Anxiety as a Signal from Open Centers
In Human Design, most anxiety is connected to open (undefined) centers. An open center is a zone where you're vulnerable to outside influence. You absorb and amplify others' energy in that area, creating feelings of pressure, fear, or anxiety.
Calculate your bodygraph to see which centers are open.
Each Open Center Has Its Own Anxiety
Open Head Center (Crown)
Anxiety: "I must find an answer to everything." Constant mental pressure, intrusive thoughts, feeling you need to solve all the world's questions.
What to do: realize that not every question needs your answer. The pressure to think isn't your pressure — it comes from outside.
Open Ajna Center (Mind)
Anxiety: "I must be certain of my opinion." Fear of seeming foolish, need for mental certainty, changing opinions under others' influence.
What to do: allow yourself not to have a fixed position. Your strength is in the ability to see different perspectives.
Open Throat Center
Anxiety: "Nobody hears me, I must get attention." Pressure to speak when not asked, or conversely — fear of speaking up.
What to do: wait until you're asked or invited to speak. Your words carry power precisely when there's a request for them.
Open Ego Center (Heart)
Anxiety: "I must prove my worth." Drive to make promises, earn more, be "enough." Low self-esteem without external validation.
What to do: you don't need to prove anything. Your value isn't in achievements and promises.
Open Emotional Center (Solar Plexus)
Anxiety: "I must avoid conflicts, please everyone." Absorbing others' emotions, emotional roller coasters without apparent cause.
What to do: distinguish your emotions from others'. Ask: "Is this my mood or am I reading someone nearby?"
Open Sacral Center
Anxiety: "I must work more, get everything done." Feeling that energy is never enough, pressure not to stop.
What to do: know your limits. You amplify others' energy, but it's not yours. Rest before exhaustion.
Open Spleen
Anxiety: fears about health, safety, survival. Instinctive anxiety without a specific cause.
What to do: don't hold onto what no longer serves you. An open Spleen can keep people in toxic situations out of fear of change.
Open Root Center
Anxiety: "I must do everything urgently." Adrenaline pressure, feeling of constant deadline.
What to do: realize the urgency isn't yours. Stop, take a breath, and check: is it really urgent?
Working with Anxiety in Practice
- Calculate your bodygraph — identify your open centers
- Keep an anxiety journal — note when and in whose presence it arises
- Practice meditation by type
- Remember: open centers are wisdom, not weakness. They're how you learn