A philosophical and testimonial essay on anxiety approached through a single sustained metaphor: the thought process of operating a motor vehicle. Where an earlier companion piece located depression largely in the past, this essay proposes — as philosophy, not clinical fact — that anxiety is oriented toward the future, and that the present is the balance point between the two, imagined as the needle of a double-pan scale in time. Drawing lightly on Jung's account of psychic energy (progression and regression) and the transcendent function, and on the existential tradition (Kierkegaard's "dizziness of freedom"), the piece frames anxiety not as a malfunction but as the mood of a creature able to imagine forward. A worked example — the impossibility of "making up" fifteen lost minutes on a thirty-mile drive without reaching roughly 168 mph — anchors the essay's central counsel: that rushing toward a finish line trades a peace we can actually reach for a danger we cannot justify, in driving and in living. The essay maintains an explicit seam between philosophical inference and empirical claim, and opens with crisis resources.
Jamison Johsnon (Wed,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: