
When Everything Feels Like Too Much
Do you immediately think “What’s parking going to be like?” or “what’s the bathroom situation?” when you get invited somewhere? Have you been putting off that dentist appointment for months because just thinking about scheduling it makes your stomach flip? Do you lie awake at 1am replaying a conversation from three days ago that nobody else even remembers?
If any of that sounds familiar, you might be one of the 40 million adults in the US dealing with anxiety. You are not alone. And the fact that you found this page means some part of you already knows it might be time to do something about it.
Here’s the thing about anxiety. It doesn’t always look like what you think it looks like. Sometimes it’s not a full blown panic attack or a breakdown. Sometimes it’s just this constant background noise that makes everything feel heavier than it should. You’re still functioning. You’re still showing up. But you’re doing it on fumes, and nobody around you has any idea how much effort it takes just to get through a regular day.
Anxiety therapy in Philadelphia helps when you’re tired of just surviving your days and ready to actually enjoy them. Our therapists work with you to figure out what’s driving your anxiety and build a plan that makes sense for your brain and your life.




How Do You Know If You Need Therapy for Anxiety?
Most people don’t wake up one day and think “I should probably see a therapist.” It’s more of a slow build. You start avoiding things. Your sleep gets worse. Your patience gets shorter. You’re snapping at people over stuff that didn’t used to bother you and then feeling guilty about it for the rest of the day.
A lot of people don’t even realize it’s anxiety. You’ve probably been called “the worrier” your whole life. Maybe you think you’re just stressed, or that this is just how being an adult works. But there’s a difference between normal stress and anxiety that’s actually running the show. If you’re constantly on edge, can’t relax even when nothing is wrong, or spend more time worrying about things than actually doing them, that’s your brain trying to tell you something.
And then there’s the physical stuff, which is honestly what gets most people’s attention. Headaches that won’t quit. Jaw pain from clenching your teeth in your sleep. A stomach that’s in knots more often than not. Chest tightness that has you Googling symptoms at midnight. Anxiety lives in your body just as much as it lives in your head, and when those symptoms start piling up, it gets really hard to keep pretending everything is fine.

What Type of Anxiety Are You Dealing With?
Generalized Anxiety Disorder Therapy
Generalized anxiety disorder is the kind of anxiety that doesn't have one specific trigger. It's a constant loop of worry about everything, from your job to your health to something you said three days ago. We help you turn down the volume so your brain stops treating every thought like an emergency.
Social Anxiety Therapy
Social anxiety makes every interaction feel like a performance you're convinced you're failing. You rehearse conversations, avoid events, and replay everything you said for hours after. We help you start showing up as yourself instead of managing everyone's perception of you.
Panic Attack Therapy
Panic attacks convince you something is seriously wrong with your body, and the fear of the next one can shrink your entire world. You start avoiding places, planning exit routes, and organizing your life around making sure you're never too far from safety. We help you break the cycle so your body stops sounding the alarm when there's no actual danger.
Health Anxiety Therapy
Health anxiety turns every headache into a brain tumor and every skipped heartbeat into a heart attack. You Google symptoms at 2am, feel better for five minutes, then Google again. We help you stop living at the mercy of every sensation your body throws at you.
Generalized Anxiety Disorder Therapy
Generalized anxiety disorder doesn’t come and go with specific situations. It’s there when you wake up, follows you through your day, and keeps you up at night. You worry about your job, your relationships, your health, and things that haven’t happened yet and probably never will.
A lot of people with GAD don’t even know they have it. They’ve been called “the worrier” their entire lives and assume this is just how they’re wired. But there’s a difference between being thoughtful and having a brain that won’t let you rest.
Generalized anxiety disorder therapy helps you build a different relationship with your thoughts so you can notice a worry, decide if it needs your attention, and let it go if it doesn’t.
Panic Attack Therapy
Panic attacks feel like your body is sounding every alarm at once. Your heart races, your chest tightens, you can’t catch your breath, and you’re genuinely convinced something is very wrong. A lot of people end up in the ER thinking they’re having a heart attack, only to be sent home without real answers.
The attack itself is awful, but what happens after is what takes over. You start fearing the next one. You avoid places where it happened. Your world gets smaller because every decision runs through the filter of “what if it happens here.”
Panic attack therapy helps you understand what’s happening in your body and why it feels terrifying even though it isn’t dangerous. Once you understand the cycle, you can start interrupting it.
Health Anxiety Therapy
Health anxiety turns every physical sensation into a worst case scenario. A headache becomes a brain tumor. A skipped heartbeat becomes a heart attack. You Google symptoms at 2am, feel reassured for five minutes, then a new sensation pops up and the whole cycle starts again.
The frustrating part is that the things you do to cope are the same things keeping it going. Every time you Google a symptom and feel relief, your brain takes that as proof you needed to check. So next time a sensation shows up, the urge comes back stronger.
Health anxiety therapy helps you learn to notice a sensation and let it pass without launching a full investigation. Not ignoring your body, just learning the difference between a reasonable response and an anxiety driven one.




How We Treat Anxiety
We don’t do one size fits all. What works for someone having panic attacks looks totally different from what works for someone whose brain never stops worrying. Our therapists are trained in CBT, EMDR, IFS, somatic techniques, and other approaches, and we pull from that toolkit based on what actually makes sense for you.
Some people need help rewiring the thought patterns that keep them stuck in worst case scenario mode. Others need to process stuff from their past that’s still activating their nervous system years later. Some need to learn what it actually feels like to be calm in their own body. Most people need a little bit of all of it, and that’s how we work.
What makes us different is the relationship. Our team is warm, direct, and real. You won’t get a blank stare and “how does that make you feel” on repeat. You’ll get someone who actually listens, challenges you when you need it, and makes therapy feel like a conversation you look forward to instead of something you dread.
What to Expect When You Start Anxiety Therapy
Starting therapy when you’re anxious about everything is its own kind of challenge. We get that. So here’s exactly what the process looks like.
It starts with a free consultation where we just talk. What’s going on? What’s been bothering you? Is this the right fit? No pressure, no commitment, just a conversation. If we move forward, your first few sessions are about getting the full picture. What triggers your anxiety, how long it’s been going on, how it shows up in your body, what you’ve tried before, and what you actually want to feel like on the other side of all this.
From there, your therapist builds a plan around you. Sessions are 50 minutes, usually weekly, and the work happens both in session and in between. Therapy isn’t just about the one hour you spend with us. It’s about what shifts in the rest of your week. Most people start noticing changes within the first few sessions, and meaningful progress usually happens within a few months.
Areas We Serve
We see anxiety therapy clients from all over Philadelphia including Center City, Rittenhouse Square, Northern Liberties, Fishtown, University City, South Philly, Graduate Hospital, Society Hill, and Queen Village. We also work with clients from the Main Line, Montgomery County, and Chester County.
Our Philadelphia office is in Center City with flexible scheduling including early morning, lunch, and evening appointments. We know fitting therapy into an already packed schedule can feel like one more thing on the list, so we keep the logistics as simple as possible.
We also offer online anxiety therapy throughout Pennsylvania and New Jersey. A lot of our clients actually prefer video sessions, and for some types of anxiety being in your own space makes the work easier. In person or on screen, you get the same therapists, same quality, same approach.

Anxiety Therapy FAQs
Signs you need therapy for anxiety
Everyone feels anxious sometimes, but there's a difference between normal stress and the kind of anxiety that starts running your life. If you're constantly worrying and can't turn it off, avoiding things you used to be fine with, dealing with unexplained physical symptoms, or making decisions based on fear instead of what you actually want, those are signs your anxiety has crossed a line. You don't have to wait until things are at their worst to get help. Our article on signs you need therapy for anxiety walks through what to look for so you can figure out where you stand.
How does anxiety therapy work?
Your therapist starts by getting to know you and understanding where anxiety shows up most in your life, then builds an approach around what's actually driving it. The most common method is CBT, which helps you catch anxious thought patterns, challenge them, and gradually face the things you've been avoiding so your brain learns they aren't as dangerous as they feel. You'll also learn practical skills like grounding techniques and ways to interrupt worry spirals that you can use outside of sessions. Our article on how therapy for anxiety works walks through the full process so you know what to expect before your first appointment.
How long does anxiety therapy take?
Most people start noticing real changes somewhere between 8 and 20 sessions, which works out to roughly two to five months of weekly appointments. The timeline depends on how severe your anxiety is, how long it's been going on, what type of therapy you're doing, and how much you practice the skills between sessions. Some people feel a shift after just a few weeks while deeper or longer standing anxiety may take six months or more. Our article on how long anxiety therapy takes breaks down what affects the timeline and what progress looks like at each stage.
Do I need medication or therapy for anxiety?
It doesn't have to be one or the other. For many people with mild to moderate anxiety, therapy on its own is enough because it teaches skills that stick with you long after treatment ends. But when anxiety is severe enough that it's hard to function day to day, medication can bring symptoms down to a level where therapy techniques can actually take hold. The best approach depends on where you're starting from, and for some people a combination of both produces the strongest results. Our article on whether you need medication or therapy for anxiety breaks down what the research says so you can have a more informed conversation with your provider.
Can anxiety come back after therapy?
It can, but it almost never looks the way it did before you got help. People who've been through therapy have tools they didn't have before, so when anxiety flares up again it tends to be shorter, less intense, and easier to manage on your own. Many people come back for a few "tune up" sessions during a rough stretch, which is usually much faster than starting from scratch. Our article on whether anxiety can come back after therapy explains why a flare up isn't a sign that therapy failed and what to do if it happens.
Do you take insurance?
We are a private pay practice and don't bill insurance directly, but we provide superbills for out-of-network reimbursement. Many of our clients get back a significant portion of their session fees from their insurance company. Check out our therapy rates and insurance FAQ for details.
Philadelphia Therapy Office
In the heart of Center City Philadelphia, our office offers you convenient access to expert care. With flexible appointment times to accommodate your busy schedule, we’re committed to making your therapy journey as seamless as possible. Also offering online therapy in PA and NJ.
Offering Online Counseling In
Ready to get started?
You’ve been dealing with this long enough. Schedule a free consultation to talk about what anxiety looks like for you and how we can help. Whatever you’re going through, you don’t have to keep managing it on your own. We’re here when you’re ready.

Social Anxiety Therapy
Social anxiety goes way beyond being shy. It’s the constant fear that people are watching you, judging you, and noticing every flaw you’re trying to hide. You rehearse what you’re going to say before phone calls. You rewrite texts over and over. You skip events you actually want to attend because the dread outweighs any enjoyment.
The tricky part is that social anxiety often hides. You might come across as the most prepared person in the room because winging it isn’t an option when you’re terrified of looking stupid. From the outside it looks like confidence. On the inside it’s fear.
Social anxiety therapy helps you stop organizing your life around avoiding judgment and start showing up as yourself instead of performing a version of yourself you think others want to see.