Worry is part of being human. You stress about a job interview, feel nervous before a difficult conversation, or lie awake the night before something important. That kind of anxiety is completely normal. It is your brain flagging a situation that matters to you.
But for millions of Canadians, anxiety does not stay in its lane. It spreads into everyday moments, magnifies risks that are not real, and starts running the show. When that happens, what was once a helpful signal becomes a disorder that needs real attention and real support.
This guide breaks down the most common anxiety disorders in plain language. It explains what they feel like, how they differ from regular stress, and what you can actually do about them. Whether you are trying to understand your own experience or support someone you love, this is a good place to start.
What Is Anxiety and When Does It Become a Problem?
Anxiety is your nervous system doing its job. When you sense a threat, your brain triggers a cascade of physical responses: your heart rate rises, your muscles tighten, your breathing gets shallow. This is the fight-or-flight response, and it kept our ancestors alive.
The problem is that the modern brain does not always distinguish between a physical threat and an email from your boss. So the same alarm system that once helped us escape predators now fires in traffic jams, grocery store queues, and quiet moments before sleep.
For most people, the alarm settles once the stressful moment passes. For people with anxiety disorders, it does not settle. The worry persists, escalates, or appears in situations where there is no logical threat at all.
Mental health clinicians use a few key markers to distinguish everyday anxiety from a clinical disorder:
- The intensity of the anxiety is out of proportion to the actual situation
- The anxiety is difficult or impossible to control even with effort
- It persists for weeks or months rather than hours or days
- It interferes with work, relationships or daily functioning
Anxiety disorders are the most common category of mental health conditions in Canada. The Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA) estimates that roughly one in four Canadians will experience an anxiety disorder at some point in their lifetime. Many people live with symptoms for years before seeking help, often because they assume their experience is just part of their personality rather than a treatable condition.
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) Explained
Generalized Anxiety Disorder is exactly what it sounds like: anxiety that is generalized across almost everything. There is no single trigger. Instead, the worry jumps from topic to topic, health to finances to relationships to work, without much of a break in between.
People with GAD often describe it as a background hum that never fully turns off. They know their worry is excessive. They can even identify that a particular fear is irrational. But knowing that does not make the feeling stop.
Clinically, a GAD diagnosis involves persistent, excessive worry occurring on most days for at least six months, along with at least three of the following symptoms:
- Restlessness or feeling on edge
- Fatigue that is disproportionate to activity level
- Difficulty concentrating or mind going blank
- Irritability
- Muscle tension
- Sleep disturbances, especially trouble falling or staying asleep
GAD is not the same as being a worrier by nature. Most people who are "natural worriers" can redirect their attention, enjoy downtime, and feel genuine relief when problems resolve. With GAD, relief is brief if it comes at all. The anxiety simply finds a new target.
Our Licensed Clinical Doctors at Threshold Clinic regularly work with clients who spent years believing their GAD was simply "how they are wired." It is not. It is a well-understood condition with strong treatment outcomes when addressed properly.
Social Anxiety Disorder: More Than Shyness
Social anxiety disorder is one of the most misunderstood conditions in mental health. People assume it means being introverted or a little shy. It is far more than that.
Social anxiety involves an intense fear of social situations where you might be evaluated, embarrassed, or judged negatively by others. The fear is not just discomfort. It is often a visceral, physical response: racing heart, sweating, blushing, voice trembling, or a sudden overwhelming urge to leave.
What makes social anxiety a disorder rather than a personality trait is the avoidance. People with social anxiety disorder begin structuring their entire lives around avoiding the situations they fear. They turn down promotions that involve public speaking. They cancel plans with friends. They eat lunch alone to avoid the anxiety of the cafeteria. They rehearse phone calls dozens of times before making them.
Over time, this avoidance narrows a person's world significantly. The short-term relief of avoiding a feared situation teaches the brain that avoidance works, which reinforces the anxiety and makes the feared situation feel even more threatening the next time.
Social anxiety disorder often begins in adolescence, which is one reason many adults have lived with it for so long they have normalized it. If you find yourself dreading ordinary social interactions at a level that most people around you do not seem to share, it is worth speaking with a registered mental health professional.
Panic Disorder and Panic Attacks
Panic attacks are among the most frightening experiences a person can have. They arrive fast, peak within minutes, and produce symptoms so physical that many people genuinely believe they are having a heart attack or dying.
A panic attack typically involves a combination of the following:
- Pounding or racing heartbeat
- Chest pain or tightness
- Shortness of breath
- Dizziness or lightheadedness
- Tingling in the hands or face
- Sweating or chills
- A strong sense of unreality or detachment from your body
- An overwhelming feeling of dread or imminent doom
Panic attacks can happen to anyone under extreme stress. A single panic attack does not mean you have panic disorder. Panic disorder is diagnosed when someone experiences recurrent, unexpected panic attacks and then spends significant time worrying about future attacks or changing their behaviour to avoid triggering one.
That last part is key. The anticipatory anxiety, the constant vigilance waiting for the next attack, is often as debilitating as the attacks themselves. People with panic disorder may stop driving, avoid crowded places, or refuse to exercise because an elevated heart rate feels like it could trigger an attack. This avoidance pattern can gradually lead to agoraphobia, a fear of being in situations where escape might be difficult if a panic attack occurs.
Panic disorder responds very well to treatment. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy in particular has strong clinical support for helping people understand what is happening in their bodies during a panic attack and systematically reduce the fear response over time.
When to Seek Help for Anxiety
This is the question most people sit with for far too long. Anxiety has a way of convincing you that you are overreacting, that you should be able to handle it, or that your problems are not serious enough to deserve professional support.
None of that is true.
Here are clear signals that it is time to speak with a professional:
- Your anxiety is present most days and does not resolve on its own
- You are avoiding situations, places or people because of anxiety
- Sleep, appetite or concentration are regularly disrupted
- You are using alcohol, cannabis or other substances to manage anxious feelings
- Your relationships or work performance are being affected
- You have had one or more panic attacks
- You feel a persistent sense of dread that you cannot explain
You do not need to be in crisis to reach out for help. Anxiety disorders are most responsive to treatment when addressed early, before avoidance patterns and negative thought cycles have years of reinforcement behind them.
If you are not sure where to start, the CMHA's Here to Help resource at heretohelp.bc.ca offers accessible information and referral guidance. CAMH (the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health) also provides publicly available clinical information to help Canadians understand what they are experiencing.
Treatment Options Available in Canada
The good news is that anxiety disorders are among the most treatable mental health conditions. You do not have to manage this alone, and you do not have to manage it indefinitely.
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
CBT is the gold standard treatment for anxiety disorders across clinical guidelines in Canada and internationally. It works by helping you identify the thought patterns that fuel anxiety and practise more balanced, realistic responses. CBT also uses structured exposure techniques to gradually reduce avoidance and retrain the brain's fear response.
CBT is typically time-limited, often 12 to 20 sessions, which makes it practical for people managing busy lives. Our Registered Counsellors at Threshold Clinic are trained in evidence-based CBT approaches tailored to each individual's specific anxiety presentation.
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
ACT is a newer approach with growing clinical support. Rather than directly challenging anxious thoughts, ACT focuses on changing your relationship with those thoughts. You learn to observe anxiety without being controlled by it, and to keep moving toward the life you want even when discomfort is present.
Many clients find ACT particularly helpful when they have tried to "think their way out" of anxiety without lasting success.
Medication
For moderate to severe anxiety disorders, medication can be an important part of treatment. SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) are the most commonly prescribed class for anxiety in Canada and have a strong safety profile. Medication is best discussed with your family doctor or a psychiatrist who can assess your full picture.
Medication and therapy together tend to produce stronger outcomes than either approach alone, particularly for GAD and panic disorder.
Lifestyle and Self-Management Strategies
Therapy and medication work best when supported by consistent lifestyle foundations. Regular physical activity has substantial clinical support as an anxiety reducer. Sleep hygiene, reduced caffeine intake, and mindfulness practices also contribute meaningfully to symptom management.
These are not replacements for professional treatment in clinical anxiety. They are tools that make professional treatment more effective.
Taking the First Step Toward Support
Reaching out for help with anxiety takes courage, particularly because anxiety itself tends to generate hesitation, doubt and avoidance around exactly that kind of step.
At Threshold Clinic, we work with Canadians who are navigating anxiety at every level of severity. Whether you are trying to figure out whether what you are experiencing qualifies as a disorder, or you have been living with significant anxiety for years, our Licensed Clinical Doctors and Registered Counsellors are here to help you understand what is happening and find a path forward.
You do not have to have everything figured out before you call. You just have to take the first step.
If you are in distress right now, please contact the Crisis Services Canada line at 1-833-456-4566 (available 24 hours) or reach out to your provincial mental health line. These services are free and confidential.
Anxiety disorders are real, they are common, and they are treatable. That is true in 2026 and it is true for you.
