Table of Contents
- Not All Anxiety Is Obvious: Understanding High-Functioning Anxiety
- Step 1: Identify Signs
- Step 2: Why It Feels Worse in Motherhood
- Step 3: Finding Your Window of Tolerance Again
- Step 4:Simple Regulation Skills
- Step 5: When to Seek Professional Support
- FAQ: Common Questions About High-Functioning Anxiety
- Final Thoughts: You Don’t Have to Do It All to Be Enough
Learning how to recognize and manage high-functioning anxiety is one of the best things you can do for your emotional health and long-term well-being. But here’s the hard truth: most women who experience it don’t even realize that’s what’s happening because on the outside, they look like they’re “holding it all together.” For a clear overview of what high-functioning anxiety looks like and why it often goes unnoticed in women, check out this article from Women’s Health.
In this post, we’ll explore what high-functioning anxiety really looks like, how it manifests for women and mothers, and practical ways to find more balance without losing your motivation or drive.
Not All Anxiety Is Obvious: Understanding High-Functioning Anxiety
She’s the woman who’s got it all handled—the meetings, the meals, the milestones. She shows up for everyone else, but rarely stops to breathe for herself.
On the outside, she’s capable, organized, and dependable. On the inside, her mind rarely rests. High-functioning anxiety often hides beneath a polished exterior, fueled by perfectionism, overthinking, and the pressure to hold it all together.
Many women and mothers live in this space—managing, achieving, doing—and yet feeling constantly “on.” It’s not weakness; it’s a nervous system running in overdrive.
Step 1: Identify the Signs
High-functioning anxiety doesn’t always look like panic attacks or meltdowns. It often shows up as:
- Difficulty relaxing, even when things are calm
- Trouble falling asleep because your mind won’t stop racing
- Overcommitting or people-pleasing
- Irritability or tension when routines get disrupted
- A constant sense of “not doing enough”
You might look composed but feel exhausted beneath the surface. These signs are often dismissed as “just being busy,” but they’re early cues that your system is stuck in a state of stress. These signs are your body’s way of saying: “My cup is full.”
Step 2: Why High-Functioning Anxiety Feels Worse in Motherhood
Motherhood amplifies everything: your love, your responsibility, your fatigue, your worry. The mental load, sleep deprivation, and constant multitasking can shrink your window of tolerance, leaving little space for rest and recovery. Every small stressor feels bigger when your cup is already full to the brim.
At the same time, motherhood can also soften you. A child’s laughter, their wonder, their presence—they can remind you to slow down and reconnect to your center.
Step 3: Finding Your Window of Tolerance Again
You can expand your window of tolerance through awareness, nervous system regulation, and support. This might look like:
- Slowing your breath before reacting
- Building small pauses into your day
- Letting yourself do less without guilt
- Naming your emotions instead of judging them
- Remembering that calm doesn’t always mean silence
The goal isn’t to eliminate anxiety, but to create enough space inside yourself that life feels more manageable again.
Step 4: Simple Regulation Skills
When anxiety runs high, try grounding through the body instead of fighting your thoughts. A few somatic and mindfulness-based practices when high-functioning anxiety feels unmanageable:
- Exhale longer than you inhale. This tells your nervous system, “You’re safe.”
- Ground through the senses. Notice what’s around you: five things you can see, four you can touch…
- Move gently. Yoga, stretching, intentional shaking, or even walking helps release stored energy.
- Pause for micro-moments of rest. Even 60 seconds of stillness widens your window of tolerance.
Step 5: When to Seek Professional Support for High-Functioning Anxiety
If you feel constantly “on edge,” burned out, or disconnected from yourself, you don’t have to go it alone. Therapy can help you build awareness of your patterns and teach you how to regulate your nervous system in a way that fits into your life. You don’t have to navigate this alone. Contact us to explore how therapy or yoga-based support can help you feel more grounded and at ease.
FAQ: Common Questions About High-Functioning Anxiety
Q: What’s the difference between stress and high-functioning anxiety?
A: Stress is a response to a specific situation. High-functioning anxiety is a state—a constant feeling of being “on.”
Q: Does motherhood make this better or worse?
A: Both. The mental load, sleep deprivation, and constant demands can shrink your window of tolerance, leaving little room for recovery. But having a child who naturally lives in the present can also remind you to slow down, breathe, and rediscover small moments of joy that bring you back to your center.
Q: Can yoga or mindfulness really help?
A: Absolutely. Somatic and breath-based practices support the body in shifting from overactivation to presence.
Q: Can high-functioning anxiety go away?
A: With awareness, nervous system work, and support, the intensity can lessen significantly.
Final Thoughts: You Don’t Have to Do It All to Be Enough
High-functioning anxiety often hides behind competence and care. But your worth isn’t measured by productivity or how well you hold it all together. You can be both capable and tired. Grateful and overwhelmed. Strong and in need of rest. Sometimes, healing begins the moment you let the cup overflow and finally give yourself permission to stop pouring.
Kristen Simons is the founder of Embodied Healing Counseling & Yoga, an integrative therapy and yoga therapy practice in Evanston, Illinois. She specializes in anxiety, perinatal mental health, and somatic mind-body work, helping women and adults build grounded, sustainable tools for everyday life.
Explore services and resources at embodiedhealingtherapist.com.