Do You Find Yourself Constantly Looking for Reassurance?
Do you often ask your partner, friends or family questions like:
“Are you okay?”
“Are we okay?”
“Do you still love me?”
“Did I do something wrong?”
Perhaps you find temporary comfort when someone reassures you, only for the worry to return a few hours later.
If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone.
Many people struggle with reassurance seeking. While asking for reassurance occasionally is perfectly normal, constantly needing it can become exhausting and may leave you feeling trapped in a cycle of anxiety and self-doubt.
Providing online counselling and psychotherapy for clients across Ireland and internationally experiencing anxiety, overthinking, low self-worth and relationship difficulties.
What Is Reassurance Seeking?
Reassurance seeking is the repeated need for confirmation that everything is okay.
You may find yourself looking for reassurance about:
Your relationships
Whether people like you
Your performance at work
Decisions you’ve made
Your health
Whether you’ve upset someone
Whether you’re “good enough”
While reassurance can reduce anxiety for a short time, it rarely provides lasting relief.
Why Do I Need Constant Reassurance?
There is rarely one single reason.
For many people, reassurance seeking develops from a combination of:
Anxiety
Low self-worth
Fear of rejection
Past relationship experiences
Childhood experiences
Perfectionism
Anxious attachment
Often, the reassurance itself isn’t the real problem.
Instead, it is the fear that sits underneath it.
The Reassurance Cycle
Many people become caught in a repeating pattern.
It often looks like this:
A worrying thought appears.
Anxiety increases.
You seek reassurance.
Anxiety decreases temporarily.
Doubt returns.
You seek reassurance again.
Over time, this cycle can actually strengthen anxiety because your brain begins to rely on reassurance instead of learning that uncertainty is safe.
Common Signs
You may recognise yourself if you:
Frequently ask if someone is upset with you
Re-read messages looking for hidden meaning
Need regular reassurance from your partner
Struggle to trust compliments
Constantly seek approval
Worry about making mistakes
Find uncertainty difficult to tolerate
Feel anxious when people don’t respond quickly
Many people don’t realise how much reassurance seeking is affecting their confidence until it becomes a daily habit.
Why Reassurance Never Feels Like Enough
One of the hardest parts of reassurance seeking is that the relief doesn’t last.
Your partner may reassure you today.
Tomorrow, your mind finds a new question.
That’s because reassurance treats the anxiety temporarily rather than addressing the underlying beliefs driving it.
Real confidence comes from learning to trust yourself rather than constantly looking to others for certainty.
How Therapy Can Help
Therapy can help you understand why reassurance has become so important and develop healthier ways of managing anxiety.
Together we can explore:
Self-worth
Relationship anxiety
Fear of rejection
Anxious attachment
Overthinking
Emotional regulation
Building confidence
Over time, many people discover they become less dependent on reassurance because they feel more secure within themselves.
Final Thoughts
Wanting reassurance from time to time is part of being human.
However, if reassurance has become something you rely on every day, it may be a sign that anxiety or low self-worth needs attention.
Learning to tolerate uncertainty and build trust in yourself can help you feel calmer, more confident and more secure in your relationships.
If you’ve recognised yourself in this article and would like support, I offer online counselling and psychotherapy for clients across Ireland. You can find out more or book an initial appointment on my Contact page.
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