Anxiety can feel like a constant buzz in the background — always anticipating, always overthinking, never fully at ease. Maybe it shows up in your relationships, your work, or just in the way you talk to yourself. You might feel stuck in patterns of worry, fear, or tension, even when you know you “should” be okay.

The truth is: anxiety is more than just stress. It can be exhausting, isolating, and make even everyday decisions feel overwhelming.

Anxiety: Find Relief and Reclaim Your Calm

therapy for

FIND YOUR CALM

Anxiety - our antifriend

Anxiety isn’t a flaw — it’s a signal. It’s your nervous system trying to protect you, even if it sometimes overreacts. In therapy, we learn how to tune into what it’s trying to say, respond with care instead of fear, and gently turn the volume down so you can live with more ease and trust in yourself.

You might notice it in your body (tight chest, racing heart), your thoughts (what-ifs, catastrophizing), or your actions (avoiding, over-preparing, snapping at loved ones).

Anxiety is your body’s natural response to perceived danger — real or imagined. It's what helped our ancestors stay alert to threats. But when that internal alarm gets stuck in the “on” position, it can cause distress even when you're safe.

What Is Anxiety?

READY FOR RELIEF?

Whether your anxiety has been around for years or has started to show up more recently, therapy can help. In sessions, we’ll work together to understand what’s fueling your anxiety — and more importantly, how to interrupt it.

You’ll learn tools to ground yourself in the present, challenge anxious thoughts, and begin responding from a calmer, more centered place.

You’re Not Alone — And You Don’t Have to Just “Cope”

Teach me plz

- Understand where your anxiety comes from and what keeps it going
- Stop spirals of overthinking and second-guessing
- Set boundaries without guilt
- Reduce physical symptoms like tightness, racing heart, or shallow breathing
- Build self-trust so you can make decisions with more confidence
- Feel safe in your body and grounded in your day-to-day life

Therapy for anxiety can help you:

I use a warm, client-centered approach and integrate evidence-based methods like CBT, ACT, Narrative Therapy, and Social Skills Training:

CBT (Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy): to challenge anxious thoughts and build healthier patterns.
ACT (Acceptance & Commitment Therapy): to help you stop fighting anxiety and start living alongside it with more freedom.
Narrative Therapy: to rewrite the story anxiety tells you about who you are.
Social Skills Support: if your anxiety shows up around others, we can gently build confidence, boundaries, and connection.

Our sessions will always be collaborative, compassionate, and paced at what feels safe for you.

How I Can Help

anxiety can be reduced

Health Anxiety – persistent worry about physical symptoms or potential illnesses.

Phobias – specific, irrational fears (e.g., flying, driving, heights, etc.).

Performance Anxiety – pressure to "get it right" that can block you from fully showing up in your work, school, or creative pursuits.

No matter how anxiety is showing up for you, healing is possible.


Anxiety looks different for everyone. Here are a few common types:

Generalized Anxiety – constant worry about a variety of things, even when there’s no obvious reason to be stressed.

Social Anxiety – fear of judgment, embarrassment, or rejection in social or performance settings.

Panic Disorder – sudden, intense episodes of fear or physical symptoms like racing heart, shortness of breath, or dizziness.

Health Anxiety – persistent worry about physical symptoms or potential illnesses.

Phobias – specific, irrational fears (e.g., flying, driving, heights, etc.).

Performance Anxiety – pressure to "get it right" that can block you from fully showing up in your work, school, or creative pursuits.

No matter how anxiety is showing up for you, healing is possible.

TYPES
OF
ANXIETY

FEEL MORE IN CONTROL

If your anxious thoughts pop up all day and feel impossible to turn off, try setting a “worry window.” Pick a 10–15 minute time in your day (like 6:00–6:15 p.m.) and only allow yourself to focus on worries during that time.
When anxiety creeps in outside of the window, gently remind yourself:

“I’ve set time aside for this later. I’ll come back to it then.”

This practice teaches your brain boundaries around anxious thinking — and helps you spend more of your day in the present.

The "Worry Window" Technique

Try This: Create Space Between You and Your Anxious Thoughts


Anxiety often pulls us into the future — worst-case scenarios, what-ifs, or racing thoughts. One quick way to re-center is with this Technique:

Notice:
5 things you can see
4 things you can touch
3 things you can hear
2 things you can smell
1 thing you can taste

It brings you back to your body, your breath, and this moment — not the imagined future.

5-4-3-2-1 Grounding Technique

Try This: A Grounding Strategy You Can Use Today

You don’t have to keep carrying this alone. Together, we’ll create a space where your anxiety doesn’t get to run the show.

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