This belief doesn’t just show up in moments of chaos — it colours everything with the fear that someone else is pulling the strings.
“I Am Not In Control” often forms when boundaries were blurred growing up, or when emotional enmeshment made it hard to separate your wants from others’ expectations. The result? A nervous system wired to either submit or resist — but rarely choose freely.
What It Sounds Like Internally:
- “I don’t even know what I want.”
- “It doesn’t matter what I choose — it never works out.”
- “I feel trapped but guilty for wanting out.”
Where It Shows Up:
- Struggling to set or maintain boundaries
- Feeling consumed by others’ emotions or expectations
- Going along with decisions to avoid conflict
- Oscillating between people-pleasing and reactive rebellion
Common Emotional Triggers:
This limiting belief doesn’t just fuel anxiety; it creates a chronic sense of internal chaos, where the world feels unsafe and your actions feel ineffective.
- Unexpected Changes. Sudden schedule shifts, surprises, or cancelled plans can spark a dysregulated response far beyond the situation itself.
- Loss of Routine or Structure. Transitions like moving, job changes, or even vacations may trigger panic or emotional collapse.
- Health Issues or Body Sensations. Illness, fatigue, or even mild discomfort can create fear spirals, as if your body is betraying you.
- Strong Emotions. Anger, grief, or even joy may feel too intense or unmanageable, leading to shutdown or destructive behaviour.
- Authority Figures Making Decisions. Being left out of decisions at work, in relationships, or in family can make you feel invisible and powerless.
- Being Dependent on Others. Relying on someone emotionally, financially, or logistically may create intense discomfort or reactive control-seeking.
- Performance Pressure. Deadlines, public speaking, parenting, or leadership roles can trigger overwhelm, not due to incompetence, but due to a fear of spiralling.
- Childhood Chaos or Hyper-Controlled Upbringing. Environments where things were either unpredictable or overly rigid often set the nervous system to assume that stability is an illusion.
This limiting belief wires you to anticipate disorder, and to react to life like you’re one step away from losing your grip.
What It Can Lead To:
Unchecked, this belief often evolves into:
- “If I take control, something will go wrong.”
- “If I assert myself, I’ll hurt someone.”
- “My choices don’t matter.”
What Therapy Targets:
We don’t teach you to take control — we help your nervous system feel safe having it.
Using Pattern Reconditioning, therapy gently unwinds the enmeshment loop, rewires threat responses around autonomy, and helps you reclaim the power to choose — without fear or collapse.
👉 Explore the Therapy Approach →
👉 See the Full Pattern Breakdown →