When the Unknown Triggers Anxiety, I Return to What Is True
For me, the first and best answer is prayer, because I have to remember (and I do forget) that I do not control anything: not my next breath, not whether I wake up tomorrow, not what news I’ll hear next week. So when my mind starts running ahead of my life, I try to bring my mind back under the Lord’s hand, because He is the One who actually holds my times (Ps 31:14–15). That’s why Scripture keeps calling us back to trust, not because life is easy, but because God is faithful. I’ve learned that anxiety often grows in the gap between what I can’t control and what I’m trying to control anyway.
When I talk about “anxiety,” I’m not talking about a mild concern. I’m talking about the racing thoughts, the “what if” loop, and the sleepless nights that show up when I’m staring at an unknown I can’t solve. Recently, my anxiety centered on health, waiting on test results and hearing a wrong diagnosis first. That month of waiting exposed something in me: I feared forgetting who God is more than I feared anything else, and I cried out to Him in the night, asking Him, “Please, never let me forget You.” In that season, I leaned hard on the promise that God is near to the brokenhearted (Ps 34:18) and that He keeps our minds in peace when we keep them stayed on Him (Isa 26:3), even when nothing feels settled yet.
Here’s what overthinking sounds like for me: it’s the endless mental checklist that never ends- reading, writing, chores, health, income, responsibility- and it’s like an inner voice that won’t shut up. Overthinking pretends it is wisdom, but most of the time it is anxious control. Wise planning prepares, but anxious control panics. Wise planning can say, “I will do what I can today,” and then rest; anxious control says, “If I don’t keep spinning this in my head, everything will fall apart.” Scripture confronts that lie gently but directly: “Be anxious for nothing…in everything by prayer…let your requests be made known to God” (Phil 4:6–7). Not “some things,” not “easy things,” everything.
Jesus also addresses the unknown head-on. He tells us not to worry about tomorrow because tomorrow will worry about its own things (Matt 6:34). He points to birds and lilies, not as poetry, but as a rebuke to the illusion that worry can add one cubit to our stature or secure the future (Matt 6:25–34; Luke 12:22–26). And this is the part we miss: Jesus doesn’t shame us for being human; He calls us to seek first the kingdom of God, because the Father already knows what we need (Matt 6:25–34). Anxiety tells me, “I have to carry my life.” Jesus tells me, “Bring that burden to Me” (Matt 11:28–30). That is not weakness; that is discipleship.
So what does it look like when I “give it to God”? For me, it means I stop letting the problem live only in my head. I talk it out sometimes to a trusted friend, sometimes out loud in prayer, and I keep repeating the truth until my heart remembers it: patience is faith, and faith learns to wait without spiraling. “Cast your burden on the Lord, and He shall sustain you” (Ps 55:22). “Casting all your care upon Him, for He cares for you” (1 Pet 5:7). Those aren’t decorative verses; they are survival verses.
One of the most practical lines that steadies me quickly is still Proverbs 3:5–6: “Trust In The Lord With All Your Heart, Do Not Lean On Your Own Understanding, In All Your Ways, Acknowledge Him, And He Will Direct Your Paths.” When my mind is spiraling, I can feel myself leaning on my own understanding like it’s a life raft, and it isn’t. That’s where I also need the battle verse: taking thoughts captive (2 Cor 10:5). The battle begins in the mind, and if I let my thoughts run wild, my body follows them into fear, fatigue, irritability, and despair.
I also learned something important through that health scare: Community Matters. I brought it to my Christian friends, and we prayed weekly while we waited. It wasn’t magic; it was fellowship. It was the body of Christ doing what the body of Christ is supposed to do: carry burdens and help someone stand when they’re tired (2 Cor 1:3–4; Heb 13:5–6). Sometimes the answer God gives is not a “why,” but a “with.” “I will never leave you nor forsake you” is not sentimental; it is a line we cling to when the unknown is loud (Heb 13:5–6; Deut 31:6; Josh 1:9).
Now, I’ll be honest: I still wrestle with the urge to be “perfectly prepared,” and that mindset feeds overthinking. I can feel the temptation to believe, “If I do more, I’ll finally feel safe.” But safety isn’t found in more control; it is found in the Lord who sees, knows, and cares. He is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble (Ps 46:1–3). He brings peace that the world cannot give (John 14:27). And He doesn’t promise a tribulation-free life; He promises His peace inside tribulation (John 16:33).
So if you’re stuck in “what if” thinking right now, here is what I would tell you plainly: do what you can do today, and then stop acting like you are God. Pray. Ask for wisdom (James 1:5–6). Hand the rest to the Lord and go to sleep. If you wake up, praise God; if you don’t, praise Him anyway, because to be absent from this world is to be with Christ, and everything is finally made right. Either way, the Lord is good, and He knows those who trust in Him (Nah 1:7; Rom 8:28).
And when you need one sentence to carry with you, I’ll give you the one I use to remind myself where this battle starts:
“Sow a thought, reap an action; sow an action, reap a habit; sow a habit, reap a character; sow a character, reap a destiny”—so by God’s grace, I’m bringing my thoughts back under the obedience of Christ (2 Cor 10:5).
Book: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ
I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ
Study Guide: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Companion Study Guide: Healing Generational Wounds Through 40 Devotions
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