
For plenty of people, making eye contact is a simple, everyday thing. But for others, it can trigger intense feelings of vulnerability. This is especially true for those living with anxiety, as even brief glances from another person can induce self-consciousness. The term opia captures the experience as the intense and often ambiguous feelings that arise when locked into someone else’s gaze.
What Is Opia?
Opia isn’t a clinical term. Instead, it describes the emotional sensation behind eye contact without pathologizing it. People who experience opia might look into someone’s eyes and sense a rush of emotions like judgment, curiosity, connection, or misunderstanding. For some, simple eye contact feels like an incredibly vulnerable part of human interaction.
Understanding Social Anxiety
Social anxiety is a clinical condition that’s characterized by intense and persistent fear of being judged or scrutinized in social situations. It can lead to avoidance behaviors that can significantly impair daily life.
Key aspects include:
- Fear of negative evaluation: Worrying that others perceive you as awkward, stupid, or weak
- Avoidance or escape: Steering clear of conversations, group settings, public speaking, or eye contact
- Physiological responses: Experiencing blushing, sweating, trembling, rapid heartbeat, or mind going blank
- Cognitive distress: Overthinking after interactions, expecting catastrophic outcomes from mundane exchanges
Approximately 7 % of people experience social anxiety in any given year, with a lifetime prevalence surpassing 12 % in the U.S.
When Opia Meets Social Anxiety
For people struggling with social anxiety, opia can turn ordinary moments of eye contact into emotionally charged experiences. For example:
- Intrusive vulnerability: A glance can feel revealing, igniting fears that one’s anxiety or self-consciousness is being exposed.
- Heightened self-consciousness: Knowing someone is looking can trigger intense internal scrutiny.
- Feedback loop of fear: Physical signs like blushing or shaking during eye contact reinforce the belief that others are judging, which amplifies anxiety.
A fleeting moment of opia can feel overwhelming, jabbing at hidden insecurities and prompting the urge to avoid meeting someone’s gaze altogether. Eye contact, a normal social interaction, turns into a minefield.
Compassionate Perspectives on Opia
It’s important to approach this experience with empathy, both for those with social anxiety and those witnessing a loved one’s struggle:
- Normalize the discomfort: Understand that eye contact isn’t easy for everyone. Feeling awkward or withdrawing from discomfort is part of being human.
- Small, gentle exposure: Gradual exposure, like practicing brief eye contact with friends, can help the system recalibrate. Over time, the risk of judgment may start to diminish.
- Reframe the narrative: Encourage your mind to treat eye contact not as a test but as a way people connect.
- Seek supportive environments: Therapy, especially cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), offers structured opportunities to confront triggers like opia.
Practical Coping Strategies for Opia
Feeling awkward when making eye contact doesn’t have to feel so inescapable. Employing effective coping strategies can help gradually take some of the stress out of social interactions.
1. Mindful Grounding
Before engaging socially, take a moment to pause and control your breathing. Bring your attention away from perceived judgment and anchor to the present moment.
2. Gradual Practice
Start with short, kind glances at mirrors, pets, or loved ones. Gradually extend the duration of eye contact until it feels more natural.
3. Positive Self-Talk
Phrase encouraging reminders to yourself: “It’s okay to meet someone’s gaze. It’s just two people interacting.”
Replace “They’re judging me” with “Eye contact can bridge connection.”
Making and maintaining eye contact can be challenging, especially for neurodivergent individuals. It’s important to realize you’re not a bad person and people will not automatically dislike you for this quirk. Simply cultivate your self-awareness, practice gentle exposure techniques, and spend time around compassionate people. You may one day learn to maintain better eye contact, and if you still struggle, you’ll at least be in company that accepts you for who you are.
If you’re struggling and you’d like to work with a dedicated therapist, reach out to DK Therapy and schedule an appointment with our office.



