how common anxiety is at higher levels of responsibility, even if itโs rarely talked about openly (Starner, 2024; Hyder, 2021).
So instead, you keep going.
Even when youโre exhausted.
At some point, though, it starts to show up in other ways. Your mind wonโt shut off at night. You feel tense even during downtime. Youโre physically present, but mentally still working through your to-do list. Small things start to feel heavier than they should.
High-functioning anxiety tends to run on a loopโwhere productivity temporarily relieves the anxiety, but never actually resolves it (Anderson, 2025). So you keep doing more, thinking it will eventually feel easier.
But it usually doesnโt.
Most high-functioning professionals donโt need more strategies for doing more. What they often need is space to step out of constant pressure.
That can start with noticing when anxietyโnot intentionโis driving your decisions. It can look like practicing boundaries without immediately labeling them as failure, or learning how to slow down without guilt taking over.
It also means beginning to untangle the idea that your worth is tied to how much you produce.
And thatโs not always an easy shiftโespecially if pushing yourself is whatโs helped you get where you are.
Therapy in this space isnโt about taking away your ambition or lowering your standards. Itโs about helping you function without relying on constant pressure as your baseline.
That might look like learning how to respond differently to anxious thoughts, reducing the mental load youโre carrying, and creating a more sustainable way of showing upโnot just at work, but in your life overall. Approaches like CBT and mindfulness-based strategies can be especially helpful in reducing anxiety while still supporting high levels of functioning (NewYork-Presbyterian, 2023).
You can be successful and struggling at the same time.
Both can be true.
And if youโve been holding it together on the outside while feeling overwhelmed on the insideโyouโre not the only one.
You donโt have to wait until things fall apart to take your anxiety seriously.
References:
Anderson, M. (2025). Managing high-functioning anxiety in professionals. https://drmalcolmanderson.net/2025/08/13/managing-high-functioning-anxiety-in-professionals/
Hyder, S. (2021). How conquering executive anxiety can make you a better, happier leader. Forbes. https://www.forbes.com/sites/shamahyder/2021/03/29/how-conquering-executive-anxiety-can-make-you-a-better-happier-leader/
McLean Hospital. (2025.). The silent strain: Top mental health concerns among executive leadership. https://www.mcleanhospital.org/news/silent-strain-top-mental-health-among-executive-leadership
NewYork-Presbyterian. (2023). What is high-functioning anxiety? https://healthmatters.nyp.org/what-is-high-functioning-anxiety/
Starner,T. (2024.). Heavy is the head that wears the crown: The state of CEO mental health. https://worldatwork.org/publications/workspan-daily/heavy-is-the-head-that-wears-the-crown-the-state-of-ceo-mental-health
Anxiety in Uncertain Times
Uncertainty is an unavoidable part of daily life. From moment-to-moment questionsโWhat will today bring? Will things go as planned?โto broader concerns involving political, economic, and social change, uncertainty exists at both the macro and micro levels. It can show up in our communities, our workplaces, our homes, and our families. As humans, we are biologically wired to seek safety, predictability, and control. When these needs are threatened, uncertainty can feel deeply unsettling. For many people, prolonged uncertainty triggers emotional and physiological stress responses. Feelings of fear, anxiety, mental exhaustion, and emotional overwhelm are common. Uncertainty often fuels โwhat-ifโ thinking, catastrophizing, and a sense of looming dangerโeven when no immediate threat is present. While some individuals enjoy unpredictability and risk-taking, others experience uncertainty as anxiety-provoking and destabilizing. If uncertainty feels overwhelming or all-consuming, it is important to know that you are not alone, and support is available.
The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted just how quickly circumstances can change. Many people experienced a loss of routine, structure, and perceived control almost overnight. In response, individuals prone to anxiety often found themselves mentally rehearsing every possible outcome in an effort to feel prepared. While this strategy may feel protective, excessive planning and rumination often increase anxiety rather than reduce it, keeping the nervous system in a constant state of alert.
Learning to tolerate uncertainty is not about ignoring reality or abandoning planning altogether. Rather, it involves developing emotional flexibility and building trust in your ability to copeโeven when outcomes are unknown. The following strategies are evidence-informed approaches to managing anxiety and stress related to uncertainty:
1. Reduce baseline stress and anxiety
Lowering overall stress helps increase your capacity to tolerate uncertainty. Regular physical activity, adequate sleep, balanced nutrition, relaxation practices, and mindfulness or grounding exercises all support nervous system regulation. Therapy can also provide a safe space to explore fears, process emotions, and develop coping tools tailored to your needs.
2. Focus on what is within your control
Uncertainty often pulls attention toward what might happen rather than what is happening. Refocusing on actionable stepsโyour behaviors, boundaries, choices, and responsesโcan restore a sense of agency. Ask yourself: What can I influence right now? What do I know to be true today?
3. Challenge the need for certainty
Explore where your need for certainty originates. Is it rooted in past experiences, trauma, or learned beliefs about safety and control? Reflect on whether absolute certainty is realisticโor even necessary. Often, the pursuit of certainty creates more distress than the uncertainty itself.
4. Practice acceptance of uncertainty
Acceptance does not mean giving up or being unprepared. It means acknowledging that not every outcome can be anticipated or controlled. Identify situations or triggers that heighten your intolerance of uncertainty and take intentional steps to reduce unnecessary exposure when possible.
5. Limit exposure to distressing news
Continuous consumption of newsโparticularly during uncertain timesโcan amplify fear and anxiety. Consider setting boundaries around how often and when you engage with news media, especially before bedtime. Staying informed does not require constant exposure.
6. Cultivate gratitude
Gratitude is a powerful protective factor against stress and depressive symptoms. Begin with a simple gratitude list and add to it consistently. Over time, reviewing this list can help shift attention toward stability, resilience, and positive experiences that coexist alongside uncertainty.
7. Practice the โThree Good Thingsโ exercise
At the end of each day, write down three positive things that occurred. Reflect on how they happened, what role you played, and how they made you feel. This practice strengthens emotional awareness and reinforces adaptive thinking patterns.
8. Reflect on past resilience
Remind yourself of previous challenges you have faced and overcome. How does your current situation compare? What coping strategies supported you then, and how might you apply them now? Recognizing your history of resilience can increase confidence in your ability to navigate the unknown.
Uncertainty is uncomfortable, but it is also a shared human experience. With the right tools and support, it is possible to build tolerance for the unknown and reduce the anxiety that often accompanies it. Therapy can be an important resource in this process, offering guidance, perspective, and strategies for managing uncertainty in a more balanced and compassionate way.
References:
Robinson, L & Smith, M. (n.d.). The role of uncertainty in life. Help Guide.org. https://www.helpguide.org/mental-health/anxiety/dealing-with-uncertainty
Seale, G. (n.d.). Best practices for managing stress and anxiety during times of uncertainty. Center for Neuro Skills. https://biausa.org/public-affairs/media/managing-stress-and-anxiety-during-times-of-uncertainty
Uncertainty is an unavoidable part of daily life. From moment-to-moment questionsโWhat will today bring? Will things go as planned?โto broader concerns involving political, economic, and social change, uncertainty exists at both the macro and micro levels. It can show up in our communities, our workplaces, our homes, and our families. As humans, we are biologically wired to seek safety, predictability, and control. When these needs are threatened, uncertainty can feel deeply unsettling. For many people, prolonged uncertainty triggers emotional and physiological stress responses. Feelings of fear, anxiety, mental exhaustion, and emotional overwhelm are common. Uncertainty often fuels โwhat-ifโ thinking, catastrophizing, and a sense of looming dangerโeven when no immediate threat is present. While some individuals enjoy unpredictability and risk-taking, others experience uncertainty as anxiety-provoking and destabilizing. If uncertainty feels overwhelming or all-consuming, it is important to know that you are not alone, and support is available.
The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted just how quickly circumstances can change. Many people experienced a loss of routine, structure, and perceived control almost overnight. In response, individuals prone to anxiety often found themselves mentally rehearsing every possible outcome in an effort to feel prepared. While this strategy may feel protective, excessive planning and rumination often increase anxiety rather than reduce it, keeping the nervous system in a constant state of alert.
Learning to tolerate uncertainty is not about ignoring reality or abandoning planning altogether. Rather, it involves developing emotional flexibility and building trust in your ability to copeโeven when outcomes are unknown. The following strategies are evidence-informed approaches to managing anxiety and stress related to uncertainty:
1. Reduce baseline stress and anxiety
Lowering overall stress helps increase your capacity to tolerate uncertainty. Regular physical activity, adequate sleep, balanced nutrition, relaxation practices, and mindfulness or grounding exercises all support nervous system regulation. Therapy can also provide a safe space to explore fears, process emotions, and develop coping tools tailored to your needs.
2. Focus on what is within your control
Uncertainty often pulls attention toward what might happen rather than what is happening. Refocusing on actionable stepsโyour behaviors, boundaries, choices, and responsesโcan restore a sense of agency. Ask yourself: What can I influence right now? What do I know to be true today?
3. Challenge the need for certainty
Explore where your need for certainty originates. Is it rooted in past experiences, trauma, or learned beliefs about safety and control? Reflect on whether absolute certainty is realisticโor even necessary. Often, the pursuit of certainty creates more distress than the uncertainty itself.
4. Practice acceptance of uncertainty
Acceptance does not mean giving up or being unprepared. It means acknowledging that not every outcome can be anticipated or controlled. Identify situations or triggers that heighten your intolerance of uncertainty and take intentional steps to reduce unnecessary exposure when possible.
5. Limit exposure to distressing news
Continuous consumption of newsโparticularly during uncertain timesโcan amplify fear and anxiety. Consider setting boundaries around how often and when you engage with news media, especially before bedtime. Staying informed does not require constant exposure.
6. Cultivate gratitude
Gratitude is a powerful protective factor against stress and depressive symptoms. Begin with a simple gratitude list and add to it consistently. Over time, reviewing this list can help shift attention toward stability, resilience, and positive experiences that coexist alongside uncertainty.
7. Practice the โThree Good Thingsโ exercise
At the end of each day, write down three positive things that occurred. Reflect on how they happened, what role you played, and how they made you feel. This practice strengthens emotional awareness and reinforces adaptive thinking patterns.
8. Reflect on past resilience
Remind yourself of previous challenges you have faced and overcome. How does your current situation compare? What coping strategies supported you then, and how might you apply them now? Recognizing your history of resilience can increase confidence in your ability to navigate the unknown.
Uncertainty is uncomfortable, but it is also a shared human experience. With the right tools and support, it is possible to build tolerance for the unknown and reduce the anxiety that often accompanies it. Therapy can be an important resource in this process, offering guidance, perspective, and strategies for managing uncertainty in a more balanced and compassionate way.
References:
Robinson, L & Smith, M. (n.d.). The role of uncertainty in life. Help Guide.org. https://www.helpguide.org/mental-health/anxiety/dealing-with-uncertainty
Seale, G. (n.d.). Best practices for managing stress and anxiety during times of uncertainty. Center for Neuro Skills. https://biausa.org/public-affairs/media/managing-stress-and-anxiety-during-times-of-uncertainty