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Success Anxiety and the Fear of Achievement

Anxiety around success may seem like a bit of a contradiction. While one would imagine that achieving success should be satisfying and fulfilling, many people actually find themselves gripped by unexpected dread or even self-sabotage as they approach their goals. This anxiety tends to be less about failing, but more of a fear of success itself. This particular form of anxiety can be confusing because it goes against how we believe we're supposed to feel about accomplishment.

What Is Success Anxiety?

Unlike (though in some ways similar to) fear of failure, success anxiety emerges when you’re actually doing well. It’s the uncomfortable feeling that starts to show up when things are going right. When you get the promotion, when your relationship deepens, when your creative project gains recognition, when you're earning more money, etc. Your body might respond with familiar anxiety symptoms: racing thoughts, tension, or restlessness, for example. But the trigger in this case isn’t an upcoming challenge. It’s the achievement you’ve already reached or are about to reach.

This type of anxiety is unconscious. You might find yourself sabotaging opportunities without understanding why. Or you might achieve something significant only to feel empty or worried rather than fulfilled or joyful. The anxiety attaches itself to success, creating a psychological trap where moving forward feels dangerous.

The Root Cause of Fearing Achievement

Success anxiety typically develops from complex psychological and emotional experiences from early in life. Growing up where achievement caused envy rather than praise can teach your mind to fear success. Perhaps standing out or doing well meant losing connection with people who felt threatened by your accomplishments. Maybe success brought unwanted attention or pressure that felt overwhelming.

For some, achieving what parents couldn’t can create an unconscious loyalty conflict. Surpassing a parent’s accomplishments can feel like betrayal, even if they want you to do better than them. The deeper emotional worry is that succeeding where they struggled might hurt them, in some way. This can become internalized as anxiety about your own achievement. Going further, it becomes more complex in that when you achieve beyond your parents' achievements, it can increase anxiety because you don't have a reference point for what this success would look like. It wasn't modeled for you at home, so you become in the unknown of uncharted territory.

The Imposter

This also links to the idea with success that the more you have, the more you can lose. Achieving the promotion, creative success, the deeper relationship, or anything else can leave you feeling a sense of fragility. If you don't feel deep down that you deserve the success, or if there is some imposter syndrome, it can feel precarious. Like everything you have gained is only temporary and a part of you is waiting for the shoe to drop. This can also be the case if you're used to things not going the way you want, and when it starts to, it feels like you have to stay on guard for what's going to go wrong to take the good away.

Success can also feel dangerous when it threatens your sense of identity or relationships. If you’ve defined yourself through struggle, achievement disrupts that familiar self-concept. When you view success as a threat to your character, anxiety can prevent you from accomplishing it. And if you equate achievement with losing loved ones, you may be unconsciously tempted to choose safety over success.

What Success Anxiety Looks Like

This anxiety manifests in various ways. You might procrastinate on the final steps of important projects, finding endless reasons to delay completion. Or you might downplay your achievements immediately after they happen, minimizing what you’ve accomplished. Some people unconsciously create problems or crises whenever things are going too well, as if calm success is intolerable.

The anxiety can also appear as imposter syndrome. That’s the persistent belief that you don’t deserve your success and will eventually be exposed as a fraud. This isn’t simple self-doubt. It’s a deeper conviction that achievement itself is somehow wrong or dangerous for you specifically.

Your Relationship with Achievement

Working through success anxiety requires exploring the unconscious meanings you’ve attached to achievement. For example, how success looked in your family, or what happened when you did better than others or reached past their goals. How did the important people in your life respond to their own successes and yours? These aren’t questions with simple answers, and they often need time and space for reflection to fully understand.

It's necessary to understand why achievement and success feels threatening in the first place. The idea isn’t to force yourself to feel differently about success or to push through the anxiety with willpower. When you can make sense of the deeper patterns driving your anxiety, you create a place for a different relationship with your own accomplishments, one where success doesn’t have to feel dangerous.

#Anxiety #fearofsuccess #Success #selfsabotage #Procrastination #PanicAttacks #MentalHealth

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"Father"

When I was 4, you told me I'd never see you again and part of me wishes you would've kept your word. I allowed you back into my life (38 years later) only for you to abandon me all over again. This morning I woke up to multiple missed calls and voicemails from you. Not heard a single word in almost 2 years and now, in the middle of one random night, it's so damn important for you to talk to me. I'm left feeling guilty for not answering or calling you back, but I just can't do it. I can't keep opening my life and heart to people who are ok with abandoning me. I made my peace with my father a while ago, but that doesn't mean I'm obligated to have a relationship with him. He can sit with his choices, as cruel as that may sound. He had no problem abandoning me, afterall.

#MentalHealth #Depression #Anxiety #Trauma #ComplexPosttraumaticStressDisorder

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A letter to my wife #Bipolar1 #Anxiety #PanicDisorder #Marriage #MentalHealth

I want to trust you fully. So bad with everything in me. And I do a majority of the time. But I realized something.. The block, the wall, the detour I keep taking or running into.
You told me years ago to drop my mask. To stop shoving the mood swings, the highs, the lows, the anxiety, the fear. The mental illnesses. That with you they were safe, that with you they were ok. So I did. So I have. But when I've trusted that I can do that, that I am safe to do that because YOU told me it was safe. Being met with anger or irritation. Being told in those moments that it's an excuse. That I'm selfish. That I'm weak and pathetic.
It feels like the opposite of safety. It breaks that trust everytime. That trust I've put in you, that I keep putting in you...is the biggest, closest, most vulnerable thing I can and ever have done. I've always felt...like not being better than the shit brain I was selfish, an excuse, weak and pathetic. But you told me it wasn't at one point. And I believed you.
You don't have to understand. You don't have to agree with the illogical world my brain puts me in. When you told me I was safe to drop the mask- in my eyes- you were telling me it was ok to stop fighting the inevitable and that YOU would make sure I felt the opposite of everything I've ever felt. In my eyes- you were telling me it was ok to face myself...in the safe space you provided with no judgment. That you would be the person who would see I was hurting, know it wasn't fixable or necessarily your fault- but stay with compassion and kindness when I couldn't give myself that. Because I've never been able to give myself that. I want to trust you all the time. I do trust you...until when I'm at my most vulnerable-doing the thing you told me it was safe to do- is met with the same hostility it's always been met with in all the close relationships I've had. Kindness, empathy, emotion, offering understanding isn't weakness. It takes so much more work and awareness and strength to be those things. It's easy, cheap, and weak to brush off emotion or ignore it. You made me feel strong and in the same breath somehow took it away and I stopped trusting you fully. I want to get back to the place where I can trust you fully because I know it's never going to come back on me negatively. All I've needed was the emotional safety you told me you could give me. The one thing no one else has been able to give me. I asked for stability. That wasn't the right word. Or it wasn't enough words. You wonder where the girl went that you met? Part of her had to die. She no longer served me or protected me. But the other part. I buried her. Because it didn't feel safe to be her. I retreated so far into myself....because in my mind, once again, me without the mask....is never ok.

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You#PTSD

Leave, you, alone? Seriously? Me, to leave you alone? You have not Left, me alone, in three https://years.I haven't bothered anyone, but Im the one? No, I have stayed in my lane, minded my own business and stayed quiet long enough.you invaded my privacy, my relationships and my business while I kept quiet and stayed away from https://all.I am not going away, I do have a say and I will be rebuild for https://me.I will tell the truth and if I were you, I'd be more concerned for her, than https://me.All involved will be finding out who pulled the strings and who sat by.

Enough You

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Easter Sunday

I cant imagine the anguish and fear that the disciples must have felt after the events of good Friday. Jesus had been killed in the most cruel and violent way. Their hopes and dreams were shattered. The plans they had had been shredded. Where do they go now?

Sometimes we can have our own Friday experience. And there seems to be no hope anywhere. But hang onto hope, because Sunday is coming. The pioneers of all the worlds major religion had this in common, they all died. And stayed that way. Christianity though is centred around the death AND resurrection of Jesus. Easter Sunday assures us we have a well founded expectation and hope. Happy Easter.

#Depression #Hope #Relationships #FamilyAndFriends #Anxiety #MentalHealth

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In Love With a Fictional Character? #Love #FictionalCharacter #NeedingAdvice

TW: slight mention of sex.

I write these words out of the total sincerity of my heart. Love can be torturous, but is also one of the most beautiful things a person is capable of experiencing. But what do you when the one you hold so dear is nothing more but a figment of imagination? I’ve been so deeply in love with this fictional character for almost three years now that it hurts so excruciatingly, knowing that I’ll never be able to hug, kiss, or be intimate with him. He gave me a way to feel loved when I was lonely or struggling with health issues, and helped me learn what I want and need in a relationship, even if every moment I’ve spent with him was in my head. I’ve developed such a strong emotional attachment, every fiber of my being wants him. It’s gotten to the point that almost all I can think about is having sex with him. It did give me a safe, healthy way to explore that knowledge, but it’s difficult letting go of something that felt so real, because it feels like cheating in a way as I’m looking for a real partner. Anyways, thanks for reading! 🩷

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Betrayal

Betrayal is the deliberate violation of trust, confidence, or a moral standard in a relationship, often causing profound emotional, physical, and psychological distress.
Some of my family was visiting. My spouse told my granddaughter that I’m actually a werewolf who howls at the moon. (Because I was in therapy and take meds.) He acted completely serious. It hurt so much. I was at a loss for words at that moment.
I once heard, in a sermon, that you can only be betrayed by someone close to you. How true. Look at Judas, among others.
Dealing with betrayal involves processing emotions and setting boundaries, while rebuilding trust requires transparency, patience, and consistent, changed behavior.
Later, I called him out on what he said. (I never would’ve done that in the past.) He laughed and never apologized. Like a knife. I have forgiven him but the trust is not returning. It’s just happened too many times. Too many slaps in the face. I try to be a good person. Sometimes, I just want to fold up into myself. The pain is real. I don’t think he’d ever let me leave. Thank you for letting me vent. Love you.

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