Ugh! Yes, I have it too. In fact, I would be willing to be that most of us who are victims of N parents have it in varying degrees. In my case, I have full blown GAD (Generalized Anxiety Disorder). I've had it since December 1995. It's affected my life so much that I remember my diagnosis date.
One thing that is really tough about anxiety, for anyone who may be in the early stages, is that it can be hard to diagnose, mainly because the symptoms are so hard to describe. It hit me in my mid 30s, which is a very common age for women. I remember going into work each day and just feeling different. Weird. Not right. It was as if things around me weren't real, and I was living in some Hollywood special effect. (People with GAD often describe a feeling of being outside of their own body looking in.) I must have made ten trips to the doctor before finally being referred to a psych, who diagnosed me and got me stabilized with medication. But until that point, the office visits went something like:
Me: Doctor, I feel funny.
Doctor: Funny how?
Me: I don't know. Just funny. Weird. Not normal. What's happening to me?
Doctor: You're just stressed. You're probably working too many hours.
Me: No, it's always there, no matter what. Every day. I feel funny.
Doctor: Funny how?
And on and on and on .....
From what I've been told, it's a chemical imbalance that can be managed but not cured, at least not when you have a severe case of it. I've tried the meditation, yoga, therapy, but I can't control my thoughts enough to make a difference. In fact, I have several episodes a month where I wake up in the middle of the night having severe anxiety attacks for no apparent reason. The day wasn't stressful, no contact with NM. Why? Did I have a dream? Do the thoughts lay dormant and attack us when we're vulnerable? I just don't know.
One way that I AM in control is by withholding my diagnosis from my family. GAD is considered a psychiatric disorder, and if NM found out that I had (as she would see it) been driven crazy, she'd throw a party. As far as she's concerned, I'm the happiest, healthiest person on earth. And THAT is some pretty good medicine.