Why the Need for Control Is Really About Safety: How Anxiety, Fear, and Trauma Hijack the Nervous System
Struggling with control issues or perfectionism? Discover how the need for control is rooted in fear and nervous system dysregulation—and how somatic and trauma-informed therapy at Embodied Wellness and Recovery helps you feel safe in a world of uncertainty.
Do You Struggle When Life Feels Out of Control?
Do you feel panicked when plans change unexpectedly? Does uncertainty make you obsessively overthink or micromanage others? Do you find yourself exhausted from trying to control everything, your emotions, your relationships, even your future?
You're not being “too much.” You're trying to feel safe.
At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we understand that the need for control often stems from deep fear, unresolved trauma, and a dysregulated nervous system. Through trauma-informed, somatic, and relational approaches, we help individuals learn how to feel safe without relying on control as a survival strategy.
The Hidden Link Between Control and Fear
Many people believe control issues stem from personality traits like perfectionism or stubbornness. In reality, the need for control is a biological adaptation to protect against fear and perceived threats. It’s not about being demanding; it’s about managing internal chaos in the face of external unpredictability.
The Nervous System’s Role in Control
When your nervous system perceives danger, whether physical or emotional, it moves into fight, flight, freeze, or fawn mode. For many, controlling behaviors become a form of "fight" or "fawn," a way to assert power or avoid conflict to reduce anxiety. These protective strategies are especially common among individuals with developmental trauma, attachment wounds, or chronic stress.
According to Polyvagal Theory, developed by Dr. Stephen Porges, our autonomic nervous system continuously scans for safety or threat. If your body doesn’t feel safe, even if you're technically "fine," it may compel you to take control of your environment, your relationships, or yourself in an attempt to stabilize your internal state (Porges, 2011).
When Control Becomes a Coping Mechanism
People who try to control everything often report symptoms like:
— Chronic anxiety or hypervigilance
— Difficulty trusting others
— Rigidity in routines or relationships
— Perfectionism and fear of failure
— Emotional reactivity when things don’t go as planned
— Shame or guilt for needing certainty
This isn’t weakness; it’s a survival strategy. For many, control was how they learned to cope in childhood environments that were unsafe, chaotic, or emotionally unavailable.
Control and Attachment: Why Relationships Feel So Hard
Controlling behaviors often emerge in relationships. You might find yourself trying to manage how others feel, behave, or respond to you. This dynamic is especially common in individuals with anxious or avoidant attachment styles. If emotional unpredictability was a norm in early relationships, the adult nervous system may interpret intimacy as inherently risky.
In romantic partnerships, this can lead to:
— Codependency
— Emotional caretaking
— Jealousy or possessiveness
— Fear of abandonment
— Micromanaging your partner’s feelings or actions
The painful truth? These behaviors push people away, the very outcome you were trying to prevent.
Why Letting Go of Control Feels So Unsafe
For someone with a history of trauma or neglect, letting go of control isn’t just uncomfortable; it can feel life-threatening. Surrendering to uncertainty may trigger old memories of helplessness or emotional abandonment, even if you can’t consciously recall them.
From a neuroscience perspective, the amygdala, your brain’s fear center, becomes hypersensitive after trauma. It overreacts to ambiguous or neutral stimuli, interpreting them as dangerous. Meanwhile, the prefrontal cortex, the part of your brain responsible for reasoning and decision-making, can become overwhelmed, making it hard to talk yourself down from anxious spirals (van der Kolk, 2014).
In short, your body is doing what it believes it needs to do to protect you even if the threat is no longer real.
The Path Forward: Building Safety in the Body
So, how do you stop relying on control as your safety net?
At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, our trauma-informed therapists integrate Somatic Experiencing, EMDR, DBT, and attachment-based therapy to help clients build a felt sense of safety from the inside out.
Here’s how we help you shift the need for control into embodied confidence:
1. Nervous System Regulation
We teach you how to listen to your body’s cues and discharge stress through somatic tools. Breathing techniques, movement practices, and grounding exercises help bring your nervous system out of survival mode.
2. Rewiring Beliefs Through EMDR
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) helps identify and resolve the traumatic memories that fuel your control patterns. You’ll reprocess past events in a way that allows the body to complete the survival response and restore calm.
3. Emotionally Safe Relationships
We explore your relationship history and attachment style, so you can begin to trust, set boundaries, and co-regulate with others. Our therapists support you in building secure relational experiences that challenge the belief that you must go it alone.
4. Mindful Communication and Self-Inquiry
We help you become curious, not critical, about your behaviors. Why do I need control right now? What is my fear? What would I need to feel safe instead?
Real Safety Comes from Within
The paradox is that control does not create safety; it creates more fear. Real safety comes from building capacity in your nervous system to stay grounded in uncertainty. It’s not about forcing yourself to be calm; it’s about giving your body and mind the tools to feel anchored, regardless of circumstances.
Ready to Transform the Way You Relate to Control?
Whether you’re struggling with anxiety, trauma, relationship conflict, or intimacy issues, our team at Embodied Wellness and Recovery offers personalized, neuroscience-informed therapy to help you heal at the root.
We support individuals, couples, and families in Los Angeles, Nashville, and virtually. Through a holistic, integrative approach, we guide you out of survival mode and into a more spacious, connected, and embodied life.
Let’s Rewrite the Story
You don’t need to control everything to be okay. You need to feel safe in your own skin.
Reach out today to schedule a free 20-minute consultation with a trauma-informed therapist at Embodied Wellness and Recovery.
📞 Call us at (310) 651-8458
📱 Text us at (310) 210-7934
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References
Porges, S. W. (2011). The Polyvagal Theory: Neurophysiological Foundations of Emotions, Attachment, Communication, Self-Regulation. W.W. Norton & Company.
Schore, A. N. (2012). The Science of the Art of Psychotherapy. W.W. Norton & Company.
Van Der Kolk, B. A. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma. Viking.