
Summary
Learn why reassurance seeking happens in anxiety and how therapy in Ontario can help you break the cycle and build lasting confidence.
Have you ever asked someone the same question more than once, even after they already reassured you?
“Are you sure everything is okay?”
“Do you think I handled that right?”
“Are you upset with me?”
For a moment, the answer brings relief. But not long after, the doubt returns, and the urge to ask again follows.
Reassurance seeking is a common response to anxiety. It can feel like a way to gain certainty and calm your mind. However, over time, it often keeps anxiety going rather than resolving it.
Understanding why this pattern happens is the first step toward breaking the cycle.
What Reassurance Seeking Is
Reassurance seeking is the act of looking for confirmation that things are okay, safe, or under control.
It can show up in different ways, such as:
- Asking others for repeated confirmation
- Checking messages or interactions multiple times
- Searching online for answers
- Mentally reviewing situations to feel certain
While these behaviors may seem helpful, they are often driven by discomfort with uncertainty.
Reassurance provides short term relief, but it does not address the underlying anxiety.
Why Anxiety Drives Reassurance Seeking
Anxiety is closely connected to a need for certainty. When something feels unclear or uncertain, the brain interprets it as a potential threat. Reassurance becomes a way to reduce that discomfort.
However, anxiety tends to return quickly, leading to a repeated cycle:
- Uncertainty appears
- Anxiety increases
- Reassurance is sought
- Relief is temporary
- Doubt returns
Over time, the brain learns to rely on reassurance as a coping strategy, which can make the urge stronger.
How Reassurance Can Keep Anxiety Going
Although reassurance feels helpful in the moment, it can unintentionally reinforce anxiety. When you seek reassurance, you signal to your brain that something is wrong or dangerous. This makes the brain more alert to similar concerns in the future.
Instead of building confidence, reassurance can reduce your ability to trust your own judgment.
This pattern is especially common in anxiety disorders and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, where reassurance seeking becomes part of a larger cycle of doubt and checking.
Practical Coping Tools
If you notice yourself seeking reassurance, these strategies may help:
- Pause before asking and notice the urge
- Delay reassurance seeking for a few minutes
- Remind yourself that uncertainty is uncomfortable but not dangerous
- Practice trusting your initial judgment
- Use grounding techniques to calm your body
These small shifts can gradually weaken the cycle over time.
When to Seek Professional Support
It may be helpful to seek anxiety therapy in Ontario if:
- You frequently ask for reassurance about the same concerns
- The urge to check or ask feels difficult to control
- Anxiety returns quickly after reassurance
- It is affecting your relationships or daily life
Trickett Counselling offers professional therapy in Guelph, Mississauga, and virtually across Ontario.
Our therapists use evidence based approaches to help you manage anxiety, build confidence, and develop healthier coping strategies.
Book a confidential consultation today to explore how therapy can support you.