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Why Do I Feel Afraid of Missing Out on My Own Life? Understanding FOMO in Psychotherapy

  • Writer: Dipl.-Psychologin Anna Fernandes Lucas
    Dipl.-Psychologin Anna Fernandes Lucas
  • Jan 4
  • 2 min read

Updated: 5 days ago


Why Do I Always Feel Like Something Better Is Happening Elsewhere?

Even when life looks stable on the outside, I often feel a quiet restlessness inside. A sense that something important is happening elsewhere. That if I choose this path, I might be missing the right one. That committing fully means closing doors I’m not ready to close.

This experience is often described as Fear of Missing Out: FOMO. But in psychotherapy, FOMO is rarely about social media, events, or comparison alone. It is a deeper psychological state, one that touches identity, attachment, and emotional safety.


When FOMO Is Not About Options, but About Safety

In therapy, people struggling with FOMO are often thoughtful, capable, and self-aware. They are not impulsive or shallow. On the contrary, they tend to think deeply, sometimes too deeply, about choices, consequences, and alternative lives.


FOMO often shows up as:

  • Difficulty committing to relationships or decisions

  • Persistent doubt after making choices

  • Comparing one’s life to imagined alternatives

  • Anxiety about “settling” or choosing wrongly

  • A sense of urgency without clarity


Underneath these patterns is rarely indecision. More often, there is a fear that choosing fully will lead to loss, regret, or emotional vulnerability.


Why FOMO Persists Even When Life Is “Going Well”

One of the most confusing aspects of FOMO is that it often intensifies during periods of external success. From the outside, life appears functional, sometimes even enviable. Yet internally, satisfaction feels fragile or temporary.

Psychologically, this happens when the sense of self is organized around keeping options open rather than inhabiting choices. Staying alert to alternatives can feel safer than committing to one path, especially for those who learned early that stability was unpredictable or conditional.

FOMO then becomes a way of protecting against disappointment, dependency, or emotional loss.


How FOMO Is Worked With in Psychotherapy

In psychotherapy, the goal is not to convince someone that they are “lucky” or to challenge FOMO with rational arguments. FOMO is not a cognitive error — it is an emotional strategy.


Therapeutic work often focuses on:

  • Understanding what feels threatening about commitment

  • Exploring early experiences of inconsistency or conditional belonging

  • Identifying how self-worth became linked to possibility rather than presence

  • Developing tolerance for limitation, loss, and chosen paths

  • Strengthening an internal sense of safety that does not depend on alternatives


Rather than asking “How do I stop missing out?”, therapy asks: “What do I need in order to feel safe enough to stay?”


From Monitoring Life to Living It

When FOMO is unresolved, life is often lived in a state of anticipation. Attention is directed outward, scanning for better options, future versions of the self, or missed opportunities.

As therapy progresses, the focus gradually shifts inward, toward emotional presence, grounded choice, and authorship. Not every door needs to remain open for life to feel meaningful. In fact, depth often emerges precisely where openness ends.


FOMO is not immaturity or superficiality, it is a response to uncertainty, attachment insecurity, and the fear of choosing wrong, or being left behind emotionally.

Psychotherapy does not remove uncertainty from life. But it can help transform constant vigilance into psychological presence, allowing choices to be lived rather than endlessly evaluated.

Sometimes the fear is not of missing out on life, but of fully inhabiting it.

 
 
 

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