Anxiety Archives - Marla Tabaka https://marlatabaka.com/category/mindset/anxiety/ Business Coach Tue, 03 Feb 2026 13:59:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://marlatabaka.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/cropped-M-Favicon-32x32.png Anxiety Archives - Marla Tabaka https://marlatabaka.com/category/mindset/anxiety/ 32 32 When “I Don’t Feel Safe” Really Means “I Feel Uncomfortable” https://marlatabaka.com/2026/02/03/when-i-dont-feel-safe-really-means-i-feel-uncomfortable/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=when-i-dont-feel-safe-really-means-i-feel-uncomfortable https://marlatabaka.com/2026/02/03/when-i-dont-feel-safe-really-means-i-feel-uncomfortable/#respond Tue, 03 Feb 2026 13:59:12 +0000 https://marlatabaka.com/?p=61935 Are there situations where you feel unsafe? Safety is real, but so is discomfort, and they are not interchangeable. Which is it for you? And why is potentially it damaging to your emotional health to tell yourself you are unsafe if physical harm is not a threat.

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And Why That Distinction Matters More Than We Think

Somewhere along the way, the word safe started showing up everywhere.

In coaching.
In relationships.
In workplaces.
In friendships.
In group settings.

“I don’t feel safe.”
“I need a safe space.”
“That doesn’t feel safe to me.”

The word has become common in everyday conversation, often used to express discomfort, vulnerability, or emotional exposure. And sometimes, that language is completely appropriate. Physical safety is real. Trauma is real. Harassment and harm are real.

There are situations where someone truly is unsafe, such as being stalked, living with domestic violence, facing sexual harassment, or experiencing repeated intimidation or threats. In those moments, safety is not a metaphor. It is urgent and literal. And this is where clarity becomes empowering. Safety is real, but so is discomfort, and they are not interchangeable.

Safety Isn’t the Same as Discomfort

There is a difference between being unsafe and being uncomfortable.

Being unsafe might mean:

  • You are being threatened or controlled at home
  • You are experiencing repeated boundary violations that feel threatening or escalating
  • You fear retaliation if you speak up
  • You are experiencing harassment or abuse
  • Your body is signaling real physical danger

Being uncomfortable might mean:

  • You are having a hard conversation
  • You are receiving criticism
  • You are being challenged emotionally
  • You feel exposed or uncertain
  • You are facing something that requires courage

Both experiences can feel intense, but they are not the same.

When we blur the line, we risk turning normal emotional discomfort into perceived danger.

The Brain Makes This Complicated

The brain is tricky. Our nervous system can respond to emotional exposure in ways that feel very real in the body. Moments of uncertainty, conflict, or social rejection can activate the same threat circuitry that responds to physical danger. Research even shows that social rejection can light up areas of the brain associated with physical pain. So emotional distress is not imaginary. It matters. This is where language becomes important. When we label emotional discomfort as “unsafe,” we may start teaching the brain to interpret ordinary challenges as threats.

A hard conversation can begin to feel dangerous.
Feedback can feel harmful.
Vulnerability can feel like something to avoid.

While that reaction is understandable, discomfort is also part of growth. Many meaningful changes require us to tolerate some emotional unease as we find our voice and build confidence.

When “Unsafe” Becomes a Loss of Power

Here is my concern.

When the word unsafe is used in situations where there is no immediate physical threat, it can sometimes take away a person’s sense of agency.

Unsafe can imply:

  • I cannot handle this
  • I need protection before I can engage
  • Something is happening to me that I cannot change

Over time, that framing can pull focus away from what is often most needed:

  • learning boundaries
  • finding the right words
  • speaking up with clarity
  • taking action
  • removing yourself from unhealthy situations

In those cases, the goal is not to dismiss discomfort, but to support empowerment. Confidence is built through learning, practice, and brave action, not through avoiding anything that feels hard.

Women and the Cultural Overlap

To be clear, women have real historical and lived reasons to care about safety. Globally, 1 in 3 women experience physical or sexual violence in their lifetime, according to the World Health Organization. So the desire for safety is not imaginary or dramatic. It is grounded in reality.

At the same time, we are seeing the word safe expand into areas where what is really being described is emotional discomfort, fear of judgment, or anxiety around conflict. That expansion can unintentionally create confusion. Discomfort deserves compassion, but it is not always a sign of danger. Sometimes it is simply the feeling of growth beginning.

Better Alternatives to the Word “Safe”

One of the most empowering shifts we can make is choosing language that keeps our strength intact. If what you really mean is emotional activation, uncertainty, or vulnerability, here are some clearer options:

Instead of “I don’t feel safe,” try:

  • “I feel anxious right now.”
  • “This topic is hard for me.”
  • “I feel emotionally exposed.”
  • “I’m feeling activated and I want to stay present.”
  • “I need support to have this conversation.”
  • “I’m uncomfortable, but I want to work through it.”
  • “I need a space where I won’t be judged.”
  • “I don’t feel steady yet.”

These statements do not remove your power. They tell the truth while still affirming capability.

A Coaching Question That Brings Clarity

When someone says, “I don’t feel safe,” a gentle and helpful question can be:

Am I in danger, or am I in discomfort?

That question is not meant to minimize feelings. It simply restores precision. Because discomfort is often the space where growth begins.

Final Thought: Safety Is Valuable, Strength Is Essential

Of course we want emotional trust.
Of course we want respect and support.

But we also want courage.

Sometimes the most empowering truth is this:

You can feel afraid and still act.
You can feel uncomfortable and still speak.
You can feel anxious and still choose freedom.

Discomfort is not the enemy. It is often the doorway to confidence.

The post When “I Don’t Feel Safe” Really Means “I Feel Uncomfortable” appeared first on Marla Tabaka.

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