Floor Moving, Unstable Surface anxiety symptoms

Written by Jim Folk
Medically reviewed by Marilyn Folk, BScN.
Last updated October 30, 2024

floor feels like it is moving anxiety symptoms

Feels like the floor moved or that you are on an unstable surface, such as the floor dropping, rising, swaying, or vibrating, even though the surface you are on is solid and stable, are common anxiety symptoms, including anxiety and panic attack symptoms.

Many anxious and hyperstimulated people experience a “floor-moving” sensation.

This article explains the relationship between anxiety and “floor-moving” symptoms.

Feels Like The Floor Is Moving Common Anxiety Symptom Descriptions

  • Suddenly, the floor, ground, or surface you are standing, sitting, walking, or lying on feels like it moved or is moving even though it’s a solid, stationary surface.
  • The surface you are standing, sitting, or lying on feels like it moved up, down, sideways, back and forth, or like it is shaking, rocking, swaying, or vibrating.
  • Sometimes, it can feel as if you are standing, sitting, walking, or lying on an unstable surface, like you are in a boat on the water, even though the surface is solid, stable, and unmovable.
  • Feels like you’ve suddenly dropped or risen, as if in an elevator, even though you are on a stable, unmovable surface.
  • Feels like the surface you are on is unstable.

Many people respond to this symptom with fear because they think it is caused by something wrong with the brain or by a serious neurological or biological problem with the nervous system. The fear can be so strong that it causes a panic attack.

The Floor-Moving sensation can:

  • Occur occasionally, frequently, or persistently.
  • Precede, accompany, or follow an escalation of other anxiety symptoms or occur by itself.
  • Precede, accompany, or follow a period of nervousness, anxiety, fear, and stress, or occur "out of the blue" for no reason.
  • Range in intensity from mild, to moderate, to severe.
  • Come in waves where it’s strong one moment and eases off the next.
  • Occur for a while, subside, and then return for no reason.
  • Change from day to day and moment to moment.

All the above combinations and variations are common.

To see if anxiety might be playing a role in your anxiety symptoms, rate your level of anxiety using our free one-minute instant results Anxiety Test, Anxiety Disorder Test, or Hyperstimulation Test.

The higher the rating, the more likely it could be contributing to your anxiety symptoms, including feeling cold or chilled.

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Causes

Medical Advisory

Talk to your doctor about all new, changing, persistent, and returning symptoms as some medical conditions and medications can cause anxiety-like symptoms.

Additional Medical Advisory Information.

1. Anxiety-Activated Stress Response

Anxious behavior, such as worry, activates the stress response, which secretes stress hormones into the bloodstream, where they travel to specific locations to immediately prepare the body for emergency action – to fight or flee. This instinctual survival reaction is often referred to as the Fight Or Flight Response.[1][2]

Visit the “Stress Response” article for the many ways it can affect the body.

Some stress response changes can cause an acute dropping/falling sensation. For example, the stress response:

  • Quickly converts the body’s energy reserves into “fuel” (blood sugar) to provide an instant boost of energy
  • Increases heart rate, respiration, and metabolism due to the boost in energy.
  • Stimulates the sympathetic nervous system, increasing nervous system activity to be more sensitive and reactive to danger.
  • Heightens most of the body’s senses to be more aware of danger.
  • Shunts blood to parts of the body vital to survival, such as the brain, arms, legs, and vital organs, and away from parts less vital for survival, such as the stomach, digestive system, and skin. It accomplishes this by constricting blood vessels in certain parts of the body and dilating them in others.
  • Tightens muscles to make the body more resilient to injury.
  • Increases respiration to accommodate the increase in heart rate.

Any combination of the above can cause an acute “floor-moving” sensation.

An active stress response is a common cause of acute “floor-moving” symptoms.

2. Hyperstimulation

When stress responses occur infrequently, the body recovers relatively quickly from its changes. However, frequently activated stress responses, such as from overly anxious behavior, can prevent the body from completely recovering. Incomplete recovery can leave the body in a state of semi-stress-response-readiness, which we call “stress-response hyperstimulation” since stress hormones are powerful stimulants.

Hyperstimulation is also often referred to as “hyperarousal,” “HPA axis dysfunction,” or “nervous system dysregulation” [3][4][5][6].

Visit our “Hyperstimulation” article for more information about the many ways hyperstimulation can affect the body and how we feel.

Hyperstimulation can cause the changes of an active stress response even though a stress response hasn’t been activated.

Just as an active stress response can cause acute “floor-moving” sensations, hyperstimulation can cause chronic “floor-moving” symptoms.

Frequent “floor-moving” sensations are common symptoms of hyperstimulation.

But that’s not all. Hyperstimulation can cause this symptom in other ways, too. For instance, hyperstimulation can cause:

  • Nervous System Excitation and Dysregulation: A chronically stimulated nervous system can act erratically and cause all kinds of nervous system, sensory system, and equilibrium problems, such as a feeling like the floor is moving.
  • Homeostatic Dysregulation: Homeostasis is the body’s ability to automatically maintain a stable internal environment despite changes in the external environment. Hyperstimulation can cause homeostatic dysregulation, leading to internal regulation problems, which can affect the nervous, sensory, and vestibular systems, causing a “floor-moving” sensation.
  • Hormone changes: Hormones play a crucial role in homeostasis and many bodily functions, which can affect the nervous, sensory, and vestibular systems. Since stress hormones affect other hormones, hyperstimulation can cause nervous, sensory, and vestibular system anomalies, such as a “floor-moving” sensation.
  • Sleep disruption and fatigue: Hyperstimulation taxes the body’s energy resources harder than normal, leading to sleep deprivation and fatigue, which can also this common anxiety symptom.

As long as the body is hyperstimulated, it can exhibit symptoms, such as the “floor is moving” sensation.

This symptom can scare you when it first occurs and trigger the body’s involuntary stress response to the feeling of suddenly and unexpectedly rising, dropping, or swaying when on a stable surface.

Other Factors

Other factors can create stress and cause anxiety-like symptoms, as well as aggravate existing anxiety symptoms, including:

Select the relevant link for more information.

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How to get rid of the "floor-moving" sensation?

When a "floor-moving" sensation is caused or aggravated by other factors, addressing those factors can reduce and eliminate this common anxiety and hyperstimulation symptom.

When a "floor-moving" sensation is caused by an anxiety-triggered stress response, calming yourself will end the active stress response and its changes. This common anxiety symptom will subside as your body recovers from the active stress response.

Keep in mind that it can take up to 20 minutes or more for the body to recover from a major stress response. But this is normal and shouldn’t be a cause for concern.

When this symptom is caused by hyperstimulation, eliminating hyperstimulation will end this anxiety symptom.

You can reduce and eliminate hyperstimulation by:

  • Containing anxious behavior.
  • Reducing stress.
  • Regular deep relaxation.
  • Relaxed diaphragmatic breathing.
  • Regular light to moderate exercise.
  • Getting regular good sleep.
  • Eating a healthy diet of whole and natural foods.
  • Avoiding stimulants.
  • Passively-accepting your symptoms until they subside.
  • Being patient as your body recovers.

Visit our “60 Natural Ways To Reduce Stress” article for more ways to reduce stress.

Recovery Support members can read chapters 5,6, 7, and 14 for more ways to reduce stress.

As the body recovers from hyperstimulation, it stops sending symptoms of hyperstimulation, including a "floor-moving" sensation.

Since worrying and becoming upset about anxiety symptoms stress the body, these behaviors can interfere with and stall recovery, causing symptoms to linger.

Passively accepting your symptoms – allowing them to persist without reacting to, resisting, worrying about, or fighting them – while doing your recovery work will cause their cessation in time.

Acceptance, practice, and patience are key to recovery.

Eliminating hyperstimulation will bring results in time!

Recovery Support

The Recovery Support area of our website contains thousands of pages of important self-help information to help individuals overcome anxiety disorder, hyperstimulation, and symptoms.

Due to the vast amount of information, including a private Discussion Forum, many of our Recovery Support members consider it their online recovery support group.

Therapy

Unidentified and unaddressed underlying factors cause issues with anxiety. As such, they are the primary reason why anxiety symptoms persist.

Addressing your underlying factors (Level Two recovery) is most important if you want lasting success.

Addressing Level Two recovery can help you:

  • Contain anxious behavior.
  • Become unafraid of anxiety symptoms and the strong feelings of anxiety.
  • End anxiety symptoms.
  • Successfully address the underlying factors that so often cause issues with anxiety.
  • End what can feel like out-of-control worry.

All our recommended anxiety therapists have had anxiety disorder and overcame it. Their personal experience with anxiety disorder and their Master's Degree and above professional training give them insight other therapists don't have.

If you want to achieve lasting success over anxiety disorder, any one of our recommended therapists would be a good choice.

Working with an experienced anxiety disorder therapist is the most effective way to treat anxiety disorder, especially if you have persistent symptoms and difficulty containing anxious behavior, such as worry.[7][8][9]

In many cases, working with an experienced therapist is the only way to overcome stubborn anxiety.

Research has shown that therapy is the most effective treatment for anxiety disorder, and distance therapy (via phone or the Internet) is equally, if not more effective, than face-to-face in-person therapy.[10][11][12]

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FAQ

Can a sudden and unexpected "floor-moving" sensation cause anxiety?

Anxiety is caused by anxious behavior, such as worry. If the sudden "floor-moving" sensation scared you and you believed it might be a sign of a serious medical condition, yes, experiencing a sudden "floor-moving" sensation can cause anxiety.

Furthermore, since the body can involuntarily react to a perceived threat, such as an unexpected equilibrium change, you can experience an involuntary sudden burst of anxiety due to this symptom.

Is the anxiety-caused "floor-moving" sensation serious?

No, anxiety-caused "floor-moving" sensations aren’t serious or dangerous. They indicate you have experienced a stress response or your body is chronically stressed (hyperstimulated). This symptom will subside when you end the active stress response and recover from chronic stress.

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Prevalence

In an online poll we conducted, 51 percent of respondents said they experience the “floor-moving” symptom due to their anxiety and hyperstimulation.

While this sensation can be unnerving when it first occurs, it is a common anxiety and hyperstimulation symptom. It is NOT an indication of something more serious.

The combination of good self-help information and working with an experienced anxiety disorder therapist, coach, or counselor is the most effective way to address anxiety and its many symptoms. Until the core causes of anxiety are addressed – which we call the underlying factors of anxiety – a struggle with anxiety unwellness can return again and again. Dealing with the underlying factors of anxiety is the best way to address problematic anxiety.

Additional Resources

Return to our anxiety disorders signs and symptoms page.

anxietycentre.com: Information, support, and therapy for anxiety disorder and its symptoms, including feels like the floor is moving anxiety symptoms.

References

1. Chu, Brianna, et al. “Physiology, Stress Reaction.” StatPearls, 7 May 2024.

2. Godoy, Livea, et al. "A Comprehensive Overview on Stress Neurobiology: Basic Concepts and Clinical Implications." Frontiers In Behavioral Neuroscience, 3, July 2018.

3. Elbers, Jorina, et al. "Wired for Threat: Clinical Features of Nervous System Dysregulation in 80 Children." Pediatric Neurology, Dec 2018.

4. Yaribeygi, Habib, et al. “The Impact of Stress on Body Function: A Review.” EXCLI Journal, Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors, 2017.

5. Z, Fatahi, et al. "Effect of acute and subchronic stress on electrical activity of basolateral amygdala neurons in conditioned place preference paradigm: An electrophysiological study." Behavioral Brain Research, 29 Sept. 2017.

6. Teixeira, Renata Roland, et al. “Chronic Stress Induces a Hyporeactivity of the Autonomic Nervous System in Response to Acute Mental Stressor and Impairs Cognitive Performance in Business Executives.” Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports., U.S. National Library of Medicine, 2015.

7. Hofmann, Stefan G., et al. “The Efficacy of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: A Review of Meta-Analyses.” Cognitive Therapy and Research, U.S. National Library of Medicine, 1 Oct. 2012.

8. Leichsenring, Falk. “Is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy the Gold Standard for Psychotherapy?” JAMA, American Medical Association, 10 Oct. 2017.

9. DISCLAIMER: Because each body is somewhat chemically unique, and because each person will have a unique mix of symptoms and underlying factors, recovery results may vary. Variances can occur for many reasons, including due to the severity of the condition, the ability of the person to apply the recovery concepts, and the commitment to making behavioral change.

10. Kingston, Dawn.“Advantages of E-Therapy Over Conventional Therapy.” Psychology Today, Sussex Publishers, 11 Dec. 2017.

11. Markowitz, John, et al. “Psychotherapy at a Distance.” Psychiatry Online, March 2021.

12. Thompson, Ryan Baird, "Psychology at a Distance: Examining the Efficacy of Online Therapy" (2016). University Honors Theses. Paper 285.