Anxiety Questions From The Audience (Episode 139)
Disordered: Anxiety Help
Josh Fletcher and Drew Linsalata
4.9 • 665 Ratings
🗓️ 9 January 2026
⏱️ 43 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
In this listener participation episode, Drew and Josh tackle your questions about recovery while celebrating inspiring stories from the community.
Questions explored in this episode:
Why does my anxiety disorder feel like it's protecting me? When you're struggling with OCD, panic disorder, or health anxiety, your threat response can feel like a cult leader in your head—insisting it has your back, showing you "the truth," and making it incredibly risky to walk away. We break down why this happens and what you can do about it.
What about rolling panic attacks? One listener shares their experience of a vacation derailed by cascading panic attacks that wouldn't stop. We explain why panic attacks can roll from one into the next, what fuels this cycle, and how following anxiety's instructions in the moment keeps the wheel turning.
How do I handle competing voices in my head? As you progress in recovery, you may notice different voices—one saying "freak out now" and another saying "wait, let's see what's happening here." We discuss what these voices represent and how to work with them.
Other topics: Managing health anxiety when you're actually sick, dealing with rejection without letting it fuel future anxiety, and why thinking about "what could have been" isn't grief—it's just overthinking.
Did It Anyways from listeners include:
- Changing medication brands without obsessing over side effects
- Driving four hours alone to a camping trip despite agoraphobia
- Sitting through a three-hour movie after a year of avoidance
- Grocery shopping while anxious
- Sharing romantic feelings despite fear of rejection
Key takeaway: The simplest description of anxiety disorder recovery? Getting really good at leaving it the hell alone. That means resisting the urge to fix, control, or prevent uncomfortable feelings, and instead doing what non-anxious you would do—even while you're feeling scared.
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The Disordered Guide to Health Anxiety is now available. If you're struggling with health anxiety, this book is for you.
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Want a way to ask questions about this episode or interact with other Disordered listeners? The Disordered community is nearing is opening day! Visit our home page and get on our mailing list for more information..
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Struggling with worry and rumination that you feel you can't stop or control? Check out Worry and Rumination Explained, a two hour pre-recorded workshop produced by Josh and Drew. The workshop takes a deep dive into the mechanics of worrying and ruminating, offering some helpful ways to approach the seemingly unsolvable problem of trying to solve seemingly unsolvable problems.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Is it normal or a regular feeling to feel like my anxiety disorder is protecting me? |
| 0:07.0 | I fear when my anxiety lessens that I am no longer aware or that I'm missing some, which loops me back around to fear. |
| 0:14.0 | That mechanism will tell you that it is on your side. It's like living with a cult leader in your head. |
| 0:20.0 | This is real. I see the |
| 0:21.5 | real problem. I am protecting you. I am good for you. That is what makes it so hard to walk out of |
| 0:27.3 | the OCD bubble, to resist compulsions, to not ruminate, because it feels super risky to go against |
| 0:34.2 | this thing that you feel like is actually got your back. It is very normal and very |
| 0:38.4 | regular for you to misinterpret your feelings and thoughts and habit as intuition. But it's not. |
| 0:44.9 | It's just a very old mechanism doing its job and keeping your attention. |
| 0:52.8 | Welcome to Disordered. This is episode 139 of the podcast. This is listener questions, audience participation, free for all. So let's get into it. I am Drew Linsalada, one half of Disordered. I am a therapist that treats anxiety and anxiety disorders practicing in New York, former sufferer of all |
| 1:11.2 | the stuff we talk about here on Disordered, better now, author, co-author with my other co-host, |
| 1:16.5 | we'll talk about that, and, you know, guy with expensive microphones that like to talk about |
| 1:19.7 | anxiety and anxiety disorders. And I am joined by... |
| 1:23.6 | Hi, I'm Joshua Fletcher. Happy New Year, Drew, and to anyone who tunes in when these episodes come out, |
| 1:29.3 | the therapist, author specializing in anxiety and anxiety disorders. |
| 1:33.3 | If you've got to episode 139, you could probably recite this introduction yourself, but it's polite to do that anyway. |
| 1:41.3 | We're going to take community questions today and did it anyways and stuff, |
| 1:45.7 | because it's always good to check in with the community, and make sure we're answering your |
| 1:50.0 | questions as well. We do get a lot of questions. If you want to send any in, you can do it at |
| 1:54.1 | disordered.fm, and you can share a voice note or an email, or you can just listen listen to other people's and that's what we'll do today. |
| 2:02.7 | Did you have a nice new year, Drew? |
| 2:04.3 | I did. It was pretty uneventful. I had about a nine day break from seeing clients from work. It was good, relaxed, chilled out. Would you do? Anything good? |
... |
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