Anxiety as a messenger
Anxiety can feel like an enemy living inside us, racing thoughts, tightness in the chest, and a constant sense of worry or danger. Many people see it as a random or faulty reaction that needs to be suppressed. But in coherence therapy, pioneered by Bruce Ecker and colleagues, anxiety is viewed differently: not as a malfunction, but as a meaningful signal.
Rather than trying to push anxiety away, coherence therapy helps uncover the deeper logic that makes anxiety necessary for the person’s emotional system. Once that underlying pattern is discovered and brought into awareness, transformation becomes possible.

The core idea of coherence therapy
At its heart, coherence therapy is based on the principle that symptoms exist for a reason. They are not random. On an emotional level, they make perfect sense — even if consciously, they feel confusing or unwanted.
- For example: Someone who panics whenever they speak up in a group may consciously know they are safe, but at a deeper level, their emotional memory may hold: “If I express myself, I will be shamed.” The anxiety “makes sense” (it is coherent) as a protection against the feared outcome.
By discovering and bringing into awareness this hidden emotional learning, the person can experience a profound shift: the old “necessity” for anxiety dissolves, and with it, the symptoms.
How coherence therapy works in practice
1. Exploring Emotional Truths
The therapist guides the client to slow down and notice the moments when anxiety appears. Instead of fighting it, they turn toward it with curiosity. Together, they uncover the deeper belief or emotional memory that the anxiety is serving.
2. Making the Implicit Explicit
Once uncovered, the client clearly states the underlying emotional truth, for example: “If I relax, something bad will happen.” Speaking this truth aloud often brings both recognition and relief: the symptom is no longer mysterious.
3. Memory Reconsolidation
The crucial next step is to bring in new, lived experiences that contradict the old learning. Neuroscience shows that when an old memory is reactivated and then paired with a contradictory experience, the brain can rewrite it. This process is called memory reconsolidation.
In practice, this might mean:
- Noticing how safe it actually feels to express an opinion with a supportive therapist.
- Realising that a feared rejection does not happen.
- Experiencing safety while allowing the body to relax.
These experiences replace the old “rule” that made anxiety necessary.
Why This Approach is Different
Unlike strategies that aim only to manage anxiety (such as relaxation techniques or medication), coherence therapy targets the root cause: the emotional learning that created the anxiety in the first place.
- It’s not about coping; it’s about transformation.
- It doesn’t try to convince the anxious mind with logic; it listens to the anxious system until the deeper need is revealed.
- Once the hidden logic is made conscious and re-written, anxiety often falls away naturally, without a battle.
A Hopeful Path Forward
For many people, anxiety feels like an endless cycle of tension and fear. Coherence therapy offers a hopeful alternative: anxiety is not a flaw to fix, but a signpost pointing to something deeply important within. By listening to it, uncovering its emotional truth, and allowing new experiences to reshape old patterns, real and lasting relief becomes possible.
Closing Thought
If you live with anxiety, remember: your symptoms are not proof that you are broken. They are evidence of your mind’s deep intelligence, working hard to protect you. With the right guidance, you can discover what your anxiety has been trying to achieve for you — and in doing so, open the door to freedom and calm.
If you’re ready to explore how coherence therapy can help you understand the deeper logic of your anxiety and create lasting change, get in touch to begin your journey toward healing.