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Inspiration

Hidden Anxiety: The ConstantSense Something Is Missing

Eckhart Tolle
Eckhart Tolle
Jan 18, 2026
7 min read

TLDR: Most people carry a low-level, often invisible anxiety rooted in the psychological belief that something essential is missing from their lives—that they haven't achieved enough, aren't far enough along, or haven't yet "made it." This background unease persists even when external circumstances appear favorable. Eckhart Tolle traces this anxiety to a fundamental disconnection from the present moment and identifies presence—direct, non-judgmental awareness of what is—as the antidote. By shifting from a future-oriented, lack-based mental framework to grounded presence, the persistent sense of incompleteness begins to dissolve.

Read · 7 sections

Where Does the "Something Is Missing" Feeling Come From?

Tolle identifies a pervasive psychological condition that affects many people: a constant, often subliminal sense that life isn't quite complete. This isn't mere ambition or healthy striving toward a goal. Rather, it's a deep-seated feeling that something fundamental is absent—a mental verdict that life, in its present form, is somehow insufficient.

This background anxiety operates quietly, like static beneath awareness. A person might achieve what appears to be success by conventional measures—career advancement, relationships, material comfort—and still feel that nagging sense of incompleteness. The anxiety doesn't announce itself loudly; instead, it creates a baseline of unease, a persistent whisper that "I'm not there yet" or "This isn't enough."

The root cause, according to Tolle's teaching, lies in the human mind's tendency to identify with thought and to be constantly oriented toward the future. The mind generates a perpetual narrative: When I achieve X, when I get Y, when I become Z, then I will be complete, then life will truly begin. This creates a psychological position Tolle calls "not yet"—a state of perpetual anticipation where the present moment is devalued as merely a stepping stone to some imagined future state.

How Does Constant Mental Projection Create Background Anxiety?

The mind's default mode is to evaluate the present against an imagined future standard. When you are here now, the mind asks: "Is this good enough? Am I making progress toward my goal? Have I arrived?" Typically, the answer the mind generates is: "Not yet. Not quite. I need more."

This evaluation mechanism is deeply conditioned. Society reinforces it constantly: education promises a better future if you perform now; career advancement requires you to sacrifice present satisfaction for future reward; self-improvement culture tells you that you are unfinished, broken, or incomplete and must work to fix yourself.

The result is a population that has learned to live in a state of perpetual inadequacy. Even moments that should feel like arrival—getting the promotion, finishing the degree, reaching the weight goal—often feel hollow or brief. The mind simply relocates the goalpost. Once one milestone is achieved, the mind identifies the next missing piece, and the cycle continues.

Tolle points out that this psychological mechanism is largely invisible to those caught in it. The anxiety doesn't feel like anxiety about a specific thought; it feels like the natural state of being alive. People describe it as restlessness, a sense of never being satisfied, or an inexplicable dissatisfaction that persists even when things are going well.

What Role Does Presence Play in Dissolving Background Anxiety?

Presence, in Tolle's teaching, means being directly aware of what is happening right now—not the mental interpretation of it, but the raw experience itself. It is consciousness meeting the present moment without the overlay of judgment, comparison, or narrative.

When you are truly present, the mind's "not yet" agenda loses its grip. The present moment is always complete in itself; it is not a means to an end. A breath is a complete event. A conversation is complete as it unfolds. Even difficulty or pain, when met with presence rather than resistance, has a quality of wholeness rather than fragmentation.

Presence dissolves the anxiety because anxiety is fundamentally a mental construct about the future—a projection that something is missing now that might be obtained later. When consciousness rests in what is actually here, that mental projection cannot persist in the same way. You cannot be anxious about being incomplete while fully present to the aliveness of the current moment.

This doesn't mean that goals, planning, or healthy desire disappear. Rather, these functions operate from a different psychological ground. When you act from presence rather than from a sense of lack, action carries less desperation and more intelligence. You move toward what matters not because you believe your worth depends on it, but because it is a natural expression of your values and consciousness in this moment.

How Can You Recognize Background Anxiety in Your Own Life?

Background anxiety often doesn't announce itself as anxiety. Instead, it masquerades as restlessness, dissatisfaction, impatience, or a persistent low-grade sense that something should be different. Common signs include:

  • Never arriving: Even when you achieve something desired, the satisfaction is brief or absent. The mind quickly moves to what's next.
  • Chronic comparison: You frequently measure yourself against others or against an imagined ideal version of yourself.
  • Difficulty being still: There's an almost compulsive urge to be doing, achieving, or progressing—stillness feels wasteful or unsafe.
  • Conditional self-worth: Your sense of adequacy depends on external metrics: productivity, appearance, status, or accomplishment.
  • Anticipatory living: You frequently think "I'll be happy when..." or "Once I achieve... then life will be better."
  • An underlying sense that you're behind: A feeling that you should be further along than you are, regardless of actual circumstances.

Recognizing these patterns is the first step. They indicate that consciousness is being diverted from the present and pulled into mental narratives about adequacy and futurity.

What Is the Relationship Between Presence and Peace?

Peace is not the absence of difficulty or challenge. According to Tolle's teaching, peace is what emerges when the mind stops fighting the present moment. When you stop telling yourself that reality should be different from what it is, when you stop generating the narrative that something is missing, a natural ease begins to surface.

This ease is not forced or superficial. It's the natural state when the energy that was tied up in mental resistance and projection becomes available again. You are no longer unconsciously depleting yourself by maintaining a constant internal verdict of inadequacy.

Peace doesn't mean passivity or resignation. It means that your actions—your efforts toward meaningful goals, your relationships, your work—flow from a place of presence and wholeness rather than from desperation and lack. This shift in ground transforms the quality of what you do.

Can You Accept Your Current Situation and Still Pursue Growth?

A common misunderstanding is that accepting the present moment means abandoning ambition or growth. Tolle's teaching clarifies this distinction: acceptance of what is doesn't preclude action toward what could be. The difference is in the psychological ground from which action emerges.

When action arises from presence and acceptance, it is informed by clarity and freedom rather than driven by desperation. You can work toward goals without the background anxiety of "not yet" contaminating the process. You can improve without the undertone that you are fundamentally broken or incomplete.

This is actually more conducive to genuine growth. When you're not expending energy on internal resistance and self-judgment, that energy becomes available for learning, adaptation, and authentic engagement with what matters.

Where to Go From Here

The teaching here points toward a direct experiment: notice the "not yet" narrative in your own mind. Observe when you're living in anticipation of a future where things will finally be complete. Then, for brief moments, consciously return to what is actually here—your breath, your surroundings, the direct sensory and emotional reality of this moment, without the mental verdict attached to it.

You don't need to fix this pattern all at once or perfectly. Simply recognizing it is a crack in the wall of unconsciousness. As you gradually spend more time in genuine presence—in simple awareness of what is—the grip of background anxiety naturally loosens. The relief that comes is not a reward for achieving more; it is the natural outcome of ceasing the internal struggle that was never necessary in the first place.

Eckhart Tolle
AuthorEckhart Tolle

German-born spiritual teacher whose 1997 book The Power of Now became one of the most widely read spiritual works of the 21st century. After a profound transformation at 29 — movin…

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Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

According to Tolle's teaching, this comes from a deeply conditioned mental pattern that measures the present moment against an imagined future ideal. The mind generates a constant verdict of 'not yet,' which creates background anxiety regardless of actual external circumstances. This pattern is reinforced by cultural messaging that equates worth with achievement.
Background anxiety, as Tolle describes it, is a subtle, pervasive sense of incompleteness that operates almost invisibly—distinct from acute anxiety attacks or clinical anxiety disorders. It's a psychological stance oriented toward the future and lack, present even during seemingly good times. If you experience clinical anxiety, professional support is important; this teaching complements but doesn't replace treatment.
Anxiety is fundamentally a mental projection about the future and what's missing. When you are fully present to the actual reality of this moment, the mind's 'not yet' narrative cannot persist in the same way. Presence dissolves the psychological ground on which background anxiety rests.
Yes. The difference is psychological: you can pursue goals from a place of wholeness and presence rather than from desperation and a sense of fundamental incompleteness. Action grounded in presence is actually more intelligent and effective because it's not contaminated by self-judgment or urgency rooted in lack.
The 'not yet' mindset is the constant internal narrative that life will truly begin once you achieve something—more money, the right relationship, the finished project, the ideal body. This orientation toward the future devalues the present moment as merely a stepping stone, creating perpetual unease and incompleteness.
Signs include: never feeling satisfied even after achieving goals, chronic restlessness or impatience, difficulty being still, frequently comparing yourself to others, conditional self-worth based on external metrics, and a persistent sense you should be further along than you are. These patterns indicate consciousness is pulled into mental narratives rather than grounded in the present.

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