The Reassurance-Seeking Trap
Checking your body, asking 'am I okay?', and looking things up feel like they should help — but they quietly feed the worry. This guide explains the trap and the gentle way out.
How reassurance-seeking works, why relief is short-lived, how it strengthens anxiety, and gentle, evidence-based ways to step out of the cycle.
What's inside
- →The reassurance trap — why we seek it
- →Short-lived relief — then more worry
- →How it feeds anxiety — the cycle
- →Common forms — checking & asking
- →Gently reducing it — step by step
- →With support — a therapist can help
For educational purposes only
This guide is educational and supportive information about health anxiety — it is not medical or mental-health advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it is not a substitute for care from a qualified professional. Health anxiety is common and very treatable, and a doctor or therapist (cognitive behavioural therapy can be especially helpful) can make a real difference. This guide does not diagnose or rule out any physical condition: if you have new or concerning physical symptoms, it's wise to have them assessed once by a doctor rather than repeatedly seeking reassurance. If anxiety feels overwhelming or you are in distress, please reach out — call or text 988 (US Suicide & Crisis Lifeline); in an emergency, call 911.