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Anxiety Still Shows Up — But Now It Rides in the Passenger Seat

Published on September 28, 2025, 10:06 AM

Anxiety Still Shows Up — But Now It Rides in the Passenger Seat

I stopped trying to silence anxiety — and started giving it a seat beside me.

There was a time when I thought I had to defeat anxiety. To “fix” myself. To chase it out, ignore it, or at least pretend it wasn’t there. But the more I resisted it, the louder it got. It took me years — and a few mental detours — to realize that anxiety isn’t a monster to fight. It’s a passenger I’ve learned to drive with.

Here’s what that journey looked like, and how I learned to make peace with a voice that once tried to run my life.

The Early Days: Anxiety in the Driver’s Seat

For a long time, anxiety called the shots. It decided whether I went to social events, spoke up in meetings, or even answered texts. It whispered worst-case scenarios at 3 a.m., questioned every choice, and painted everyday situations with catastrophe.

I thought anxiety meant something was wrong with me — that I was too fragile, too fearful, too broken. So I fought it. I tried breathing it away, logic-ing it into silence, even numbing it with distractions. But like a stubborn backseat driver, it only got louder.

The Shift: What If I Stopped Fighting?

Things started to change when I stumbled across a radically different idea: what if anxiety isn’t the enemy? What if it’s just... a very nervous friend trying (badly) to help?

That perspective flipped the script. Anxiety wasn’t trying to ruin my life — it was trying to protect me. It just didn’t know the difference between real danger and imagined ones. Like an overactive smoke detector, it meant well, but needed recalibration.

So I stopped pushing it out of the car. I invited it to sit in the passenger seat instead.

Living with Anxiety: The Passenger Seat Strategy

Letting anxiety ride along doesn’t mean letting it steer. It means noticing when it speaks up, acknowledging it, but still making my own decisions. Here’s what that looks like in practice:

1. Labeling It, Not Becoming It

Instead of saying “I’m anxious,” I started saying, “I notice anxiety is here.” That small language shift reminded me that anxiety is an experience — not an identity. It’s something passing through me, not something I am.

2. Making Space, Not War

When anxiety shows up, I don’t fight it. I feel it — the tightness, the tension, the thoughts — and I give it space. Sometimes I breathe. Sometimes I journal. Sometimes I just say, “Hey there. I see you.”

Ironically, giving it room takes away its power.

3. Choosing Action Anyway

Anxiety often tells me, “Don’t go,” “Don’t speak,” or “Don’t try.” But I’ve learned to thank it for its concern and move forward anyway. I call a friend. I send the email. I show up scared.

And every time I do, I prove to myself — and my anxiety — that I’m more capable than the fear suggests.

4. Building a Life That Can Hold Anxiety

I stopped chasing a life where I’d feel no anxiety. Instead, I started building one where anxiety could exist — and I’d still be okay. That meant:

  • Good sleep and routines to support my nervous system
  • Therapy to understand my patterns
  • Mindfulness and grounding tools to stay in the present
  • Realistic self-talk (not toxic positivity)

The Payoff: Freedom, Not Fearlessness

No, anxiety didn’t vanish. It still pops up on Sunday nights or when plans change or when I’m stretched thin. But now, it doesn't hijack the wheel. It doesn’t decide who I am.

Living with anxiety isn’t about being fearless. It’s about building trust with yourself — that you can feel uncomfortable emotions and still move forward.

It’s about learning that discomfort isn’t danger.

It’s about making room for a passenger that might never leave, but doesn’t have to lead.

Final Thought: You Can Drive Your Life

If you’re someone who feels like anxiety is running your life, here’s what I wish someone had told me sooner:

You don’t have to kick it out. You just have to stop giving it the keys.

Let anxiety come along for the ride — but you choose where you’re going.

___

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