Anxiety With No Apparent Cause
When Your Nervous System Hits the Alarm
Content advisory: This episode mentions crisis resources (including the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline)
Support & Kindness Podcast, Ep. 20
Some days, nothing “bad” is happening… and your body still sounds the alarm.
In Episode 20 of the Support & Kindness Podcast - “Anxiety With No Apparent Cause” - host Greg Shaw and co-hosts Rich, Jay, Liam, Derek, and Sarah talk through what it feels like when anxiety shows up “out of nowhere,” why it can happen, and what helps in the moment (and over time).
This episode shares personal reflections and is not a substitute for professional advice.
In this episode, you’ll explore
- Why anxiety can feel “random” even when your body has reasons
- The “anxiety about anxiety” loop (and how to loosen it)
- A simple 90-second kindness plan for the moment anxiety hits
- Real-life strategies from the co-hosts (baseline anxiety, catastrophizing, shame-free coping)
When Anxiety Feels Random, It’s Still Real
Greg opens with a compassionate reframe: unexplained anxiety doesn’t mean you’re broken - it means your nervous system is reacting.
“Anxiety can be real even if there’s no obvious cause, and you deserve compassion, not criticism.” - Greg
A useful context point: clinical descriptions of panic disorder include attacks that can occur “out of the blue,” meaning they aren’t always tied to an obvious immediate trigger. (National Institute of Mental Health)
And globally, anxiety disorders are extremely common - WHO estimates 359 million people were affected in 2021, and many people still don’t receive care. (World Health Organization)
Your Built-In Alarm System Can Misfire
The episode explains anxiety as an alarm system (fight/flight/freeze) that’s meant to protect you - but can become oversensitive.
When the sympathetic (“fight-or-flight”) system is activated, it can shift your body fast: heart rate up, breathing changes, tension rises, digestion slows. (Cleveland Clinic)
Greg emphasizes that “no obvious cause” doesn’t mean “no cause.” Sometimes the trigger is subtle (a tone, a memory cue, a date), or your system is running on fumes.
The “Anxiety About Anxiety” Loop
One of the most relatable moments is when the conversation names the spiral:
- You feel anxious
- You don’t know why
- You fear the feeling
- That fear adds more fuel
That loop can become its own engine - especially when you start monitoring your body like it’s about to betray you.
Rich describes his goal as catching anxiety early:
“My goal is to keep anxiety from becoming a panic attack.” - Rich
And Jay describes what it’s like when your baseline never feels “calm”:
“On a scale of one to ten, my anxiety doesn’t really go below a four.” - Jay
Hidden Triggers: Stress, Sleep, Caffeine, and the Stuff You Haven’t Had Time to Feel
The episode stays shame-free while naming common “invisible” contributors:
- Ongoing stress (caregiving, work pressure, grief, money worries)
- Body basics (sleep disruption, caffeine, dehydration, hunger, hormones)
- Sensory overload (noise, clutter, bright lights, constant notifications)
- Unprocessed emotion (anger, fear, sadness, disappointment living in the body)
Derek frames anxiety as a messenger that forces a check-in:
“My anxiety will jolt me back to reality - like, ‘Hey, stop and breathe.’” - Derek
And Liam names a big one many of us know too well: catastrophizing - mentally fast-forwarding into worst-case certainty.
“I’ve already developed the worst thing that can happen in my head.” - Liam
(If you’ve ever felt this, you’re not weird - catastrophizing is a recognized thinking pattern often discussed in CBT contexts.) (APA Dictionary)
The 90-Second Kindness Plan: What to Do Right Now
Greg shares a simple, repeatable in-the-moment tool - not to “win” against anxiety, but to meet it with steadiness.
The 90-Second Kindness Plan
- Name it: “Anxiety is here.”
- Locate it: chest, stomach, jaw, shoulders
- Use one anchor (pick one):
- Longer exhales (exhale a bit longer than you inhale)
- Grounding: feet into the floor + name 3 things you can see
- Temperature cue: hold something warm or cool
- Reassure (if it fits): “This is uncomfortable, not dangerous.”
That longer-exhale idea aligns with how the parasympathetic (“rest-and-digest”) system helps the body return toward safety after stress. (Cleveland Clinic)
Lowering Your Baseline Over Time (Tiny, Sustainable Habits)
A theme across the whole episode: the goal isn’t perfection - it’s a lower baseline and more support.
Jay mentions a few practical stabilizers (sleep routine, journaling, exercise, keeping hands busy), and Sarah shares how she works with nighttime anxiety by walking her thoughts all the way through the “worst case” and then asking what’s actually actionable.
“I don’t feel shame about my anxiety… it’s just another layer of worry.” - Sarah
Greg’s closing message lands gently:
- Anxiety can be an alarm
- Alarms can misfire
- Fighting anxiety often turns into fighting yourself
- Curiosity + kindness can turn the volume down over time
Summary
Episode 20 offers a grounded reminder: anxiety doesn’t need a visible cause to be valid. The hosts connect nervous-system education with lived experience, then give listeners a simple “in the moment” plan and long-game habits that reduce overwhelm, especially when anxiety loves to show up during ordinary life.
Key Takeaways
- Anxiety can feel like it comes “out of nowhere,” but that doesn’t mean it’s fake - your nervous system may be responding to hidden cues or accumulated stress.
- Catching early signals (racing thoughts, fast breathing, body tension) can help stop anxiety from escalating.
- Naming the experience (“anxiety is here”) reduces the fear-of-the-feeling loop.
- Small anchors (longer exhales, grounding, temperature) can help your body shift toward safety.
- Baseline anxiety often drops with steady basics: sleep rhythm, movement, journaling, reduced doomscrolling, and connection.
- Catastrophizing is powerful - and noticing it is the first step to loosening it.
- Shame isn’t required. You can accept anxiety as part of your human load and still move forward.
- Peer support doesn’t erase anxiety - but it can make it less isolating.
Closing
If this episode felt uncomfortably familiar, you’re not alone - and you’re not failing. Anxiety that “makes no sense” is often your body asking for care, not punishment.
If you feel up to it, share in the comments:
What helps you most when anxiety hits - and what do you wish people understood about it?
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Podcast
Resources & Links Mentioned
If you’re in immediate danger
- Call your local emergency number right now.
Immediate crisis support (U.S.)
- 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (call/text/chat): https://988lifeline.org (988 Lifeline)
- Crisis Text Line (U.S.): Text HOME to 741741 • https://crisistextline.org
- Veterans Crisis Line: https://www.veteranscrisisline.net
- SAMHSA Disaster Distress Helpline: https://www.samhsa.gov/disaster-distress-helpline (may redirect) (SAMHSA)
- The Trevor Project (LGBTQ+ youth): https://www.thetrevorproject.org/get-help (Mental Health VA)
- Note: U.S. federal announcements indicate the specialized LGBTQ+ youth option within 988 changed in 2025; Trevor remains a direct option. (SAMHSA)
Learn about anxiety (trusted, practical)
- WHO - Anxiety disorders (global overview + stats): https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/anxiety-disorders (World Health Organization)
- NIMH - Anxiety Disorders: https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/anxiety-disorders
- NIMH - Panic disorder (“out of the blue” episodes): https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/statistics/panic-disorder (National Institute of Mental Health)
- NIMH - Generalized Anxiety Disorder (definition + stats): https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/statistics/generalized-anxiety-disorder (National Institute of Mental Health)
- ADAA (Anxiety & Depression Association of America): https://adaa.org
- Mind (UK) - info + helplines: https://www.mind.org.uk/information-support/helplines/ (Mind)
Peer support & community options
- NAMI Support Groups: https://nami.org/support-education/support-groups
- ADAA Online Support Group / community: https://adaa.org/adaa-online-support-group
- DBSA (peer-led groups): https://www.dbsalliance.org/support
- 7 Cups (peer support; not for emergencies): https://www.7cups.com
Find help and treatment (U.S.)
- FindSupport.gov: https://findsupport.gov
- SAMHSA “Find Help”: https://www.samhsa.gov/find-help
- SAMHSA National Helpline: https://www.samhsa.gov/national-helpline
- FindTreatment.gov (locator): https://findtreatment.gov (SAMHSA)
Directories for finding therapy / clinicians
- Psychology Today (therapist directory): https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists
- APA Psychologist Locator: https://locator.apa.org
- National Register - Find a Psychologist: https://www.findapsychologist.org
- Open Path Collective (lower-cost therapy network): https://openpathcollective.org
Worksheets, workbooks, and skills practice
- Centre for Clinical Interventions (CCI) - free anxiety modules: https://www.cci.health.wa.gov.au/Resources/Looking-After-Yourself/Anxiety (cci.health.wa.gov.au)
- NHS (UK) - panic/anxiety self-help guidance: https://www.nhs.uk/mental-health/conditions/panic-disorder/overview/ (nhs.uk)
Videos / TED Talks (accessible, skills-focused)
- Olivia Remes - “How to cope with anxiety” (TEDx): https://www.ted.com/talks/olivia_remes_how_to_cope_with_anxiety](https://www.ted.com/talks/olivia_remes_how_to_cope_with_anxiety)
- Wendy Suzuki - “The brain-changing benefits of exercise” (TED): https://www.ted.com/talks/wendy_suzuki_the_brain_changing_benefits_of_exercise
- David H. Rosmarin - “The anxiety antidote” (TEDx): https://www.ted.com/talks/david_h_rosmarin_the_anxiety_antidote
- Lisa Damour - “How to handle anxiety” (TED): https://www.ted.com/talks/lisa_damour_how_to_handle_anxiety
Books mentioned (Further Learning)
- The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook - Edmund J. Bourne
- Unwinding Anxiety - Judson Brewer
- Dare - Barry McDonagh
- Hope and Help for Your Nerves - Claire Weekes
- The Happiness Trap (ACT-based skills) - Russ Harris
#podcast #kindness #mentalhealth #anxiety #selfcare #peersupport #wellbeing #supportgroups #cwh #creativeworkhour
Edited with the help of ChatGPT. Images were created using Nano Banana. I hold a commercial license for each.