It’s Sunday afternoon and you just mentioned a last-minute family outing — somewhere your child has never been before. Immediately the mood shifts. They’re tearful, their stomach hurts, and they’re absolutely convinced something bad is going to happen. You just wanted a nice afternoon out. So you let them stay home.
The Anxiety Avoidance Cycle
Anxiety is uncomfortable. And when we avoid the thing that makes us anxious, we get immediate relief. That relief feels good — so the brain files it away as evidence that avoiding was the right move.
“We skipped the outing and everything was fine. The outing must have been dangerous.”
The brain doesn’t know the outing was actually safe. It only knows that avoiding it made the discomfort go away. And the next time an unexpected outing is suggested, the anxiety will be louder, faster, and more convincing than before.
This is the avoidance cycle — and it’s one of the main reasons childhood anxiety tends to grow rather than resolve on its own without the right support.
Avoidance teaches the brain that the threat is real. Facing it teaches the brain that it isn’t.
What Avoidance Looks Like in Kids
Avoidance doesn’t always look like a child hiding under their bed. It can be subtle — and it can look a lot like other things entirely.
Common avoidance behaviors in anxious children:
- Refusing school, activities, or social events
- Asking repeated reassurance questions — “Are you sure it’ll be okay?”
- Claiming to feel sick before anxiety-provoking situations
- Clinging to a parent or refusing to separate
- Quitting activities they used to enjoy
- Insisting on sitting out, watching instead of participating
- Procrastinating on anything that feels uncertain or hard
Each of these behaviors provides short-term relief — and long-term fuel for anxiety.
The Reassurance Trap
This one deserves its own section because it’s so common and so well-intentioned.
When your anxious child asks “But what if something bad happens?” for the fifth time, it feels kind and loving to reassure them. “Nothing bad is going to happen, I promise. You’ll be fine.”
But here’s the problem: reassurance is a form of avoidance too. It removes the discomfort in the moment — which feels like relief — but it also confirms to the child’s brain that there was something worth worrying about in the first place. Otherwise, why did we need to check?
Over time, reassurance-seeking becomes its own anxiety loop. The child needs more and more reassurance to feel okay — and the window of relief gets shorter and shorter each time.
So What Do We Do Instead?
The answer isn’t to throw your child into the deep end and hope for the best. It’s to build what anxiety researchers call “brave ladders” — gradual, supported exposure to the things that feel scary, starting small and building up over time.
The goal isn’t to eliminate anxiety. The goal is to teach the brain through repeated experience that the feared situation is manageable — and that your child is capable of handling it.
Here’s what that looks like in practice:
1. Validate the feeling without feeding the fear
Acknowledge what your child is feeling without confirming that the threat is real.
Instead of: “You’ll be fine, nothing bad will happen.” Try: “I hear you — that feels really scary. And we’re going to do it anyway. I’ve got you.”
This validates the emotion while gently holding the boundary that avoidance is not the plan.
2. Break it down into small steps
If your child is anxious about a birthday party, the first step isn’t attending the whole party. It might be:
- Driving to the house and sitting outside for 5 minutes
- Walking in and saying hello to the host
- Staying for 20 minutes then leaving
Small exposures build evidence that the situation is safe — and confidence grows with every brave step!
3. Celebrate the brave moments
This is something I feel strongly about — we celebrate every single win, no matter how small. Acknowledging bravery reinforces it. “I know that was hard and you did it anyway. That’s something to be proud of.”
4. Resist the reassurance loop
When your child asks the same worried question repeatedly, instead of answering it again try: “I’ve already answered that one. I think Worry is just being loud right now. What’s one brave thing you can do right now?”
Redirecting to action rather than reassurance builds the habit of facing anxiety rather than feeding it.
5. Look at the whole picture
As an OT, I always look beyond just the anxious behavior — because sleep, sensory processing, nutrition, and daily routines all affect how regulated your child’s nervous system is on any given day. A child who is overtired, sensory overloaded, or running on sugar is going to have a much harder time facing hard things than one whose nervous system is supported from the ground up.
When To Get Support
If avoidance is significantly impacting your child’s daily life — school attendance, friendships, family activities, or their ability to try new things — it’s time to get support. Anxiety that is left untreated and reinforced by avoidance tends to grow, not shrink.
The good news is that with the right intervention, children can and do learn to face what feels scary. The skills they build in therapy don’t just help with anxiety — they build the kind of confidence and resilience that carries them through life.
How I Can Help
As a Child Anxiety Specialist and Occupational Therapist, I use action-based anxiety skills to help children and teens break the avoidance cycle and build real, lasting confidence. We work together as a team — your child, you as the parent, and me as the guide — because anxiety is a family experience and recovery is too.
If this post resonated with you, I’d love to connect.
👉 Schedule a Free Discovery Call or learn more at three23therapy.com