Online go anxiety is a thing. We have had discussions about it in the past.

Currently there are two active topics that are related:
Physical fitness for better Go? (
https://lifein19x19.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=17203 )
How to improve? Useful ideas by Alexandr Dinershteyn (
https://lifein19x19.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=17242 )
In the first one SoDesuNe links to an ESPN article by Aishwarya Kumar about the physiological effects of high level chess competition and the physical training of current top pros. (
https://www.espn.com/espn/story/_/id/27 ... =417198403 ) In reference to excessive weight loss by top chess players in tournaments, Kumar has this to say:
ESPN wrote:
Stress and anxiety, in fact, are the greatest drivers of the phenomenon.
Kumar does not say much about destressing and handling anxiety. She does mention in passing Magnus Carlsen's yoga practice and Fabiano Caruana's jogging, without going into their destressing qualities. I was a bit surprised by that, because how to handle stress and anxiety has a long history, in general and in sports, as well. Some decades ago the Austrian Olympics ski team used to practice autogenics, for instance. Professional musicians have also embraced stress control and relaxation. I once attended a concert of the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra under Pinchas Zukerman, where it looked like some of the violinists were so relaxed they might slide out of their chairs onto the floor.
BTW, Kumar does mention the bad habit of chess players leaning forward oven the board, which puts strain on the muscles of the neck and shoulders that support the head. That happens with face to face go, as well.
Jujube wrote:
Please share your thoughts about motivation and anxiety in the game of Go, related to playing online or any other aspect, and solutions you have created to help.
Some thoughts:
Playing online, specifically online, is the quickest way to improve. You can't improve only by doing tsumego. It has to be a combination.
It's definitely true that you need both study and play to optimize your advancement. In my own experience, my advancement in my first year of play, up to around current AGA 3 kyu, I think, came almost entirely through play, with some review. This was before online go. I played between 5 and 10 games per week, at about one hour per game.

Depending on your circumstances, you might need to play online to get that much play, but I don't see much value in online play, per se. I agree pretty much with Dinershteyn in his article:
breakfast wrote:
On multiple Go servers you can find a great many of 10-kyu players who have played dozens {of thousands of} games as it is shown on their profile. They might be eager to improve, but playing about 30 blitz matches a day (and figure is not uncommon) is only aggravating {their poor} skills. It is desirable to set up a limit of 2 or 3 matches per day and not to start a new game until the last one has been reviewed in details.
Jujube wrote:
It's like football training: you have to have your "skin in the game" (I hate that BS business lingo... but it's not wrong). You have to risk spraining your ankle if you want to win your next match.
Really? To those who say, no pain, no gain, my reply is this:
No pain, no pain. 
Sprains and pains come from pushing and exceeding your limits, from increasing the level of stress, not decreasing it. Feel the burn? Physiologically, it is true that to build muscle you have to damage it slightly, so that the body is later mobilized to repair it during later sleep or rest. The brain does not work that way. And what is the point of stressing the body to improve the mind? IMHO, it is good to get into the zone of competence, which combines a certain level of physiological arousal with relaxation. Effortless effort is an art that can be acquired.

Jujube wrote:
For several months, I have not felt like playing online. After self-diagnosing this feeling, it draws parallels with anxiety disorder. The anxiety of making a mistake. The anxiety of wasting other people's time or annoying others. The anxiety of not improving, or de-ranking, or disappointing oneself with a bad performance. That feeling of detachment: I'm playing the most stimulating game in the world with someone who I can't see, who I don't know, who I will never speak to again. Many bad feelings. Procrastination takes over. Oh, I must tidy my room instead of playing Go. I must read the newspaper first. I must have lunch. I must play a computer game instead. I must do tsumego problems and study professional games instead of playing. I must post on a Go forum.
Actually I love playing in real life tournaments and at the Go club. So, it's specifically the lack of motivation due to anxiety about playing online. I struggle with this tug of war: the desire to get better, the lack of desire to adapt myself. The outright jealousy of hearing people say: "I played for 10 hours yesterday, it was great". "I've ranked up to 2000 on Go Quest". "I played my 1000th online game today".
To address the last first: 10 hours of online go in one day? That's fine for those who enjoy it, but if your goal is improvement, I would recommend not more than 3 hours of play, with equal time for review. 1,000 online game? At what time limits? Unless the player is already quite strong, that is thousands of plays and read aheads that reinforce bad habits. Repetition of thoughts and actions reinforce them. That's how the brain works.
Your self diagnosis is good, but what you say is not very concrete. You mention bad feelings and avoidance, doing something else instead of playing go online. One well established method of reducing anxiety is called systematic desensitization. You can look that up, if you wish. Not to go into any details, the basic idea is that as you approach what causes anxiety, your anxiety arises and begins to grow. At some point your anxiety is still manageable, and you are able to reduce it and relax. You can imagine yourself in that circumstance, vividly enough to evoke some anxiety, which you then reduce. As you practice this anxiety reduction, you will find yourself getting less and less anxious when you first imagine it. When you no longer get anxious at that point, you can move closer to what causes anxiety, and repeat the process. In a related method you can also go through the actual steps, rather than relying upon your imagination. For instance, if you find bad feelings arise when you are at a go server's web site, but have not logged in, you can practice going to the web site and reducing anxiety at that point. When you feel comfortable at that point, you can try logging in.

These methods are tried and true. You can find one of them, or some variant, that works for you.

IMX, I have also found relaxation practice helpful, such as the savasana of hatha yoga. autogenics. and self-hypnosis. Good luck!

Edit: I have said that these methods are tried and true. That does not necessarily mean that you can do it yourself. There are therapists who help other people with this for a living. It may take some skill to come up with an effective desensitization schedule, for instance. IMX, I once had to start stress reduction before any anxious feelings arose, at the very first sign of aversion. OTOH, a lot of people can treat themselves effectively, just as they take care of minor physical ailments at home.
