Bharosa Neuropsychiatry Hospital

Am I Going Crazy or Is This Anxiety — How to Tell the Difference | Bharosa

You cannot stop the thoughts. They loop in your head all day, unwanted and intrusive. Your heart races for no reason. Your chest feels tight. You feel detached from reality — like you are watching your own life from outside your body. You lie awake at night convinced something is deeply wrong with you. You are afraid to tell anyone because you are afraid of what they will think. You type the question into Google at 2 AM — am I going crazy? What you find, eventually, is that what you are experiencing is almost certainly not madness. It is almost certainly anxiety. And the distinction matters enormously because anxiety is one of the most treatable conditions in all of psychiatry — and you are not losing your mind.

If you have been asking am I going crazy, please read this blog carefully. At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals, Plot No. 114, Mythripuram, Karmanghat, Opposite TKR College Comman (TKR Kamaan), Main Road, LB Nagar / Karmanghat, Hyderabad – 500079, Telangana, we see patients every week who arrive terrified that they are losing their mind. Almost all of them turn out to have anxiety disorders — which are deeply uncomfortable but entirely treatable. Here are 5 signs that tell you the difference.

Why Am I Going Crazy Is One of the Most Common Anxiety Symptoms

The American Psychiatric Association (https://www.psychiatry.org) has documented that the fear of losing control or going mad is one of the most common features of severe anxiety — particularly during panic attacks and generalised anxiety disorder. The U.S. National Institute of Mental Health (https://www.nimh.nih.gov) confirms that anxiety produces sensations and thoughts that feel alarming and alien — racing heart, unreal feelings, intrusive thoughts, physical symptoms without cause — and the brain interprets these as evidence of serious illness. Harvard Medical School (https://www.health.harvard.edu) has published research showing that this fear is itself a symptom of anxiety, not a sign of actual psychiatric breakdown.

The irony is that the very fact you are worried about going crazy is itself strong evidence that you are not. People who are actually losing touch with reality usually do not have this awareness or this fear. Anxiety creates the fear. True psychosis does not.

Sign 1 — You Are Aware of the Symptoms and Find Them Distressing

When you ask am I going crazy, you are demonstrating awareness. You know your thoughts or feelings are unusual. You find them distressing. You want them to stop. This insight is a hallmark of anxiety disorders, not psychotic illness. People with psychosis typically lack this insight — they experience their symptoms as normal or meaningful, not as alarming. Your very distress about the experience is evidence that your reality-testing is intact.

Sign 2 — The Thoughts Are Repetitive and Unwanted, Not Believed

Anxiety produces intrusive thoughts — unwanted, repetitive, often disturbing content that you recognise as not reflecting your true beliefs. You may have an intrusive thought about harming someone you love, and you are horrified by it. You may have an intrusive thought that something catastrophic will happen, and you know logically it probably will not. These thoughts feel foreign. They are not things you actually believe or want to act on. This pattern is characteristic of anxiety disorders, particularly OCD, and it is treatable. Psychotic delusions, by contrast, are firmly believed by the person and not recognised as unusual.

Sign 3 — Physical Symptoms Come and Go With Stress

Anxiety produces physical symptoms — racing heart, chest tightness, shortness of breath, dizziness, tingling, stomach upset, feelings of unreality. These symptoms typically intensify during stressful moments and ease during calm ones. They are reversible. They come in waves. This pattern points to anxiety, not to serious medical or psychiatric illness. Your body is producing real symptoms, but the cause is an over-active threat-detection system — not an underlying disease.

Sign 4 — You Function Reasonably Well Despite the Distress

Anxiety can be intensely uncomfortable, but most people with anxiety continue to function — they go to work, care for their families, maintain relationships, make reasonable decisions. The functioning may take more effort than it should, but it is happening. This is very different from psychotic illness, which typically significantly impairs daily functioning, decision-making, and reality-testing. If you are asking am I going crazy while simultaneously holding down a job and caring for your family, you are almost certainly describing severe anxiety, not psychosis.

Sign 5 — You Have Not Lost Touch With Reality

You know what is real. You are not hearing voices that are not there. You are not seeing things that are not there. You are not holding beliefs that are clearly false (being followed by government agents, having special powers, being the subject of a conspiracy). You are not in altered states of consciousness. You are experiencing distressing thoughts and physical sensations — not a break from reality. This is the clearest differentiation between anxiety and psychosis, and it is the most reassuring.

If you genuinely were having hallucinations, delusions, or severely altered reality, that would be a serious matter requiring urgent psychiatric care — but it would not be something you would be asking Google at 2 AM, because the insight to ask would typically not be present. Your question proves your sanity. Your distress deserves treatment.

What to Do Right Now If You Think You Are Going Crazy

Breathe slowly. Anxiety feeds on fast, shallow breathing. Breathe in for 4 counts, hold for 4, out for 6. Repeat.

Ground yourself. Name 5 things you can see, 4 you can touch, 3 you can hear. This pulls you out of the internal spiral and back to reality.

Tell yourself the truth. What you are feeling is anxiety. It is not evidence of madness. It is a medical condition with specific, effective treatments.

Make an appointment with a psychiatrist. Anxiety disorders are among the most treatable conditions in all of medicine. Most patients experience significant relief within weeks of proper treatment. Do not suffer through this alone.

How Bharosa Treats Severe Anxiety With the 90-Day Programme

At Bharosa, we treat this with our dedicated 90-Day Personalised Recovery Programme — a structured, medically supervised plan that is built around you, not a generic template. Every patient gets their own psychiatrist, their own therapist, their own medication plan, and their own recovery roadmap. No two patients at Bharosa follow the same programme, because no two people have the same story.

For patients asking am I going crazy, our 90-Day Programme at Plot No. 114, Mythripuram, Karmanghat, Opposite TKR College Comman (TKR Kamaan), Main Road, LB Nagar / Karmanghat, Hyderabad – 500079, Telangana provides reassurance first and treatment second. Our consultant MD Psychiatrists (/best-psychiatrist-hyderabad-depression) conduct thorough assessments to confirm the diagnosis (almost always an anxiety disorder) and to rule out rare cases where something more serious is happening. Anti-anxiety medication (/anxiety-treatment-hyderabad-bharosa) — selected for your specific presentation — often reduces symptoms within days to weeks. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (/cbt-therapy-hyderabad-bharosa) addresses the thought patterns that maintain anxiety and teaches practical skills for managing intrusive thoughts, physical symptoms, and the fear of losing control itself. Regular follow-ups ensure the treatment is working and adjust when needed.

We have treated hundreds of patients at our Karmanghat, LB Nagar, Hyderabad facility (/mental-health-hospital-in-hyderabad) who arrived convinced they were going crazy. Every single one of them — without exception — turned out to have a treatable anxiety disorder. Most of them, weeks into the programme, told us they could not believe how much better they felt. The fear was gone. The physical symptoms were under control. They could think clearly again. They no longer believed they were losing their mind — because they were not, and they never had been. Patients from across Hyderabad — LB Nagar, Karmanghat, Dilsukhnagar, Vanasthalipuram, Nagole, Uppal, Hayathnagar, Secunderabad, Kukatpally, Gachibowli, Mehdipatnam — have found this relief at Bharosa. You can too.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Am I going crazy if I feel like this?

A: Almost certainly not. The fear of going crazy is itself a common anxiety symptom, not evidence of actual psychosis.

Q: How can I be sure it is anxiety and not something worse?

A: A psychiatric assessment at Bharosa will give you a clear diagnosis and put your mind at ease.

Q: Can anxiety really produce these symptoms?

A: Yes. Severe anxiety produces dramatic physical and mental symptoms that are entirely reversible with treatment.

Q: How quickly will treatment help?

A: Many patients experience significant relief within 2 to 6 weeks of starting the 90-Day Programme.

Q: Where is Bharosa?

A: Karmanghat, Opp TKR College, LB Nagar, Hyderabad – 500079. Call +91 95050 58886.

Am I going crazy? Almost certainly no — just treatable anxiety. Bharosa's 90-Day Programme resolves it, in Hyderabad. Call +91 95050 58886.



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