Some patients with anxiety often feel dizzy and the floor shakes unsteadily, so they repeatedly visit neurology and ENT departments, but no organic pathology is detected. Patients feel as if they are walking and floating on clouds or cotton, without actually stepping on the floor. They often worry about fainting and lying helplessly on the floor, relying on others to support them in full view of the public to get up, and not being able to find others to assist them even in emergency situations. Their vertigo is not the vertigo of insufficient blood supply to the brain, nor is it the vertigo of sky spinning, but the vertigo of swaying unsteadiness. The reason for this is that chronic muscle tension affects the balance organs and triggers vertigo, which sends alarm signals. Symptoms of muscle tension also appear in other parts of the body, and many anxiety sufferers have symptoms of shoulder and back pain or constant leg tremors when sitting.