Living with health anxiety can feel overwhelming, but health anxiety healing begins when you stop waiting for symptoms to disappear and start bringing them with you. Listen to the episode below to learn how, and enjoy.
You Can Feel It and Still Do It: Living With Health Anxiety
If you’ve ever found yourself saying, “I’ll start living again once this dizziness goes away,” or “When my chest tightness stops, then I’ll go on that trip,” you’re not alone. This is one of the most common thought patterns in health anxiety, and one of the most deceptive.
In today’s anxiety guy podcast episode, I explore a powerful idea that helped me and has helped countless others on the healing path:
You don’t need a perfect body to start living again.
In fact, waiting for all health anxiety symptoms to vanish before you do the things you love might be what’s keeping them around.
The Trap of Anxiety Symptom Fixation
When you are living with health anxiety, every sensation in your body can feel like a threat. A flutter in your chest, a dizzy spell, a sense of disconnection, these aren’t just uncomfortable. They’re terrifying. Your brain, wired to protect you, sounds the alarm.
You start scanning, checking, Googling, asking for reassurance. You avoid things that might “trigger” symptoms like exercise, social situations, even rest.
And soon, life starts shrinking.
But here’s the truth that can shift everything:
Healing doesn’t come from avoiding symptoms. It comes from changing how you respond to them.
Why “Feeling Safe” Is Not a Prerequisite for Action
One of the hardest things for those with health anxiety to accept is that there may never be a day where you feel completely safe before doing the thing you want to do.
You may not feel 100% symptom-free before:
And yet… you can still do it.
When you learn to bring your symptoms with you, you loosen anxiety’s grip. You teach your brain: this sensation is uncomfortable, but it’s not dangerous.
That’s neuroplasticity in action. And that’s what rewires your fear responses over time.
You Can Bring It With You
This doesn’t mean you force yourself to do things you’re not ready for. It means that when the moment comes, when life is inviting you to engage, you can allow the symptoms to come along without making them the enemy.
Let’s say you’re feeling dizzy and your body is screaming for you to stay home. You might say:
“Okay dizziness, you can come with me. You’re not running the show today, I am.”
This isn’t denial or distraction. It’s compassionate courage.
You’re no longer asking your body to be perfect in order for you to show up. You’re asking yourself to show up as you are, symptoms and all, and let the healing come through experience, not control.
The Myth of the “Healed” Body
There’s a subtle (but damaging) belief many of us hold:
“If I could just get my body to be symptom-free, then I’d finally live again.”
But healing isn’t about eliminating all discomfort. It’s about building a new relationship with it.
The truth is, no human lives without some form of discomfort, physical, emotional, or mental. Even those who don’t suffer from anxiety still feel aches, sensations, and fatigue.
The difference is perception.
An anxious brain interprets normal bodily signals as danger. A calm brain recognizes them as part of the human experience.
So the goal isn’t to fix everything. The goal is to retrain the brain to see your symptoms differently, not as warnings, but as background noise that doesn’t need a full-body alarm response.
A Shift in Identity
This process goes deeper than just changing behavior — it’s a shift in identity.
From:
To:
This identity shift won’t happen overnight. But with each small decision, each moment where you say yes to life even while your body feels uneasy you reinforce a new internal story.
Small Ways to Practice This While Living With Health Anxiety Today
You don’t have to start by doing the scariest thing on your list. Start small. Here are a few ways to practice bringing your symptoms with you:
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Take a short walk while experiencing anxiety, and narrate your inner experience with compassion.
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Eat a meal mindfully, even if your stomach feels off.
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Say yes to a social plan even if your heart is racing.
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Sit in a café or public place and breathe through any discomfort without escaping.
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Show up to your daily responsibilities without waiting for the “perfect” internal state.
Each of these is a signal to your nervous system: we are safe enough to live.
It’s Your Time for True Healing
This might be the most important reminder of all.
Your body isn’t failing you.
It’s doing what it thinks it must to protect you, and you have the power to gently teach it something new.
You don’t need to wait for the dizziness, the fatigue, or the tight chest to disappear before you begin again. You can begin now. And by beginning now, your symptoms begin to lose their power.
Final Words
If you take one thing away from this episode, let it be this:
You can live fully, even when you don’t feel fully okay.
It’s not about forcing yourself. It’s about choosing presence, compassion, and courage over perfection. That’s how healing happens. That’s how life opens up again. If this episode spoke to you, I’d love it if you’d leave a review and share it with someone who needs it. You never know how your share might change a life.
Comment on your biggest moment of clarity from this episode on living with health anxiety below
The Anxiety Guy Podcast is one of the most popular mental health podcasts in the world with more than 20 million downloads alongside the Health Anxiety Podcast Show.
It has been selected as the top mental health and anxiety podcast on Apple 6 times, and has been listen as a top podcast for anxiety today on Psychology Today, Choosing Therapy, Better Help, Women’s Health, Marissa Peer and many more. To listen to any of the past episodes for free, check out this page.
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