Why Do We Experience Existential Dread and What Can We Do About It?

Blog > Why Do We Experience Existential Dread and What Can We Do About It?
Karin
Written by
Karin Andrea Stephan

Entrepreneur, Senior Leader & Ecosystem Builder with a degrees in Music, Psychology, Digital Mgmt & Transformation. Co-founder of the Music Factory and Earkick. Life-long learner with a deep passion for people, mental health and outdoor sports.

Curly woman looking shocked, struggling with existential dread and a sense of doom
Curly woman looking shocked, struggling with existential dread and a sense of doom

You, the Ceiling, and a Thousand Questions

Imagine yourself staring at the ceiling. It’s 2:30 am and the light from your phone screen reflects on the wall, casting a faint blue glow that makes the room feel even more distant. Maybe you’ve just asked your AI buddy  Earkick “What is the point of it all?” for the third time this month. There is no emergency or disaster looming. But you feel a weight you can’t name. As of now, your body feels fine. Yet, something under the surface keeps asking the questions that don’t have quick answers: Existential dread. 

  • Why am I here? 
  • What should I be doing? 
  • And what if none of it adds up?


What Is Existential Dread?

Existential dread or existential anxiety is the unsettled feeling that comes when you zoom out too far, too fast. It touches the big themes: death (thanatophobia), freedom, responsibility, isolation, and meaning. Unlike regular anxiety, which worries about specific outcomes, existential dread comes from the vastness of life itself. 

You feel small, unanchored, and unsure.

In psychology, it’s sometimes described through Terror Management Theory, a way our brains try to protect us from the anxiety of knowing we will die one day. The theory suggests that our cultural beliefs, goals, and daily routines exist partly to distract us from this deep fear.

But don’t let the theory box you in. What matters is this: existential dread makes the everyday feel unreal and the future feel uncertain. It goes beyond fear because it’s the sensation that the ground under your life has shifted, even if nothing visible has changed.

What Existential Dread It’s NOT

You won’t find existential dread in the DSM because it is not a clinical diagnosis. However, it often walks hand in hand with depression or generalized anxiety. You can think of it more like a fog that seeps in when something bigger gets triggered.

And it’s not just about fearing death. Sometimes it shows up as boredom that feels endless, or as a quiet sense that nothing fits anymore. The pointlessness you feel in line at the grocery store, or the sudden thought that everyone is performing. Maybe the flicker of isolation in a room full of people. That’s existential pain, and it runs deeper than it first appears.

Video about existential dread and existential anxiety

Why Existential Anxiety Now?

The world today makes dread, fears, and anxiety louder. Every scroll, every click, every ping reminds you that things are breaking. There’s climate, politics, trust in institutions and endless FOMO. The problems feel enormous and permanent. That very scale feeds existential dread.

At the same time, we’re more connected than ever yet lonelier than ever. You can talk to someone at any time and still feel entirely alone. That’s the paradox of being “alone together.”

And then there’s choice overload. You could live anywhere, date anyone, learn anything. But more freedom often brings more pressure. The pressure to get it right, the expectation to find your purpose and live meaningfully every day. When you can’t answer those questions, existential thoughts pile up. They don’t always come with panic. Sometimes, they come with silence that feels too big to hold.

Add in doomscrolling, news notifications, and crises served in real time 24/7. Your brain doesn’t get a break and the gaps where meaning could grow are flooded by noise.

It’s not just you. And there’s something you can do. That’s we’re about to get into it.

What Existential Dread Feels Like

Existential dread can sneak up or crash in. The signs often show across mind, mood, body, and behavior.

Business woman looking out the train window wondering about big existential dread questions
Business woman looking out the train window wondering about big existential dread questions
  • Cognitive signs include looping questions like “What’s the point?” or “What if nothing matters?” You may find yourself mentally zooming out, feeling detached from the moment like you’re watching your life from above.
  • Emotional signs often include a strange mix of hollowness and heaviness. You might feel a sadness that has no clear source or notice that moments of awe quickly flip into moments of dread.
  • Physical signs show up in the chest, stomach, or breath. Many describe a tightness that doesn’t go away or sudden drops in the gut. Sleep can also get disrupted, especially with spikes before falling asleep or jolts early in the morning.
  • Behavioral signs include scanning your life for signs that it matters. You may find yourself checking with others for meaning, freezing when faced with choices, avoiding milestone events, or filling silence to outrun the discomfort.

What Keeps Existential Dread Going

Several forces silently feed and build up existential pain. One of the biggest is the mind’s struggle with uncertainty. When there’s no clear answer, the brain tends to loop. That’s where reassurance-seeking and rumination take hold. You ask again, you think again, and you stall again.

  • Constant exposure to large-scale threats from climate to conflict to economic instability can add fuel. These macro-stressors stretch your sense of control and flood the system with dread that feels too big to hold.
  • Disconnection also plays a role. Without grounding conversations or relationships that help you feel heard and seen, the experience becomes harder to name and regulate.

Mental Health Conditions and Existential Dread

Existential dread can overlap with anxiety and depression. It brings restlessness, low mood, and difficulty concentrating. But unlike general anxiety or mood disorders, existential dread centers around identity, meaning, and life’s deeper questions. When these thoughts impair functioning or come with compulsive checking, it may even fall into existential OCD territory.

You may still go to work, answer texts, and sleep okay. But in the background, there’s a hum of pointlessness or disorientation. It’s different from being curious about let’s say philosophical questions, existentialism in literature or existentialism quotes.

The key difference lies in the theme. Generalized anxiety focuses on daily threats. Existential dread zooms out to ask who you are, why you’re here, and what any of it means. 

Why the Body Feels Existential Anxiety First

Long before existential dread forms, the body sends signals. A stomach drop, tight chest, or shallow breath often show up before any words. That’s the gut–brain axis in motion—your inner system picking up on threat, uncertainty, or disconnection.

This is part of interoception: the brain reading internal cues. When you catch those cues early, the signal becomes easier to work with.

Many people confuse these signals with intuition, especially when anxiety and emotions run high. But tuning into the body with clarity can help you tell the difference. When you learn to tune into these signals with clarity, you unlock the first layer of response.

What’s The Existentialism Philosophy of Education?

When existential dread flares up, the brain starts chasing big answers. But those rarely arrive on command. That’s where micro-moments of meaning matter more: making someone laugh, finishing a task you care about, watering a plant. This shift turns existential anxiety into values in motion. You stop trying to solve the meaning puzzle all at once and start living small pieces of it now. That’s the heart of the existentialism philosophy of education:

Meaning is shaped by action


How To Turn Existential Dread Into Action

From here, let’s look at the practical moves that help you handle existential anxiety when it hits.

#1 Try Micro-Meaning Moves

Forget the life mission for a minute. Your brain wants traction, not philosophy. Try this:

  • Name one thing you did today that helped someone or made something slightly better.
  • Pick one tiny value in action: kindness, curiosity, focus.
  • Ask: “What would the version of me I respect do next?”

Meaning grows better when in motion rather than in perfect plans.


#2 The Existential Dread Night Spiral Kit 

When the ceiling starts talking back, try this 3-step reset:

  1. Grounding: Push your feet into the mattress. Feel the sheets and wiggle your toes.
  2. Attention anchor: Count backwards from 99 by 3s, or name five objects that start with B.
  3. Gentle statement: “Right now, my brain is searching because it loves me. I can listen later.”

No deep thoughts at night! Focus on small signals of safety.


#3 Move Before You Think

Existential dread likes to sit still and swirl. So don’t.

  • Stand up.
  • Stretch until your arms feel awake.
  • Walk to another room.
  • Shake your hands for 10 seconds.

Execise may not fix the big existential questions, but it resets your nervous system so you can face them better.


#4 Ask a Better Existential Question

Your brain wants clarity, but abstract questions keep it spinning. Shift to questions you can act on today.

  • “What is the point of my life?”

    → “What kind of impact do I want to make today?”
  • “What if I’m wasting my potential?”

    → “What’s one thing I’d feel proud to follow through on this week?”
  • “Why do I feel so behind?”

    → “What matters to me right now, in this season?”
  • “Am I doing life wrong?”

    → “What choice would feel aligned with who I want to become?”

#5 Local Action Beats Global Despair

World problems are huge and existential dread is justified. But that doesn’t mean you’re powerless.

Man harvesting tomatoes in garden as a way to outsmart existential dread
Man harvesting tomatoes in garden as a way to outsmart existential dread


  • Plant something, watch it grow and experience harvesting
  • Volunteer one hour. It carries proven benefits
  • Fix one broken thing in your house.
  • Donate to a cause that aligns with your values.

Every small repair counts, especially when the world feels broken.


#6 Your Awe Prescription

Awe can be five seconds long and you don’t need a grand canyon or the perfect sunset.

  • Watch a leaf move in the wind.
  • Listen to a piece of music with your eyes closed.
  • Stare at the night sky for one full minute.

Let your brain stretch wider than your worries.


#7 Talk It Out, But Choose Well

Venting helps when you don’t try to fix the void. Talk it out to feel human and find the next step.

  • Pick one person you trust and who won’t rush to fix you. 
  • Open your AI chatbot for mental health and speak the words that feel too heavy to carry alone.
  • Start with: “I’m not looking for answers, just space to say this out loud.”

Belonging shrinks the dread faster than conclusions. So does feeling heard, even if it’s by a nonjudgmental buddy app or journal that listens when no one else can.


#8 Build a Philosophy (In 5 Lines or Less)

Write your own tiny creed, but keep it practical and real. Ask:

  • What do I believe matters?
  • Is there something I want to protect?
  • What am I willing to let go of?

Then put it where you can see it and let it guide a few real choices.


#9 Unfreeze the Meaning Loop With Low-Stakes Creativity

Dread often stalls you in overthinking. Move it out of your head:

  • Write a poem.
  • Make a playlist about your mood.
  • Take five random photos in five minutes.

Output is much more about agency than about art!


#10 Body Check, Then Intuition Check

Before you make a big life call, pause:

  • Scan: chest, stomach, breath.
  • Rate your arousal 0–10.
  • Ask: “Is this anxiety asking for certainty, or is intuition asking to be checked?”

Let your body give you more than just signals and allow it give you a filter.


When the Tools Feel Too Small

Sometimes even the best tricks barely scratch the surface. Rather than assuming it is a failure, simply think of it as the weight having tipped into territory where more support helps. If dread keeps stealing sleep, flattening your appetite, or leaking into work and relationships week after week, it is time to loop in a professional. Structure from outside your own head can be the anchor your system is asking for.

Caring for Someone in Existential Dread

Being the steady one when someone you love feels groundless is its own challenge. Forget the quick fixes and offer presence instead. Sit in the same room or share a meal. Ask, 

“Do you want me to just listen or think this through with you?” 

You shrink the dread by showing that their questions are safe to say out loud.

Video about how to deal with existential dread, existential anxiety and existential depression

From Existential Dread to AI Psychosis

Late-night spirals often send people searching for anything that listens. Open, general tools like ChatGPT can feel like lifelines, but can also pour fuel on fragile states. In vulnerable moments, that can slide into AI psychosis. That’s where extended and unchecked conversations with a chatbot start replacing reality. If you lean on AI, choose one built with mental health in mind and guardrails in place. 

Widen Your Circle

Four Friends sharing concerns and a meal to widen circle and combat existential dread tendencies
Friends sharing concerns and a meal to widen circle and combat existential dread tendencies

While existential dread and AI psychosis grow in silence, meaning rebuilds in connection. Widen your circle when the questions get too heavy to carry alone. A therapist, a group, a trusted friend, even a community built around shared values are places where the fog lifts faster. 

Meaning shows up when people hold it with you.

Even with support, dread has a way of circling back. The trick is to meet it with something it cannot script or predict. That is where play slips in.


Catch Existential Dread Off Guard

Existential dread waits for you to freeze. It expects silence, overthinking, and stillness. Surprise it! Do something slightly absurd or unpedictable. Speak a sentence in a made-up language. Stack three books in the wrong order. Put your shoes on the wrong feet just long enough to laugh. These small acts shake the system and remind you that you are not just a thinker of big questions. You are also the maker of tiny disruptions that bring life back into the room.

Now stop scrolling and do one thing that makes no sense but feels very alive!