
#1 Catastrophizing

The scale of the issue is also significant. According to the World Health Organization, anxiety disorders are the most common mental disorders in the world, affecting an estimated 359 million people in 2021. In the United States, data shared by the National Institute of Mental Health suggests that 19.1% of adults had an anxiety disorder in the past year, while 31.1% experience one at some point in their lives. Research has also linked anxiety disorders to real impairment in work, school, social life, family life, sleep, concentration, and overall well-being.
#2 Treating Feelings As Facts

#3 Mind-Reading

Of course, anxiety is not always about what is happening on the outside. Very often, it is also shaped by the way the mind interprets situations: a delayed reply becomes rejection, one mistake becomes proof of failure, uncertainty feels like danger, and a passing feeling starts to look like a fact. These thought patterns can be incredibly convincing in the moment, which is why recognizing them is often the first step toward loosening their grip.
#4 Personalizing

#5 Only Noticing What Could Go Wrong

#6 Fearing The Anxiety Itself

#7 Labelling

#8 Perfectionism As A Protection

#9 Believing Your Worry Keeps You Safe

#10 All-Or-Nothing Thinking

#11 Over Generalizing

#12 Comparing Your Inside To Everyone Else's Outside

#13 Needing To Feel Ready Before You Act

#14 Believing Uncertainty Means Danger

#15 Overthinking In A Loop



