It’s been a day. You’ve answered every important email. Showed up prepared and on time to the weekly meeting—heck, you were a few minutes early. Remembered your co-worker’s birthday. Professionally handled that last-minute curveball. And then still made it home to make dinner. Somehow.
By every measure, it looks like you’ve got it handled. You’re doing great—or at least fine.
Yet, at the end of the day, no matter how good it all looks to the outside world, it feels like you can never quite shut down completely. You long for peace. For quiet. Yet there’s something that continues to buzz in the background.
While many people think anxiety always appears as either a panic attack or frantic energy, for a lot of folks, it doesn’t look like that at all.
Sometimes, it looks like someone who’s driven—who pushes hard to get everything done. Or at least almost everything, even if a few items linger on the to-do list. For others, it’s waking up at 3 a.m. and mentally replaying a conversation from earlier that day… or was that three days ago? Seven years ago? Leaving you wondering why this (of all things) is keeping you up?!
From the outside, everything looks fine—even when it absolutely isn’t. And that’s the paradox of high-functioning anxiety.
If the above sounds somewhat familiar, it’s time to talk.
What Is High-Functioning Anxiety?
First off, high-functioning anxiety isn’t an official diagnosis. It’s not listed in the DSM-5. That, however, doesn’t make it any less of a real experience for a growing number of people.
It describes anyone who carries all the internal weight of anxiety (e.g., the worry, overthinking, physical tension, and dread—fun!), while still somehow managing to show up, perform (often very well), and appear composed. People have described it less as hitting a wall and more like an endless treadmill that never fully powers down and, in fact, tends to ramp up. No matter how exhausted you get from all of that running.
You see, high-functioning anxiety can masquerade as ambition or thoroughness. Coworkers, family members, and friends may just see you as the “responsible” one. And because it’s under the surface, it can go unrecognized. Sometimes for years.
If you don’t have a name for what’s happening, it’s easy to assume that there’s nothing to address. After all, you’re still functioning. You’re still getting stuff done. You still look like more than competent.
In truth, though, untreated anxiety—even if it’s well hidden from the world—doesn’t stay in the background forever. Eventually, it can wear on your sleep, relationships, and physical health.
Plus, it often doesn’t visit alone, either. Anxiety frequently co-occurs with depression, ADHD, OCD, substance use disorder, trauma-related disorders, and other mental health conditions. And when that happens, the picture can feel even more distorted.
How Do I Tell If I Have High-Functioning Anxiety?
The tricky thing is that the signs of high-functioning anxiety don’t look like “symptoms.” Many people see them as personality traits or “just the way they are.” They’re reliable. Thorough. Good at their job. That’s not anxiety. That’s just being a responsible citizen or perhaps even an overachiever.
The difference between someone who’s driven and someone who’s driven by fear and anxiety, though, isn’t about what shows up on the surface. It’s about what’s going on underneath.
There are seven signs that may indicate your experience is more than everyday stress. They’re not meant to diagnose you. However, they may help you see signs you’ve been too busy to notice. If you find that several of them hit just a little too close to home, you may want to take our two-minute free anxiety self-assessment quiz to gain clarity.
Your brain runs worst-case scenarios on autopilot
You’re not a pessimist; you’re a planner. And that’s helpful and often honest framing.
But if you mentally rehearse every possible way something could go wrong—even when the odds are solidly in your favor—your (over)planning could be getting in the way of a life well lived. Before every routine doctor’s appointment, every work presentation—even just going over notes with the boss—or a simple text that hasn’t yet gotten a response shouldn’t immediately spin into three catastrophes deep.
Psychologists describe this as a “checklist running in your mind that keeps you in a state of vigilance.” And for folks with high-functioning anxiety, it can feel impossible to turn off. It just switches to the next possible catastrophe.
You’re exhausted, but slowing down feels impossible.
Even if you got the requisite “7 to 8 hours of sleep,” you still wake up tense and tired. Why? Because your mind never completely relaxes. Vacation? Sounds great. But it’s not restorative if you spend the entire time mentally worried about what’s happening at home. As much as you may want to have a few moments of calm, when you do stop, it doesn’t feel restful. It just feels like you’re falling further behind.
As one person who’s spent decades dealing with high-functioning anxiety described, “It feels like anxiety is in the driver’s seat on a relentless drive you can’t get off.” Her only way to deal with it was to keep moving. And that worked. Until it didn’t.
You replay conversations long after they’re over.
Your meeting may have ended hours ago, but you’re still turning over every word that was said. Did that comment land wrong? Should I have said something different? Were they frowning when I got up to leave?
Before you even know how well the meeting went, your brain filed it under “unresolved” and started replaying it from every angle—often with some unhelpful narration.
Make no mistake, this rumination isn’t about being insecure or uncertain. It’s anxiety doing what it does: scanning for threats—real and imagined—and refusing to let something go, even after reviewing it.
What’s most frustrating is that no amount of analyzing can quiet that voice.
Unwanted thoughts show up once the lights shut off.
For many people with high-functioning anxiety, days are manageable. You do what you do—accomplish tasks, fill your roles, look the part, and continue to maintain forward momentum.
Then the night comes, and all your carefully maintained structure is stripped away. Under the cover of darkness, the mental noise grows loud. The to-do list for tomorrow, the project you forgot to follow up on, the thing you said, the nagging worry you’ve kept at arm’s length all day… it all shows up right on schedule once the lights are off.
Maybe you find it difficult, if not impossible, to wind down until well past midnight. Perhaps you find it easy to fall asleep, only to wake up at 3 or 4 in the morning, already alert and thinking. It chips away at your much-needed sleep when your nervous system needs that time to recover.
You say yes when you really need to say no.
You want to help. You truly do. But you’re already feeling overwhelmed or close to burned out. The thought of saying no, though. Inconceivable. Saying no means you’ll disappoint someone. Or be seen as difficult. You can’t let them down. That causes a deep level of discomfort that’s difficult to describe. It’s just not worth the boundary.
So, you say yes. You take on more, manage more, deliver more.
This pattern is especially common in women, who were often conditioned to show up for others regardless of their own capacity. It can look like generosity or like being a team player.
In fact, it’s anxiety making the decisions—often before you’re even aware of the ask.
Your body has been trying to tell you something.
This may come as a bit of a surprise, but those tight shoulders that never fully release, a jaw that clenches without you even noticing, headaches that show up every single Sunday evening, a stomach that’s always slightly off before any important decision or event aren’t random inconveniences. They’re your nervous system communicating what your brain has learned to push past.
Unfortunately, many people with high-functioning anxiety have learned to override these signals. Often very well. There’s typically a good, logical reason: bad posture, leaning over a computer for too many hours, not enough water, too much coffee, etc., etc. But when the physical patterns are consistent and tied to stress, they’re messages that should be listened and responded to.
Everyone thinks you’re fine.
This is perhaps the most isolating sign of all. You’ve gotten so great at holding it all together that even the people closest to you don’t realize you’re suffering. Your coworkers see competence. Family sees reliability. And because no one is raising any flags, it’s easier to convince yourself that you shouldn’t raise one either.
You may have become so good at masking it that even your doctor won’t pick up on it. This isn’t because the anxiety doesn’t exist; it’s because there’s nothing on the surface to indicate a “problem.” That’s why high-functioning anxiety can be carried silently for years. And it’s also why it’s so important to name it when you finally do recognize it.
Again, if more than a couple of these signs sound uncomfortably familiar, it’s worth pausing here. The GAD-7 is a clinically validated tool used by mental health professionals to screen for anxiety. You can take it right here, right now, in just a few minutes, to see how your symptoms score.
What Is the Worst Habit for Anxiety?
If we had to pick the worst habit that feeds anxiety more than any other, it’s avoidance.
Often, it makes perfect sense in the moment. If a situation makes you anxious—perhaps it’s a hard conversation, a crowded event, or an email you’ve been putting off—not doing it brings relief. At least right now. Your nervous system settles, the discomfort passes, and you’re all good.
Except you aren’t.
That problem still lingers. Every time you avoid something anxiety has flagged as threatening, your brain files it away as confirmation that staying away from that dangerous thing kept you safe. The fear behind it, though, doesn’t go away. In fact, over time, it grows bigger. And your comfortable little world shrinks.
If you’re high functioning, you may not even see this avoidance as, well, avoidance. It feels like a simple way to manage the issue. Overworking, for example, can help you avoid the discomfort of sitting with your thoughts. Over-preparing can help you avoid being caught off guard. Staying busy allows you to avoid those feelings that show up when everything quiets down.
Yet avoidance in a productivity mask is still avoidance. And it often comes along with a partner: rumination. That is, replaying and re-analyzing may strike you as “problem solving.” But it rarely resolves anything. It just keeps the anxiety busy while leading to exhaustion.
Breaking the cycle usually requires you to do the opposite of what you want to do. It requires you to move toward discomfort rather than away from it. Which is why therapy can be so helpful, as it provides practical tools to honestly address the situation.
Grounding in the Moment: The 3-3-3 Rule
One of the most popular and helpful tools for actually handling spikes in anxiety is the 3-3-3 rule. When you feel your heart rate ramping up, your thoughts start racing, and your attention narrow, this simple grounding technique is designed to interrupt that response and pull your attention back to the present moment.
What’s the 3-3-3 rule? It’s simple:
1) Name 3 things you can see
2) Identify 3 sounds you can hear
3) Move 3 parts of your body.
That’s it.
It works because anxiety lives in anticipation—in the imagined future or the replayed past. Grounding yourself in the present with exercises like this helps redirect your brain toward sensory input, which is much harder to catastrophize. It may not resolve what’s behind the anxiety, but it can provide enough of a pause so you can respond rather than react.
Slowing down long enough to use the technique is the hardest part—especially when your default mode has always been forward motion. Stopping to take stock, even for a moment or two, can feel unnatural. That’s why it’s recommended that you take time to practice the technique when you’re feeling calmer.
What Is the Root Cause of High-Functioning Anxiety?
There’s rarely a single cause. High-functioning anxiety can develop from a combination of factors, often building on each other over time.
For many, it may root back to childhood—often to messages absorbed about worth and achievement. For example, if praise was almost always tied to performance, or when love felt conditional on getting things right (or perfect), or when the environment was unpredictable enough that staying on high alert felt necessary. Over time, the nervous system learned to operate in a state of low-grade readiness.
Unfortunately, that type of wiring doesn’t just disappear as you grow up and become an adult. Instead, it can show up as the need to over-prepare and overdeliver yet never quite feel like you’re enough.
Neurobiology also plays a role. Some folks are simply born with a more reactive nervous system. One that’s more sensitive to threats—real or perceived. A system that’s quicker to activate the stress response. In many cases, this can be highly useful. It’s how our ancestors survived. Yet it can also be exhausting to always be on alert.
Cultural and environmental pressures, of course, layer on top in a world that rewards busyness and overachievement while treating rest and recovery only worth it when earned. In this society, high-functioning anxiety can feel like a reasonable response to unreasonable demands. That’s one of the main reasons it can be so challenging to recognize.
What Vitamin Deficiency Causes Anxiety?
More and more often, we’re finding that the foods we eat and the nutrients we consume can affect our mental health. That’s not to say that nutrition can fix anxiety or other mental health conditions alone. However, certain deficiencies have been found to worsen symptoms in ways that aren’t always obvious right away.
Vitamin D is one of the most commonly flagged for a number of conditions. Indeed, low levels of vitamin D have been linked to not only increased anxiety but to depression and ADHD as well. Worse, deficiency is widespread—especially as more of us spend most of our days indoors.
Another key nutrient is B12. Deficiencies of which can affect mood and neurological function, potentially even producing symptoms that resemble anxiety, such as a racing heart, fatigue, and difficulty concentrating.
A mineral (rather than a vitamin), magnesium is another one to know as it plays a direct role on nervous system regulation. Many adults don’t get enough through their diets alone. Insufficient magnesium has been linked with irritability, restlessness, and difficulty sleeping, which can make symptoms of anxiety worse.
The research surrounding omega-3 fatty acids (also a nutrient but not a vitamin) is less conclusive. However, some experts suggest it may help reduce inflammation and support mood regulation.
While nutrition does have an impact on mental health, it’s always worth having your levels checked and consulting with your healthcare team before reaching for supplements. That way, you know what your body really does need, and you can find the best ways to obtain those nutrients (potentially by making small changes to your diet).
What Medication Is Used for High-Functioning Anxiety?
Medication can be helpful, but it’s not the right fit for everyone. Understanding your options and what will work best in your situation starts with a conversation.
Often, the first line of medical treatment recommended are SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. Medications like sertraline, escitalopram, and fluoxetine may help gradually regulate serotonin levels. They can take some time to reach full effect—typically two weeks or more—but they’re widely used and well-studied. SNRIs, such as venlafaxine and duloxetine, have similar effects but also affect norepinephrine, which can be helpful for those dealing with anxiety combined with depression.
Another medication often used for generalized anxiety is buspirone. It’s both non-sedating and doesn’t carry the dependency concerns often associated with past options. It works well for ongoing day-to-day anxiety. For more acute or situational episodes (think public speaking, performance anxiety, or high-stakes events), beta-blockers are sometimes prescribed to help reduce physical symptoms, such as a racing heart or shaking, without causing sedation. Interestingly, though, there’s not much evidence that they’re all that effective.
Medication is often paired with therapy. For good reason! Combining therapy, such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), with medication tends to produce better outcomes than with either one alone.
The right path depends on your specific symptoms, history, and everything else you’ve got going in life. That’s why a proper evaluation is so important before beginning treatment.
You Don’t Have to Go It Alone
High-functioning anxiety has a way of convincing many people that they’re managing just fine. You haven’t fallen apart, so what is there to address? You may even think that because other people have it so much worse, your experience doesn’t really count.
Managing anxiety, though, isn’t the same as thriving. Just because you’re good at carrying something heavy doesn’t mean you should have to carry it indefinitely.
At DMHBH, we work with people navigating anxiety in all forms, including anxiety that doesn’t “look” like anxiety. So, if any parts of this article made you stop and wonder, it’s worth paying attention. A good first step is understanding where you stand by taking our free GAD-7 Anxiety Self-Assessment Quiz. This is the same tool used by mental health professionals to screen for anxiety. The results can help guide your next conversation.