A guide to staying
human, embodied, and loyal to yourself
before the answer comes
Introduction
After I wrote about anticipation, people began asking what could be done with this kind of suffering. I understood the question immediately, not because I had already found my way out of it, but because I was asking it too.
I wrote it as a psychiatrist, yes. I wrote it as someone trained in neuroscience, psychoanalysis, and the clinical language of anxiety, trauma, attachment, sleep, rumination, and the body under stress. But before any of that, I wrote it as a human being who has been living inside limbo for months.
I do not mean one clean kind of limbo, or one isolated uncertainty that can be placed neatly inside a psychological category and managed with a few breathing exercises.
I mean the kind of limbo that gets into the structure of a life.
I have been living through the aftermath of whistleblowing, the beginning of a legal case against a large health care system, a job change that followed from it, and a neurological injury that has improved while the fear of it still feels fresh. I have also been living with the recognition that a marriage of more than two decades was emptier than I had allowed myself to see for years while I was busy immigrating, building a career in a new country, surviving abuse, creating a new life, mothering, working, and holding everything together. And now I am moving through the divorce that follows such a recognition, not as one clean legal event, but as the reorganization of an entire inner and outer life.
Then, in the middle of all of that, another uncertainty entered my life, this time relational, and it affected me more deeply than I expected because it did not stay in thought. It entered the body before life had given me enough reality to know what to do with it.
So when I wrote about anticipation, I was not writing from above it. I was writing from inside the state I was describing. The mind keeps calculating because it cannot yet know, and the body can wake in the early morning with the same unanswered question already there, before the day has even started. You can keep functioning. You can speak clearly, take care of people, make decisions, work, write, and move through the visible life everyone else sees. And still, underneath all of it, there can be one private unresolved reality pressing on you, not as a passing thought, but as something that keeps living in the body.
I do not want to offer the usual clean advice: breathe, meditate, journal, detach, take a walk, move on. Some of these things can help. I use some of them myself. But they become hollow when they imply that the real problem is poor regulation.
Sometimes the problem is not that you are failing to regulate.
Sometimes something important has entered your body before life has given you enough reality to know what to do with it.
That is a different kind of suffering.
Nor do I believe the answer is always to let go.
Sometimes the phrase sounds wise because we have made it socially acceptable to ask people to become quiet before they have understood what is happening inside them. When something is still unfolding, when the future has not declared itself, and when the heart knows something has awakened, “letting go” can become another form of self-silencing. It can flatten hope, but it can also silence the breakthrough voice inside you, the part that is trying to tell the truth before the rest of life has caught up.
So I am trying to think honestly from inside anticipation itself.
- How do we live when life has not given us an answer yet?
- How do we let something matter without turning our response into shame?
- How do we remain dignified without pretending to be untouched?
- How do we keep one actual day alive when the mind keeps reaching toward a future that has not arrived?
That is the question I want to stay with here: not how to stop caring, but how to remain alive while caring, before reality has told us what caring will cost.
Part I. Do not insult yourself for suffering
The first thing I would say to anyone living inside anticipation is this: do not begin by attacking yourself for being affected.
That may sound simple, but it is often the first injury added on top of the original suffering.
People are already exhausted by the uncertainty itself, and then they start judging the fact that they are exhausted.
They tell themselves they are being irrational, obsessive, weak, dramatic, too attached, too sensitive, too unable to tolerate normal adult uncertainty. They begin speaking to themselves in the same cold language the world often uses toward pain it does not want to understand.
But anticipation suffering is not the same thing as meaningless anxiety.
Sometimes anxiety is free-floating, displaced, or disproportionate to the immediate situation, and sometimes the mind attaches fear to something smaller because a deeper fear has not yet found language.
But there is another kind of anxiety that comes from something real remaining unresolved, whether it is a medical result, a legal decision, a job outcome, a family rupture, a relationship that has shifted without declaring itself, or a truth that can already be felt moving toward the surface before anyone has said it aloud.
In those situations, the body is not inventing importance. It is responding to importance.
The suffering can become consuming enough to change the way a person moves through the day.
It can make the body restless, the mind unavailable, and even simple tasks feel strangely effortful.
It may need containment, but containment is not the same thing as dismissal.
When uncertainty takes over the nervous system, it does not automatically mean the response is meaningless or excessive. Sometimes it means a person is being asked to keep living, working, caring, deciding, and showing up while some essential part of life remains suspended.
And shame makes anticipation crueler.
Once you decide that your suffering is embarrassing, the uncertainty is no longer the only thing you are carrying. Now you are also trying to hide your reaction, minimize its meaning, and force yourself into a version of composure that your body cannot honestly hold. The mind is already trying to understand what is happening, and then another layer arrives: the private accusation that you should be calmer by now, less affected, less preoccupied, more able to place the whole thing somewhere reasonable and continue with your life.
That kind of self-interrogation rarely produces peace.
It usually tightens the same inner pressure it is trying to relieve.
When a person is living in anticipation, the mind keeps going back to the same place because it is trying to find its footing. It wants to understand what is happening, what may be coming, and what this feeling is asking for.
After a while, the question is no longer something you think about only in words. It starts to live in the body. It changes how you move through the day, how you fall asleep or fail to sleep, how the future begins to press on the present, and how much private feeling you carry while still appearing functional.
So the first step is not advice. It is recognition.
Something unresolved has entered the mind, and it is no longer just an idea.
When this happened to me, I did not immediately meet it with tenderness.
My first response was accusation.
I questioned myself for being so affected, for waiting, hoping, fearing, checking, imagining, rehearsing possibilities, and trying to read meaning before life had made itself clear. I asked why I could not simply be calmer, more disciplined, more adult, more detached. Why couldn’t I put the uncertainty somewhere in the background and return to my life?
There was work to do, writing to finish, children to care for, decisions to make, the visible parts of my life still needing me as if nothing inside me had been interrupted. I scolded myself for losing time, for sitting in the fog, for circling the same thoughts when I should have been moving forward.
I called it laziness, procrastination, immaturity, lack of discipline, when in reality my mind was not refusing life. It was trying to orient itself while something important remained unresolved.
At some point, I had to stop using adulthood as a weapon against my own heart.
I had to tell myself that this was possible because I was still human.
All the discipline in the world had not removed longing from me, and not only the longing for another person. I was longing for clarity, for safety, for justice, for a future I could finally begin to recognize as mine. I wanted certain parts of my life to stop hanging in the air. I wanted an answer, a direction, a sign that the ground under me was becoming real again. All the years of maturity, responsibility, and survival had not erased the part of me that still wanted to hope for something, to feel life moving toward me, and to be met by the future instead of only managing the present.
Realizing that did not make the anticipation go away.
But it made me less cruel to myself.
I stopped treating every feeling as evidence against me.
I could care about what was going to happen without shaming myself for caring.
I could want an answer and still respect myself.
The fact that uncertainty affected me did not mean I had failed at being an adult.
I was trying to steady myself without abandoning myself. And that is a very different thing.
Once you understand that, the tone toward yourself can change.
You do not have to worship the anxiety, obey every thought it produces, or mistake every surge of feeling for truth.
But you also do not have to insult yourself for having a human response to something that matters.
A more honest place to begin is this:
Something important in me is worried.
Something important in me is waiting for an answer.
This uncertainty is not nothing. It may not be the whole of my life, and it may not deserve to control every hour of my day, but it matters enough that my body and mind are responding to it.
I do not have to pretend indifference in order to be mature.
I do not have to call my concern irrational just because the outcome has not arrived yet.
That kind of naming matters.
It gives the anxious part of the self a place to stand.
Instead of saying, “Why am I like this?”
you can say,
“This is affecting me because it touches something real.”
Instead of saying, “I should not care this much,”
you can say,
“I care because some part of my future, safety, love, identity, stability, or freedom feels connected to this.”
The point is not to let the anxiety run your life.
The point is to stop treating it as evidence that something is wrong with you.
That sentence does not solve the anticipation. It does not deliver the answer. It does not make the waiting painless. But it removes one unnecessary cruelty. It stops turning suffering into a character flaw. It allows you to support the part of yourself that is affected instead of abandoning it at the very moment it needs you most.
And sometimes, before we can regulate anything, we have to stop making the wounded part of us feel ashamed for bleeding.
Part II. The goal is not to stop caring
One of the most common pieces of advice given to people in anticipation is also one of the least useful: stop caring so much.
It usually comes in more acceptable language.
Let go. Detach. Move on. Stop thinking about it. Put it out of your mind. Do not give it so much power. These phrases can sound wise from a distance, especially when spoken by people who are not carrying the same uncertainty in their own bodies. But from the inside, they can feel less like wisdom and more like another demand to silence yourself before life has finished speaking.
There are moments when moving on is necessary.
Sometimes the answer has already been given, even if the mind does not want to accept it.
In those cases, detachment can become an act of self-respect.
But anticipation is different because the shape of the thing has not fully appeared.
Something may be ending, beginning, transforming, collapsing, or asking a different kind of courage from you, and part of the suffering comes from not knowing which reality you are being asked to meet.
That is why forcing yourself to stop caring often does not work.
It asks the heart to make a final decision before life has provided final information.
It asks the mind to behave as if the outcome is settled when the whole agony is that it is not.
And because the mind cannot honestly settle what remains unsettled, the thought keeps returning.
It comes back in the morning, in the shower, while driving, while working, while trying to fall asleep. Not because you are choosing misery, but because something inside you is still trying to understand where to place this.
I do not believe the goal is to become untouched.
The goal is also not to spend the entire day circling the uncertainty until nothing else can live.
That is not care either; that is captivity.
But there is a middle place that people are rarely taught.
You can give the uncertainty real space without giving it your whole life. You can let yourself think about it without pretending you are supposed to be finished with it. You can say, with some honesty, “This matters enough that I need time with it.”
That is different from obsessing.
Obsession is when the mind grabs the same thought again and again because it has nowhere safe to put it. Giving something time is different. It means you stop treating the thought like an invader and begin treating it like information. You let yourself sit with it, write about it, walk with it, speak it out loud, cry about it, organize it, question it, and return to it consciously instead of only being attacked by it in fragments throughout the day.
This is one of the paradoxes of anticipation.
When you keep telling yourself not to think about it, you often end up thinking about it more.
The forbidden thought becomes louder. The body tightens. The mind keeps checking whether the feeling is still there. But when you allow yourself to care directly, when you give the worry a chair instead of forcing it to pound on the door, something in the nervous system can begin to soften.
One way to do this is to decide honestly how much time the worry needs from you that day, whether it is thirty minutes, two hours, or longer on a harder day, and then give it that time on purpose instead of pretending it is not there.
Use that space to write, rethink, cry, speak it out loud, walk, or sit with the questions that keep returning. In a strange way, this becomes a scheduled conversation with the part of you that is waiting, which is very different from letting the worry chase you through the entire day.
The point is not to ruminate without end.
The point is to stop making the worry homeless.
When it has a place to go, it may not need to interrupt every part of the day with the same urgency.
It may not happen immediately or perfectly, but even a small amount of permission can create room inside the body. You may still care, still wait, still want the answer, but the feeling no longer has to fight for its right to exist inside you.
That alone can reduce some of the pressure, because the anxiety is no longer carrying the additional burden of proving that it matters.
This is why “stop thinking about it” can be such poor advice.
It sounds practical, but it often teaches people to distrust their own inner life.
It makes them treat every return of the thought as failure.
But thought does not stop by command when something important remains unresolved.
The mind returns because it is trying to complete a pattern, prepare for an outcome, understand a change, or protect the self from being blindsided.
A better question is not, “How do I stop caring?”
A better question is,
“Can I make enough room for this concern that it does not take over every room?”
That question changes the work.
You are not trying to amputate the feeling.
You are trying to contain it without humiliating it.
You are not telling yourself, “This should mean nothing.”
You are saying,
“This means something, and because it means something, I need to give it a place that does not consume the whole of me.”
That last part matters.
Permission to care is not permission to disappear into the waiting.
It is not surrendering your entire life to the unresolved thing.
It is actually the beginning of returning to yourself, because you are no longer wasting so much energy pretending you are unaffected.
That is the part many people misunderstand.
Allowing yourself to think about something is not the same as feeding it endlessly.
Sometimes it is the opposite.
A feeling that is constantly pushed away becomes intrusive. A feeling that is given honest attention can become more organized. It can begin to tell you what it is really afraid of, what it wants, what it knows, what it does not know, and what still has to wait.
To survive anticipation, you do not always begin by caring less.
Sometimes you begin by letting yourself care honestly enough that your mind no longer has to chase you around the house trying to be heard.
Part III. Give the body a present-tense life
Anticipation pulls the body forward before life has actually moved there.
This is part of why it becomes so exhausting.
The answer has not arrived, but the body begins preparing as if it has.
It braces, scans, tightens, waits, and stays available for whatever may happen next. The person begins living ahead of the present moment, not because they are choosing drama, but because the nervous system has assigned urgency to something unresolved.
That is why it is often not enough to argue with the thoughts.
A person can tell themselves a hundred times that there is nothing to do right now, that no answer has come, that no final decision can be made, and that no amount of thinking will force reality to declare itself faster. All of that may be true, and still the body can remain at the edge of something, ready for an impact that has not yet arrived. Insight can be accurate and still not reach the muscles, breath, stomach, sleep, or skin.
So the work cannot happen only through thought.
It cannot happen only through naming, accepting, scheduling the worry, or understanding why the anxiety makes sense. Those things matter, but the body also needs a present-tense life.
By that I do not mean pretending the unresolved thing no longer matters. I do not mean distracting yourself into numbness or filling every hour so there is no room to feel.
I mean giving the body repeated evidence that there is still a world here, in this day, under your feet, around your skin, inside the room you are standing in.
The future may be pressing on you, but your body is not actually living in the future. It is living now, and it needs reminders of now through sensation, movement, temperature, rhythm, muscle effort, and contact with the life that is still happening around you.
This can be very simple, almost embarrassingly simple, especially for people who are used to solving complex problems with the mind. Take a shower and feel the water on your skin instead of turning the whole shower into another courtroom for the same question. Walk outside and let your eyes register actual trees, sidewalks, sky, weather, cars, dogs, strangers, whatever is in front of you. Eat something real, not because appetite has returned perfectly, but because the body should not have to prove emotional certainty before it is fed. Try to register the taste while you eat. Name it if you can: salty, warm, sweet, sour, soft, sharp, familiar. Let the body know that food is not only fuel. It is also contact with the present. Put your hands into cold water. Fold laundry. Clean one small surface. Drive with the window slightly open. As you do it, try to register temperature, air flow, texture, and pressure. Name it quietly in your mind: cold water, moving air, clean fabric, hard surface, warm cup, bare feet on the floor. The point is not to become poetic. The point is to give the nervous system something real and present to recognize.
Stretch your neck, back, hips, legs, and shoulders, not as performance, but as a way of telling contracted muscles that they do not have to hold the entire future. Do it slowly enough to feel what is actually tight. Breathe into the stretch, stay with the sensation, and imagine the knots beginning to soften, not because the larger uncertainty has resolved, but because the body is being allowed to release a little of what it has been carrying.
And when you can, give the body rhythm: run outside or on a treadmill depending on the weather, swim, walk fast, move to music with a steady beat, and actually listen to the lyrics instead of letting the same worry occupy the whole mind. Rhythmic movement gives the body something forward-moving to follow when the future itself has not moved yet.
Movement matters here, not because exercise is a moral achievement, but because anticipation often turns the body into a locked system. Stress hormones prepare the organism for action, but when there is no action to complete, that mobilization can stay trapped inside the body as tension, restlessness, agitation, or collapse. The muscles need a way to spend what the nervous system has been preparing to use.
This is where rhythmic movement can be especially helpful. Run if you can. Walk fast if running is too much. Climb stairs. Swim. Dance in the kitchen. Use a rowing machine. Ride a bike. Move to music with a steady beat. Do something repetitive enough that the body can find a pulse outside the pulse of the worry. Rhythm gives the nervous system something to organize around. It brings the body out of suspended waiting and into sequence: step, breath, step, breath, foot, ground, air, motion. The future is still unresolved, but the body is no longer frozen in front of it.
There is a physiological reason this helps.
Anticipation keeps the stress system activated as if the body is preparing for action, but often there is no action to complete. Cortisol, adrenaline, muscle tension, shallow breathing, vigilance, and restlessness can keep circulating because the body has been mobilized without being given a path. Rhythmic movement gives that mobilization somewhere to go. It uses the large muscles, deepens the breath, improves circulation, and sends repeated signals back to the brain that the body is moving through the stress rather than remaining trapped under it. This does not magically erase cortisol in one walk or one run, but it helps the nervous system metabolize arousal instead of letting it sit inside the body as pure waiting.
This is also why repetition matters.
One walk, one run, one swim, or one stretch may help for a moment, but repeated movement teaches the body that arousal has an outlet. The nervous system begins to learn, almost below language, that tension does not have to stay trapped inside the body all day.
Timing can help too. If you run, walk, stretch, swim, or do another rhythmic activity around the same time each day, the body begins to anticipate release instead of only anticipating threat. It learns that there is a place in the day where the stress has somewhere to go.
This is part of why somatic trauma work matters, and why books like The Body Keeps the Score reached so many people. The body does keep the score. It remembers threat, waiting, shock, helplessness, and unfinished action. But the body also responds to new evidence. It responds to movement, breath, pressure, rhythm, stretching, temperature, and safe contact with the present. You do not have to explain your way out of every state. Sometimes you have to give the body an experience that is different from the state.
None of this answers the larger question. That is exactly the point.
A walk will not decide the outcome. A shower will not erase longing, and a meal will not resolve the uncertainty. None of these things makes the future arrive any faster. But they remind the nervous system that life has not completely disappeared into the not-yet.
This matters because prolonged anticipation can quietly strip the present of its reality. A person may keep doing the visible tasks of life while inwardly living almost entirely in relation to the pending thing. The body becomes a waiting room. The day becomes a passage toward some future clarification. Food, rooms, weather, conversations, chores, and even beauty can feel strangely distant because the nervous system is tuned toward what has not happened.
Giving the body a present-tense life is a way of refusing that total occupation.
It is not a rejection of what matters. It is an insistence that even while something enormous remains unresolved, the body still deserves contact with the real world. It deserves light, air, water, food, movement, texture, warmth, rhythm, and sound. It deserves to be treated not only as an alarm system for the future, but as a living body inside the present.
I have to remind myself of this too.
When anticipation becomes intense, the mind can make the whole day feel like a corridor leading toward one answer. Everything becomes charged by what has not yet happened. Even rest can become another room where the same question waits. In those moments, returning to the body does not feel poetic or instantly healing. It feels stubborn and practical. You bring the mind back, again and again, to the action you are actually in. If you are walking, you return to walking. If you are washing a cup, you return to the water, the temperature, the movement of your hands. If you are eating, you return to taste. If you are outside, you let the eyes actually see what is in front of you. You notice smell, sound, air, color, texture, pressure. You can speak, hum, sing, or name what is happening quietly in your mind. I am here. My feet are here. This room is here. This cup is warm. This air is real. This day has not been canceled because another part of life remains unfinished.
The goal is not to force peace. The goal is to give the body enough present-tense reality that it does not have to live entirely inside anticipation. A body that has been waiting for too long needs more than insight. It needs proof that life is still occurring around it and through it, even before the answer comes. It needs a way to release the stress chemistry that keeps circling when nothing has been resolved: the cortisol, adrenaline, tension, vigilance, and unfinished mobilization. Sometimes the mind cannot lead the body out of waiting. Sometimes the body has to move first, breathe first, stretch first, sweat first, touch the present first, and then the mind begins to follow.
Conclusion
Anticipation is hard because it asks us to live before we know what life is asking from us.
It asks us to keep waking up, working, caring, answering messages, feeding children, seeing patients, paying bills, writing, driving, showering, sleeping, and speaking to other people while some private part of the future remains unfinished. That is what makes it so difficult. The world keeps moving in visible time while the inner life is suspended in unfinished time.
I do not think the answer is to become indifferent. I do not think the answer is to shame the longing, silence the worry, or force the body into peace before it is ready. There are moments when detachment is necessary, but detachment is not the same thing as self-erasure. A person can remain dignified without pretending to be untouched. A person can care deeply without surrendering their entire life to the waiting.
Maybe this is where the work begins.
You stop insulting yourself for being affected. You name what matters. You give the worry a place to speak so it does not have to follow you through every hour. You bring the body back into the day through water, food, movement, rhythm, sound, air, muscles, breath, and the ordinary evidence that life is still here.
None of this makes the answer arrive faster.
But it changes how abandoned you feel while waiting for it.
And maybe that is the point. Not to become a person without longing. Not to become so regulated that nothing reaches you. Not to train yourself out of hope, desire, grief, fear, or love. The point is to remain with yourself while the future is still unclear.
To say: this matters, and I am allowed to know that.
To say: I am waiting, but I am still alive.
To say: the answer has not come yet, but I will not disappear into the absence of it.
Because anticipation can make the unresolved thing feel like the only real life left.
It can make everything else seem temporary, secondary, almost unreal, as if the day itself is only a hallway leading toward the answer. But the day is not only a hallway. It is still a day. The body is still here. The room is still here. The work is still here. The sky, the water, the music, the food, the breath, the people who need us, the words we still have to write, the life that has not been canceled.
The future may still be silent.
But the present is not empty.
Vera Hart