Your heart races. Your chest feels tight. You get dizzy or nauseous for no clear reason. You have been to multiple doctors. They run tests. Everything comes back normal. They tell you it is anxiety, but you are not sure you believe them. How can anxiety cause real physical symptoms?
You feel frustrated. The symptoms are real, but no one can find a medical explanation. You worry something is being missed. You feel dismissed when doctors say it is “just anxiety.”
If you have been searching physical symptoms of anxiety, somatic anxiety, or therapy for body anxiety Colorado, you are recognizing something important. Anxiety does not just live in your mind. It lives in your body, and the physical symptoms are just as real as any other medical condition.
At Better Lives, Building Tribes, we help people in Colorado understand and address the physical manifestations of anxiety. This article explores why anxiety shows up in your body and how to find relief.
What Are Somatic Symptoms?
Somatic symptoms are physical sensations or symptoms that are connected to psychological distress. They are not imagined or fake. They are real sensations caused by your nervous system responding to stress or anxiety.
Common somatic anxiety symptoms include:
- Chest pain or tightness.
- Heart palpitations or racing heart.
- Dizziness or lightheadedness.
- Shortness of breath or feeling like you cannot get enough air.
- Nausea, stomach pain, or digestive issues.
- Muscle tension, especially in the neck, shoulders, or jaw.
- Headaches or migraines.
- Tingling or numbness in hands or feet.
- Fatigue or exhaustion.
- Hot flashes or chills.
Why Anxiety Causes Physical Symptoms
Anxiety activates your nervous system. Here is what happens:
Your Brain Perceives A Threat
Even if there is no real danger, your brain perceives something as threatening. This could be a worry, a memory, or a situation that triggers fear.
Your Body Responds
Your nervous system activates the fight, flight, or freeze response. This is designed to protect you from danger.
Physical Changes Happen
Your heart rate increases. Your breathing becomes shallow. Blood flows to your muscles. Your digestion slows. All of this is meant to help you survive a threat.
You Notice The Sensations
These physical changes are uncomfortable. You notice them and worry something is wrong, which increases anxiety and makes the symptoms worse.
Why Doctors Cannot Always Find A Medical Cause
Medical tests look for structural problems or disease. Somatic anxiety symptoms are functional, not structural. Your organs are healthy, but your nervous system is overactive.
This does not mean the symptoms are not real. It means the problem is not in your heart or lungs or stomach. It is in how your nervous system is functioning.
The Cycle That Keeps Somatic Anxiety Going
Somatic anxiety creates a vicious cycle:
- You feel a physical sensation (chest tightness, dizziness).
- You worry something is medically wrong.
- The worry increases your anxiety.
- The anxiety makes the physical symptoms worse.
- You focus more on the symptoms, which amplifies them.
- The cycle continues.
Breaking this cycle requires addressing both the anxiety and the way you relate to your body.
When To See A Doctor Versus A Therapist
It is important to rule out medical causes before assuming symptoms are anxiety related. See a doctor if:
- You have new or sudden symptoms.
- Symptoms are severe or worsening.
- You have risk factors for medical conditions (family history, high blood pressure, etc.).
- You have not had a physical exam recently.
Once medical causes are ruled out and your doctor says it is anxiety, therapy can help.
How To Start Managing Somatic Anxiety
Managing somatic anxiety requires calming your nervous system and changing how you respond to physical sensations:
Learn To Regulate Your Nervous System
Breathwork, grounding techniques, and movement can help calm your nervous system. When your body is regulated, symptoms lessen.
Stop Fighting The Sensations
Resisting or panicking about symptoms makes them worse. Practice acceptance. “This is uncomfortable, but it is not dangerous.”
Shift Your Focus
When you fixate on symptoms, they intensify. Redirect your attention to something else. This is not denial. It is choosing where to place your focus.
Address The Underlying Anxiety
The symptoms are not the problem. They are the symptom of the problem, which is anxiety. Working on the anxiety reduces the physical manifestations.
Build Interoceptive Awareness
Learn to notice body sensations without judgment or panic. This helps you distinguish between normal sensations and anxiety driven ones.
How Therapy Helps With Somatic Anxiety
Therapy addresses both the physical symptoms and the underlying anxiety. At Better Lives, Building Tribes, therapy for somatic anxiety might include:
Psychoeducation
We help you understand why anxiety creates physical symptoms. Knowledge reduces fear.
Nervous System Regulation
We teach you tools to calm your nervous system so your body can relax.
Somatic Therapy
We use body based approaches to help you process anxiety that is stuck in your body.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
We help you challenge catastrophic thinking about your symptoms. “This is anxiety, not a heart attack.”
Addressing Root Causes
We explore what is driving the anxiety. Is it trauma? Chronic stress? Unresolved emotions? Addressing the root cause reduces symptoms.
We offer virtual therapy for adults across Colorado, so you can access support from home.
The Role Of Trauma In Somatic Symptoms
Trauma often manifests physically. If you have a history of trauma, your body might be carrying unprocessed pain or fear. This shows up as chronic tension, pain, or anxiety symptoms.
Trauma informed therapy helps you release what is stored in your body without retraumatizing you.
Why Medication Might Help
For some people, medication can reduce somatic anxiety symptoms while you work on the underlying issues in therapy. Talk to your doctor or psychiatrist if:
- Symptoms are severe and interfering with daily life.
- You have tried therapy and lifestyle changes without significant improvement.
- You have a diagnosed anxiety disorder that would benefit from medication.
Medication is not a replacement for therapy, but it can be a helpful tool.
What Healing Looks Like
Healing from somatic anxiety does not mean symptoms never happen. It means:
- You can recognize symptoms as anxiety, not danger.
- You have tools to calm your nervous system.
- Symptoms are less frequent and less intense.
- You trust your body instead of fearing it.
- You address the anxiety before it escalates into physical symptoms.
How Better Lives, Building Tribes Supports Somatic Anxiety
At Better Lives, Building Tribes, we understand that physical anxiety symptoms are real and distressing. We help you calm your nervous system and address the underlying anxiety.
Our approach is:
- Validating: We believe you. We do not dismiss your symptoms as “just anxiety.”
- Body focused: We use somatic and nervous system based approaches.
- Holistic: We look at your whole experience, not just your symptoms.
- Compassionate: We understand how scary somatic symptoms can be.
Next Steps: Getting Help In Colorado
If physical anxiety symptoms are affecting your life, therapy can help. You do not have to keep living in fear of your own body.
To start therapy for somatic anxiety with Better Lives, Building Tribes:
- Visit betterlivesbuildingtribes.com/ to learn more about our services.
- Schedule a session with Dr. Meaghan Rice or another therapist on our team through the booking link on our site.
- Reach out via our contact form to ask questions or find out if we are a good fit for what you are experiencing.
Your symptoms are real, and they can get better. With support, you can calm your nervous system and reduce physical anxiety. We would be honored to help.