Belonging: the true antidote to anxiety
Belonging: the true antidote to anxiety
You regulate yourself better when you don’t need to defend yourself.
When we talk about anxiety, the focus almost always goes to the mind:
racing thoughts, worries, fear of the future, difficulty controlling things.
The proposed solution is usually the same: think differently, control better, organize more.
But what if anxiety were not, at its origin, a problem of thinking?
What if it were a bodily signal of a lack of real belonging?
Anxiety is not excess thinking. It is excess defense.
From a biological point of view, anxiety emerges when the body enters protective mode.
It is the state in which the nervous system understands that it needs to:
anticipate
prepare
defend
This does not happen because you “thought wrong.”
It happens because the body does not feel safe in relation to the environment or the group.
Before it becomes thought, anxiety is body posture, breathing rhythm, muscle tension, hypervigilance.
Silently, the body asks:
“Do I belong here, or do I need to protect myself?”
Belonging as Human Quorum Sensing
Here we introduce a central concept of our model: Belonging as Human Quorum Sensing.
In biology, quorum sensing is the ability of organisms to perceive:
who is around
whether there is enough cooperation
whether the environment is favorable
In humans, belonging works in a similar way — but in a corporeal and affective manner, not a rational one.
Belonging is not agreeing.
Belonging is not being the same.
Belonging is feeling that the body can relax in the presence of others.
When human quorum sensing is active:
the body reduces alertness
breathing slows down
attention broadens
anxiety naturally decreases
Not through control,
but through living coordination.
Jiwasa: when the group regulates (or dysregulates)
The Jiwasa avatar represents the dynamics between bodies in a shared task.
It observes what happens when people need to:
cooperate
synchronize
decide together
coexist
Jiwasa shows something essential:
groups also have regulated and dysregulated states.
A group can be:
synchronized by trust
or synchronized by fear
Externally, it may look the same.
Internally, the effect on the body is opposite.
When synchronization is real:
the body relaxes
mistakes are tolerated
creativity emerges
When synchronization is driven by pressure:
the body contracts
mistakes become threats
anxiety grows
Acceptance by pressure is not belonging
Here lies one of the greatest confusions of social life — especially in adolescence.
Being accepted is not the same as belonging.
Acceptance by pressure happens when:
you need to adapt all the time
hide parts of yourself
act against bodily signals
maintain constant performance
The body perceives this immediately
and responds with tension.
Real belonging is the opposite:
you do not need to defend yourself
the body finds rhythm
presence is enough
Anxiety decreases not because everything is perfect,
but because the body is not under social threat.
APUS: the body also belongs in space
Belonging is not only social.
It is also spatial.
The APUS avatar represents the body–territory: how the body positions itself in space and relates to the environment.
The body feels belonging when it:
has somewhere to settle
recognizes the ground
perceives clear boundaries
finds predictable rhythms
Chaotic, noisy, overly accelerated environments
keep the body in alert — even without social conflict.
That is why anxiety is not resolved only by talking.
Often, it decreases when:
the space changes
the rhythm slows down
the body finds support
Body in space, group in rhythm
When APUS and Jiwasa align, something powerful happens.
The body finds:
a place to be
a group to synchronize with
In this state:
breathing adjusts
internal time slows down
attention distributes more evenly
This is collective Zone 2.
It is not euphoria.
It is not constant excitement.
It is effortless coordination.
Collective Zone 2 vs. Social Zone 3
Collective Zone 2 is marked by:
spontaneous cooperation
comfortable silence
error without punishment
presence without performance
Social Zone 3, on the other hand, emerges when:
the group operates through rigid ideology
there is fear of exclusion
difference becomes a threat
the body is silenced
In Social Zone 3:
anxiety increases
thinking accelerates
creativity drops
belonging is replaced by obedience
The body knows the difference —
even when the mind tries to deny it.
A simple path to reduce anxiety now
No complex techniques.
No attempt to “control the mind.”
Some bodily questions:
Can I relax here, or do I need to defend myself?
Is my body trying too hard to adapt?
Does this group regulate me or tense me?
Simple practical actions:
change position in space
leave environments of continuous pressure
seek simple shared rhythms (walking, breathing, listening)
allow silence without justification
This is not social withdrawal.
It is biological regulation.
The central point
Anxiety does not decrease when you think better.
It decreases when the body stops defending itself.
And the body only stops defending itself when it feels:
real belonging
living coordination
safe space
shared rhythm
Or, in one sentence to remember:
You regulate yourself better when you don’t need to defend yourself.
When the body belongs,
the mind finds rest.
Scientific References (post-2020)
Balconi, M., Angioletti, L., & Amenta, S. (2024).
Inter-brain synchronization during interoception: a multimodal EEG–fNIRS coherence-based hyperscanning approach.
Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews.
— Combines EEG and fNIRS to show that interoceptive attention (e.g., breathing focus) modulates neural coherence between individuals, supporting collective regulation and embodied social coordination.Chen, X., Liu, Y., & Zhang, D. (2024).
EEG–fNIRS-based emotion recognition using graph convolution and capsule attention networks.
Brain Sciences.
— Demonstrates that emotional and affective states can be objectively identified through EEG + fNIRS integration, reinforcing that social emotions have measurable neurophysiological bases.Nozawa, T., et al. (2021).
Interpersonal neural synchronization during social interaction: a hyperscanning study with EEG and fNIRS.
NeuroImage.
— Shows that cooperative interactions produce inter-brain neural synchronization, empirically supporting belonging as Human Quorum Sensing and the concept of collective Zone 2.Koike, T., Tanabe, H. C., & Sadato, N. (2021).
Hyperscanning neuroimaging study designs for social interaction research: a review.
NeuroImage.
— Methodological review consolidating the use of EEG and fNIRS to study real-time social dynamics and group coordination.Tachtsidis, I., & Scholkmann, F. (2021).
False positives and false negatives in functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS): challenges, limitations, and future directions.
Neurophotonics.
— Updates validity and interpretation criteria for fNIRS data, strengthening its application in studies of emotion, bodily regulation, and natural social contexts.
How these references support the blog
Belonging reduces anxiety → evidenced by interpersonal neural synchronization (EEG/fNIRS) in cooperative contexts.
Belonging is bodily and rhythmic, not only cognitive → neural and hemodynamic coherence reflect living coordination, not pressure-based obedience.
Collective Zone 2 is measurable → inter-brain synchronization patterns differentiate regulated cooperation from defensive interaction.
Anxiety as a state of social defense → dysregulated groups show neural patterns distinct from groups in safe coordination.