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Anxiety

High-Functioning Anxiety: When You Look Fine but Don't Feel It

The quiet, exhausting version of anxiety that hides behind achievement, productivity, and people-pleasing — and what to do about it.

Haylie Ann Yakrus, MS, LPC, NCCMarch 15, 20268 min read
High-Functioning Anxiety: When You Look Fine but Don't Feel It

On paper, you're fine. You show up. You meet deadlines. You hold the family schedule together. You're the dependable one. The competent one. The one people don't worry about.

Inside, it's another story. A racing mind that doesn't shut off. A body that's always braced. A constant low-grade dread. The 2 a.m. replay of a conversation you had two weeks ago. The certainty that if you stop, even briefly, something will collapse.

That's high-functioning anxiety — and it's far more common than we admit.

What It Looks Like From the Outside

  • Productive, organized, dependable
  • Often the one others lean on
  • High-achieving at work or in school
  • Calm under pressure (until you're not)
  • Rarely complains

What It Feels Like Inside

  • Overthinking, ruminating, mentally rehearsing
  • Perfectionism — and the shame when you fall short
  • People-pleasing and difficulty saying no
  • Inability to rest; guilt when you try
  • Physical tension: jaw, shoulders, shallow breathing
  • The sense that the floor will drop if you stop holding it up
  • A harsh inner critic that won't let anything be enough

Why It's So Hard to Get Help For

Because nothing is technically wrong. You're not in crisis. You're not falling apart. You're functioning — which is exactly what makes high-functioning anxiety so insidious. The functioning itself is the symptom. The achievement is the coping mechanism. The competence is the armor.

By the time many people seek therapy for it, it's often because their body finally made them — through burnout, a panic attack, a health scare, or the slow-dawning realization that they've been exhausted for a decade.

Where It Often Comes From

High-functioning anxiety usually has roots. It often started as a brilliant adaptation — to a chaotic home, to a parent whose love felt conditional, to an environment where achievement was the way to feel safe or seen. It made sense then. The problem is that the part of you that learned to keep everyone happy and everything controlled is still on duty, decades later, in situations that no longer require it.

What Helps

Just calming yourself down isn't enough — because the anxiety isn't the problem. It's the strategy. What helps is meeting the part of you running the strategy, understanding what it's been protecting, and helping it trust that you no longer have to perform safety to be safe.

In our work together, we use IFS to get curious about the parts that drive the overfunctioning, somatic and grounding work to help your nervous system settle, and slow-paced relational work to help you actually rest — not just collapse into rest when your body finally forces it.

You Don't Have to Earn the Right to Slow Down

If any of this lands, your anxiety isn't a personality trait. It's something that learned to take care of you a long time ago. It can be helped. And you can find a way to live that doesn't require holding everything up alone.

Ready to Take the Next Step?

If something here resonates, we'd love to support you in deeper work.