How do I support a partner with anxiety without making it worse?

Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Mental Health Counsellor, Neuropsychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-06-30

Short answer

Do not try to argue anxiety away with logic — it is not a thinking problem. Validate the feeling, help them sit with it, and refuse to become their avoidance system.

Loving someone with anxiety is easy on good days and confusing on bad ones. The usual instincts — reassure, fix, plan around it — often make the anxiety stronger over months. The technical term is 'accommodation' and it is one of the biggest predictors of anxiety chronicity in couples research.

Say this, not that

Say: 'That sounds really hard. I am here. What do you need right now — space, contact, or a distraction?' Do not say: 'There is nothing to worry about,' 'You are overthinking,' or 'Just relax.' Those land as dismissal even when meant kindly.

The accommodation trap

If you find yourself always driving because they cannot, always cancelling plans they dread, always answering calls for them — you are the reason the anxiety has not had to shrink. Gradually hand tasks back with warmth: 'I know this is hard. I believe you can handle it. I will be right here if you need me.'

Take the next step

Read about the condition

Want to talk about your specific situation?

The AI Psychologist trained on Dr. Sodhi's clinical method is free, private and available 24×7 in 100+ global languages.