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Anxious thoughts: when they help, when they hurt (and what to do with them)

Do you ever have a voice in your head warning that something might go wrong? It’s not always a bad thing. Anxiety gets a bad reputation, but sometimes, thinking ahead to potential problems helps us prepare.

The challenge is knowing when caution becomes excessive worry – when a helpful warning turns into a full-blown spiral.

Not all anxious thinking is useless. The term defensive pessimism describes mentally running through worst-case scenarios to stay ahead of them. Some examples include:

This kind of thinking can motivate preparation rather than just causing stress. The problem arises when the brain doesn’t stop at helpful caution and shifts into constant threat detection mode.

When vigilance becomes exhausting

Hypervigilance is like an alarm system that never shuts off. Instead of solving problems, it creates new ones such as:

Have you ever noticed how anxious thoughts escalate? Here’s how it usually happens:

These patterns are common and predictable. The good news is they can be interrupted.

How to challenge anxious thinking

The next time your mind wanders into worst-case territory, try this:

On some days, challenging anxious thoughts might not be enough, and that’s OK. Try these suggestions instead:

Anxiety isn’t something to eliminate – it’s something to understand and work with. Learning to balance caution with calm means recognising when your mind is being helpful and when it’s running in circles.

To learn more, check out our ‘Being Human’ podcast episode with anxiety expert, Prof. Jon Abramowitz.


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