I do think that this is anxiety or over-thinking related. It's pretty common and natural to feel this way about every new skill that you're trying to develop. I had a similar problem - after some of my WBTB WILDs I used to not being able to fall back asleep being anxious about getting too little sleep or wanting to try the WILD again. Nowadays, I can make usually clear my head and relax to not have this problem in real life, although most of my wake induced false awakenings start by trying desperately to fall asleep and getting anxiety over it (not realizing that I'm actually dreaming - already asleep). It now became a dream sign for me... 
As I said, over-thinking and worrying about developing a new skill is very common and natural. However it's one of the most counterproductive things that can happen. The key is just to be able to relax and realize that the less you stress about something the more you're likely to perfect it faster. I suggest that when you feel that you're over-stressing and can't fall asleep - just try to relax and remained yourself that you're practicing lucid dreaming to have some fun. The whole point of it is to have fun and to be more in tune with yourself, so just tell yourself "forget about the alarm, I'm just going to have some fun and dream" (or something similar). If this doesn't work, you can try a different method designed to distract you from the anxiety - try to "fake" the process of falling asleep. Generate random memories from your day - like your breakfast, your conversation with a loved one, etc, and go from one to the next passively but focus on the process (instead of focusing on the goal, which is to fall asleep). This will eventually make you actually fall asleep, or at least distract you from over-thinking.
By the way, for many getting that first lucid takes months... So, if you already had a lucid after just two weeks of practice it is a tremendous success!
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