For years I tried to make my fear fit the labels I'd been handed – tokophobia, anxiety, “just not ready”. None of them quite fit. They didn't explain why the dread had been there since long before I was anywhere near a pregnancy, or why it touched so much more than birth. So eventually I named it myself: Reproductive Anxiety Disorder, or RAD.
This is the plain-English explainer: what RAD is, how it shows up across a woman's life, where tokophobia fits within it, and why naming it accurately changes everything about getting help.
What is Reproductive Anxiety Disorder (RAD)?
Reproductive Anxiety Disorder (RAD) is a framework for the spectrum of fear, avoidance and nervous-system dysregulation that women can carry across the whole reproductive lifecycle – from anxiety about whether to have children, through tokophobia (severe fear of pregnancy or birth), into perinatal anxiety, birth trauma and the years afterwards. It isn't a single phobia, and it isn't ordinary anxiety. It's a pattern that names what currently falls between the cracks.
One thing to be clear about up front: RAD is a framework I've proposed from over a decade of clinical work – a named pattern, not yet a formal clinical diagnosis. I'm always upfront about that, because accuracy matters. What it offers right now is a more useful and more compassionate lens than the labels we've been using.
Why the usual labels fall short
For decades this experience has been mislabelled – called tokophobia, generalised anxiety, or simply “not being ready”. Those labels miss the mark because they don't account for the developmental imprinting, the cultural conditioning and the physical, nervous-system activation that define this fear. Above all, they can't explain why so many women are terrified of pregnancy, or avoid it entirely, without ever having had a traumatic birth.
That's the gap RAD fills. It treats the fear as a whole-system response with roots that often reach back to childhood – not a one-off phobia, and not a personal failing.
The reproductive-fear spectrum – and where tokophobia sits
RAD covers a spectrum. At one end is a quiet, early unease – the woman who has always felt “not maternal” without knowing why. Further along is tokophobia, the severe fear of pregnancy and birth. Beyond that sit perinatal anxiety, birth trauma and postnatal struggle. Different points on one spectrum, the same underlying pattern.
Tokophobia is simply the most visible manifestation of RAD – the part that has a name people occasionally recognise. If that's where you are, the complete guide to tokophobia goes deeper.
The Fear Funnel: how reproductive fear escalates
One of the models within RAD is the Fear Funnel – six stages that map how reproductive fear develops, usually without the woman realising it has a name or a shape:
- Latent fear. A vague dread or “I'm not broody”, often present since childhood.
- Early avoidance. Quietly steering life around it: delaying, side-stepping, “not the right time”.
- Emotional activation. The nervous system flares; panic, intrusive thoughts, “I thought I was going mad”.
- Misdirection & misdiagnosis. The dangerous stage: help is sought but mislabelled as general anxiety, OCD or “first-time nerves”, so it never reaches the root.
- Fear escalation. A “try → panic → stop” cycle; identity wobbles (“maybe I'm not meant to be a mum”).
- Final outcomes. The fear becomes a life shape: childlessness felt as the only option, traumatic births, lasting regret.
Every stage is a point where the funnel can be interrupted. Earlier is easier – but it's never too late.
Betrayed by your biology
Underneath all of it is a particular wound: the sense of being betrayed by your own body. You can see it at every stage of reproductive life – puberty arriving like an ambush, fertility that won't cooperate, a pregnancy that takes over, a birth that feels hijacked, menopause changing the rules again. Each one can teach the same lesson, and once that trust goes, the nervous system works overtime trying to stay safe in a body it treats as a volatile partner. That's the soil RAD grows in.
When I started using the phrase “betrayed by your biology”, women's eyes would widen – yes, that's it.
It helps to think of it like an allergy: a sensitive system, always working a bit harder to stay balanced, that tips into full defence mode when the trigger appears. The reaction isn't a fault in you – it's protection that has lost its sense of perspective.
Why naming it matters
This isn't just semantics. As long as reproductive fear is filed under “pregnancy and birth”, it stays invisible to mental-health frameworks, funding and training – so women keep being told it's “just nerves” and sent away. Naming the pattern gives it somewhere to belong, and gives the women living with it something they rarely get: recognition, and a map. Naming it doesn't pathologise you. It points the way out.
Can RAD be healed?
Yes. If reproductive fear is a protection pattern – an alarm system convinced you're in danger – then healing isn't about forcing yourself toward what scares you. It's about helping your body feel safe again, so the alarm can switch off, and rebuilding trust with yourself piece by piece. I cleared my own fear using the Head Trash Clearance Method, and there are several approaches that help. The first step is simply understanding where you are.
Want to understand your own reproductive fear?
The free Tokophobia Test takes about five minutes and tells you what you're dealing with – no pressure, no scare tactics.
Take the free Tokophobia Test ›Provided by our partner Fearless Birthing.Reproductive Anxiety Disorder questions, answered
Is Reproductive Anxiety Disorder a real diagnosis?
RAD is a framework coined by Alexia Leachman to describe reproductive fear across the lifecycle. It's a named pattern drawn from clinical experience – not yet a formal clinical diagnosis. It's offered as a more accurate, compassionate lens than the labels currently used.
How is RAD different from tokophobia?
Tokophobia – severe fear of pregnancy and birth – is the most visible manifestation of RAD. RAD is the wider pattern: it also covers fear about whether to have children, perinatal anxiety, birth trauma and postnatal struggle. Same underlying nervous-system pattern, different points on one spectrum.
What causes RAD?
There's rarely one cause. It often begins early – with your own birth, puberty, or absorbed cultural and family messages – building into a nervous-system pattern that treats reproduction as a threat. A previous traumatic birth can also set it off.
Can RAD be treated?
Yes. Because it's a fear response rather than a personality trait, it can be reset – by helping the body feel safe again rather than through exposure. Approaches range from self-help to working with a specialist.