How I Overcame Anxiety — And Why Understanding the Science Gave Me Back My Life
For years, anxiety felt like a force I couldn’t control. It hit fast, hit hard, and left me feeling like a prisoner inside my own body. My worst struggle was gephyrophobia — the fear of crossing bridges — a fear so intense it triggered full-blown panic attacks. Anyone who has lived through panic knows it’s not “just in your head.” It’s physical. It’s overwhelming. It feels like your body is betraying you.
But over time, I learned something that changed everything:
Anxiety begins in the body — but it ends with the choices we make in the mind.
That realization is what allowed me to take control of my anxiety instead of letting it control me.
1. Why Anxiety Starts: The Physiology Behind the Fear
Anxiety isn’t random. It’s the body’s ancient survival system firing at the wrong time.
Here’s what happens:
- The amygdala, the brain’s threat detector, senses danger — even when none exists.
- It sends an emergency signal to the body.
- The adrenal glands release adrenaline.
- The heart races to pump blood to the muscles.
- Breathing speeds up to bring in more oxygen.
- Sweating increases to cool the body for “fight or flight.”
- The stomach drops because digestion shuts down during danger.
- The prefrontal cortex — the reasoning part of the brain — goes partially offline.
This is why anxiety feels so physical. Your body is preparing for a threat that isn’t real.
And once the symptoms start, the mind often reacts with fear:
- “Why is my heart racing?”
- “What’s happening to me?”
- “Am I in danger?”
That fear feeds the physical symptoms, and the physical symptoms feed the fear.
That’s the snowball effect.
2. Genetics Matter — But They Don’t Decide Your Fate
I’ve come to accept something important:
Anxiety can run in families.
The science supports it. Genes influence:
- how sensitive the amygdala is
- how easily the brain triggers a fear response
- how quickly adrenaline is released
- how strongly the body reacts to stress
In many families, anxiety passes from mother to son, son to daughter, daughter to her daughter, and so on.
But here’s the part that matters:
Genetics influence the spark — not the fire. What changes everything is how we respond to the spark.
Biology loads the gun. Environment cocks it. But free will decides whether the trigger gets pulled.
3. Medication Can Help — But It Can Also Create a Mental Trap
There’s nothing wrong with medication. For many people, it provides real relief.
But it can also unintentionally reinforce a belief:
“My anxiety is a chemical problem outside my control.”
That belief can become a cage.
It can make people forget that they still have agency — that they can still influence their thoughts, their reactions, and their internal dialogue.
For me, the turning point came when I realized:
I can’t stop the first feeling. But I can control the second thought.
That’s where the power is.
4. The Technique That Changed Everything:
“Is This Real or Imagined?”
When I felt the first spark of panic — the racing heart, the tight chest, the sense of doom — I started asking myself one simple question:
“Is this threat real, or is my brain imagining danger?”
That question did something powerful:
- It forced my reasoning brain back online.
- It interrupted the panic cycle.
- It created a gap between the feeling and the reaction.
- It stopped the snowball before it rolled downhill.
This is the same mechanism behind cognitive behavioral therapy, exposure therapy, and panic desensitization — but I discovered it through experience, not textbooks.
And it worked.
5. Overcoming Gephyrophobia: Rewiring the Fear Circuit
My fear of bridges used to trigger instant panic. But instead of avoiding them forever, I did the opposite:
- I confronted the fear.
- I questioned the thoughts behind it.
- I reminded myself the danger was imagined.
- I stayed present long enough for the fear to lose its power.
Each time I crossed a bridge, the fear weakened. Each time I challenged the thought, the brain rewired.
This isn’t philosophy — it’s neuroscience.
The brain learns through repetition. What you confront, you desensitize. What you avoid, you reinforce.
Today, that fear barely exists.
6. Why This Works: The Science of Reclaiming Control
Modern neuroscience confirms what I learned firsthand:
- Thoughts reshape neural pathways. Repeated reasoning strengthens the prefrontal cortex.
- Fear circuits weaken when not reinforced. This is called extinction learning.
- Exposure rewires the amygdala. The brain learns the situation is safe.
- Metacognition (thinking about your thoughts) reduces panic. It shifts the brain from reaction to evaluation.
- Discipline builds emotional resilience. The more you practice control, the more control you gain.
In other words:
You can’t stop the brain from firing the first signal, but you can train your brain to think rather than react. You can control how you react to the feeling.
That’s real change — not temporary relief.
7. The Conclusion I’ve Come To
Anxiety is real. Genetics is real. Brain chemistry is real. Panic is real.
But so is free will. So is discipline. So is the ability to challenge your own mind.
I’m not claiming everyone can simply “think their way out” of anxiety. But I am saying this:
You have more power over your mind than you think. And the moment you start questioning your fear, you stop being its victim.
I rarely have anxiety attacks anymore — not because my biology changed, but because I changed the way I respond to it.
And that is something anyone can learn.
I have another post that fully explains how I overcame my fear of bridges. It goes deeper into where these anxious reactions begin in the inner ear and how to control the way you respond to those feelings. It puts you in the driver’s seat. Read it here:
Bridge Anxiety: Mapping the Unknown Gradient – The Restorationist Project