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Anxiety

Signs of Anxiety and When to Seek Help

A degree of anxiety is normal. It is when worry becomes constant, distressing, and limiting that it is worth talking to someone.

5 June 2026 · Clarity Wellbeing Clinic

Anxiety becomes something worth seeking help for when it is persistent, feels out of proportion to the situation, and starts getting in the way of your daily life. A degree of anxiety is normal and even useful. It is when worry becomes constant, distressing, and limiting that it is worth talking to someone. Below are the common signs, and a clear guide on where that line sits.

Almost everyone feels anxious sometimes. The question is not whether you feel anxiety, but whether it has started running the show.

The common signs of anxiety

Anxiety shows up in the body, the mind, and behaviour, often all at once.

In the body, people notice a racing or pounding heart, tight chest, shallow breathing, muscle tension, headaches, a churning stomach, restlessness, and trouble sleeping. Because these are physical, anxiety is often mistaken for something being wrong with the body.

In the mind, it tends to look like constant worry, racing or looping thoughts, expecting the worst, difficulty concentrating, and a sense of dread that is hard to switch off.

In behaviour, anxiety often leads to avoidance, cancelling plans, putting off tasks, seeking constant reassurance, or relying on something to take the edge off. Avoidance brings short term relief but quietly makes the anxiety stronger over time.

Normal anxiety versus anxiety that needs help

Normal anxiety is tied to a specific situation, a job interview, a difficult conversation, and it fades once the situation passes. It is proportionate and temporary.

Anxiety worth addressing tends to be persistent, showing up most days for weeks or more, out of proportion to what is actually happening, and disruptive to your work, relationships, or wellbeing. If you find yourself anxious about being anxious, that is another sign the pattern has taken hold.

When to seek help

It is time to talk to someone if any of these ring true: the anxiety has lasted weeks and is not lifting, it is interfering with your sleep, work, or relationships, you are avoiding things you used to manage, you are using alcohol or other substances to cope, or it simply feels like too much to carry alone. You do not need to wait until it is severe. Earlier is easier.

If your anxiety centres specifically on your health, that has its own pattern and its own solutions, which we cover in our guide to health anxiety.

The good news

Anxiety is one of the most treatable mental health difficulties there is. With the right support, including talking therapy, most people see real improvement. You do not have to simply live with it.

How we can help at Clarity Wellbeing Clinic

At Clarity Wellbeing Clinic in Nuneaton, we work with people to understand what is driving their anxiety and to build practical, lasting ways to manage it, in person and online. If anxiety has started running your life, a calm, confidential conversation is a good first step.

Frequently asked questions

What are the main signs of anxiety?

Physical signs like a racing heart, tension, and disturbed sleep; mental signs like constant worry and racing thoughts; and behavioural signs like avoidance and reassurance seeking. Most people experience a mix.

When should I seek help for anxiety?

When it has lasted weeks, feels out of proportion, interferes with your daily life, or you are avoiding things or using substances to cope. You do not need to wait until it is severe.

Is some anxiety normal?

Yes. Anxiety is a normal, protective response to threat. It becomes a problem when it is persistent, disproportionate, and disruptive rather than tied to a specific passing situation.

Can anxiety be treated?

Yes. Anxiety is highly treatable, and talking therapy is one of the most effective approaches. Most people improve significantly with the right support.

If anxiety has stopped feeling manageable, Get in touch when you're ready.

If you need help now

Clarity is not an emergency or crisis service, and our inbox is not monitored around the clock. If you are in distress or struggling to cope right now, please reach out straight away. You deserve support, and it is always okay to ask for it.

SamaritansCall 116 123, free, any time, day or night.

SHOUTText the word SHOUT to 85258 for free, confidential text support.

NHS 111Call 111 and choose the mental health option.

EmergencyIf life is at risk, call 999 or go to your nearest A&E.