Everyone feels stressed sometimes — deadlines pile up, family demands pull from all directions, finances feel precarious. Stress is a normal human response to external pressures. But anxiety is different, and knowing the distinction matters for your health.
What Is Stress?
Stress is a reaction to a specific external trigger. When the trigger resolves — the deadline passes, the conflict gets worked out — the stress typically fades. It's time-limited and proportionate to the situation.
What Is Anxiety?
Anxiety persists even when the external stressor is gone or absent. It's characterized by excessive, difficult-to-control worry that feels out of proportion to the actual situation. Anxiety often involves physical symptoms: racing heart, shortness of breath, muscle tension, GI distress, and sleep disruption.
Key Differences
Stress is externally triggered, temporary, and proportionate. Anxiety may have no clear trigger, lingers, and tends to spread to new topics — what clinicians call "free-floating anxiety."
When to Seek Help
It's time to speak with a psychiatric provider if: your worry is present most days for more than two weeks; it's interfering with work, relationships, or daily tasks; you're avoiding situations because of fear; physical symptoms are frequent; or you're relying on alcohol or substances to manage the feeling.
Anxiety disorders are highly treatable with the right combination of therapy and, when appropriate, medication management. You don't have to keep white-knuckling through it.
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