Why My Symptoms Weren’t “All in My Head” — Or a Crisis
Letting experience exist without dismissal or alarm.
I kept bouncing between two stories.
Either I was overreacting — or something was seriously wrong.
Both interpretations felt unsettling.
Both made it harder to stay grounded in my own experience.
“I couldn’t find a place where my symptoms were allowed to simply exist.”
This didn’t mean my body was confused — it meant the explanations I had available were too extreme.
Why “All in My Head” Never Fully Fit
My symptoms didn’t disappear when I tried to think them away.
They followed patterns.
They changed with context.
I saw this clearly while writing Why Physical Reactions Don’t Always Come With Clear Thoughts.
“What I felt had rhythm — not randomness.”
Dismissing my experience only added another layer of tension.
Why Treating Everything Like a Crisis Made It Worse
On the other end, urgency amplified everything.
Every sensation felt like proof.
My nervous system stayed braced, waiting for escalation.
This mirrored what I explored in Why My Nervous System Stayed Activated at Home.
“Urgency made sensations louder, not clearer.”
Nothing could settle while everything felt high-stakes.
What Changed When I Allowed a Middle Ground
Things shifted when I stopped forcing an explanation.
When I let symptoms be information without conclusions.
This space felt unfamiliar — but stabilizing.
I noticed this shift again while reflecting on Why Observing Patterns Felt Safer Than Guessing.
“I didn’t need a diagnosis to trust what I felt.”
My body responded to the absence of pressure.
Why Reframing Reduced Fear Instead of Creating Doubt
Letting go of extremes didn’t make me passive.
It made me steadier.
I wasn’t ignoring symptoms.
I was relating to them differently.
This echoed what I wrote in How Mindfulness Helped Me Separate Fear From Signals.
“Understanding didn’t come from certainty — it came from safety.”
Fear softened when my experience wasn’t being argued with.

