Why Does Avoidance Feel So Good (At First)?And Why It Keeps Us Stuck in the Long Run
Avoiding hard things — conversations, feelings, foods, memories, decisions — often gives us a huge wave of temporary relief.
You skip the meal.
You postpone the appointment.
You distract yourself instead of feeling that sadness or fear.
And in that moment?
😮💨 It feels like the right move.
Because the anxiety fades. The discomfort lifts. You feel safe again.
That’s the trap. And it’s backed by science.
The Brain Science Behind Avoidance
Your brain is wired for survival, not necessarily growth.
When you face something it perceives as “threat” — a scary feeling, a vulnerable conversation, a feared food — your amygdala fires off an alarm:
“This is dangerous. Get away!”
So you avoid it.
And then your brain goes:
“Whew, we’re safe. That worked.”
✅ Relief = reward
This becomes a reinforced pattern:
Avoidance → relief → more avoidance.
Even if the “threat” isn’t truly dangerous (like eating carbs, expressing emotion, or setting a boundary), your nervous system thinks it saved your life. And it wants to do it again.
The Cost of That Temporary Relief
Avoidance feels good short term…
But over time, it shrinks your life.
Emotions don’t disappear — they build up.
Anxiety grows stronger the more we obey it.
Life gets smaller, more rigid, more fear-driven.
And the things we avoid start to feel bigger and scarier than they actually are.
What once felt like relief… becomes a prison.
So What’s the Alternative?
Not pushing through with force — but gently building tolerance. Curiosity. Tiny doses of courage.
This might look like:
Naming the feeling instead of numbing it
Eating the feared food with support
Making space for grief without distraction
Saying “yes” to something that scares you — on purpose
Each time you lean in, your brain learns:
“That was hard — but I survived it. I didn’t need to run away.”
And slowly, avoidance loses its grip.
Final Thought
Avoidance feels good because it soothes your nervous system. It makes sense. It’s not weakness — it’s a coping strategy.
But when you’re ready, you can learn new ways to feel safe — without running.
Safety isn’t the absence of discomfort.
It’s the presence of support, courage, and self-trust.