Anxiety Therapy for High Achievers in Los Angeles, Orange County, and Throughout California
Do you worry about making a mistake, disappointing someone, or accidentally saying something “wrong?” Or maybe you find yourself overthinking conversations, checking for any small thing you might have missed. This can look like replaying situations in your head, triple or even quadruple-checking emails or texts before sending them, or re-reading messages after you’ve already sent them if someone doesn’t respond quickly enough.
These experiences are extremely common among high-achieving professionals who struggle with anxiety. If this sounds like you, please know you’re not alone.
Anxiety is one of the most common mental health experiences worldwide. Many high performers experience it in ways that are subtle on the outside but exhausting internally. Therapy for anxiety can help you manage these feelings, reduce stress, and find balance in work and life.
If any of this resonates, you’re in the right place.
Who Anxiety Therapy Can Help
High-achieving professionals often experience anxiety differently. It may show up as:
Overthinking or over-preparing
Difficulty resting without guilt
Feeling responsible for everything
Struggling to ask for help
Appearing calm, while internally managing constant tension
Tying self-worth to performance or productivity
If you recognize even one of these patterns, you’re exactly the kind of client I help.
What is Anxiety and Why Does it Happen?
Anxiety is a normal, adaptive response of the nervous system (our body’s “fight-or-flight” mechanism) designed to keep us safe. For example, when crossing a busy street, your body naturally increases its stress response (cortisol levels) to help you stay alert and avoid harm. This is a normal survival response.
Sometimes, however, the nervous system can become “stuck” in this state, often due to prolonged stress or environments with ongoing pressure, especially during early life. Many high-achieving professionals grow up or work in environments that reward overachievement, making it feel like nothing is ever enough. Over time, patterns like perfectionism, hyper-responsibility/hyper-independence, and chronic overthinking can develop as survival strategies.
When the nervous system remains in survival mode, the once helpful anxiety can then manifest as persistent worry, difficulty relaxing, over-preparation, or feeling “never enough,” even when everything seems fine or “perfect,” on the outside.
If You’re Struggling with Anxiety, it Doesn’t Have to Stay this Way.
Get Support from an Experienced Anxiety Therapist Today.
Schedule Your Free Consultation Below.
When To See a Therapist for Anxiety
Signs and symptoms that suggest therapy may be helpful include:
Constant worry or rumination about mistakes or others’ opinions
Difficulty concentrating or completing tasks due to anxious thoughts
Intrusive “what if” scenarios that replay repeatedly
Physical symptoms such as racing heart, shallow breathing, muscle tension, or trouble sleeping
Avoidance of situations that trigger anxiety
Perfectionism that interferes with daily life
Emotional exhaustion or irritability
Feeling stuck in worry even in safe environments
If anxiety is affecting how you live (or want to live your life), therapy can help.
How Anxiety Therapy Can Help
Therapy helps you develop tools to manage anxiety and regain a sense of calm, control, and clarity. Benefits often include:
✓ Increased confidence and self-assurance (rather than depending on external validation)
✓ Greater comfort with assertive communication and healthy boundary-setting
✓ Improved emotional regulation, helping you feel safer, more grounded, and more connected to yourself
✓ More flexibility in your expectations of yourself, easing the grip of a harsh inner critic
✓ More resilience when facing stress or uncertainty
✓ A felt sense of calm and clarity in everyday decisions
Working with a therapist who understands the pressures high-achieving professionals face can help you manage stress, set boundaries, and reconnect with your values, focus, and energy.
Online Anxiety Therapy Is Available in California
Schedule Your Free Confidential 15-minute Consultation Below.
How Does Anxiety Therapy Work?
I use evidence-based approaches tailored to high-achieving professionals, including:
Eye-Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)
This trauma-informed approach helps the body learn to become “unstuck.” It supports healing from early or recent experiences that contribute to anxiety by addressing their effects on the nervous system. Through bilateral stimulation, EMDR helps the nervous system return to balance and calm.
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
CBT helps clients recognize and evaluate thoughts and behaviors that contribute to anxiety. For example, you might think, “I’m a failure because I forgot to turn in an assignment.” CBT helps examine these thoughts, evaluate their accuracy, and find more balanced, healthy perspectives, often decreasing anxiety.
Mindfulness-Based Approaches
These approaches help you notice thoughts and feelings without labeling or judging them. This can be powerful, especially when anxious thoughts lead to additional anxiety or shame about having those feelings.
My Approach as an Anxiety Therapist
I take a warm, attuned, and relational approach, specifically supporting high-achieving professionals who carry high internal pressure. Many clients describe therapy as the only place where they don’t have to hold everything together.
I help clients:
✓ Slow down and feel safe in their nervous system
✓ Build internal resources to manage anxiety without over-relying on control or perfectionism
✓ Navigate anxiety alongside related patterns like overthinking, perfectionism, and high responsibility
Therapy with me is not about giving up ambition. You can achieve your goals while feeling calmer, more confident, and less overwhelmed.
Moving Away From Anxiety Can Be Peaceful
Anxiety can ease when you begin letting go of the pressure to always do more or be more. You deserve a space where you don’t have to carry everything alone. Therapy can be that space.
I offer a complimentary phone consultation so you can ask questions, get a feel for my approach, and see whether therapy feels like a good fit.
To schedule an appointment to begin therapy for anxiety, please fill out the contact form to schedule a complimentary phone consultation.
Anxiety often overlaps with other challenges. If you’re curious about additional areas of support, I also offer online therapy for adults in California in the following specialties:
If you’d like to learn more about my work as an anxiety therapist, or explore which type of therapy might be the best fit for you, you’re welcome to connect for a complimentary 15-minute consultation call.
Exploring Other Therapy Options
FAQs About Anxiety Therapy
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This is a very common misunderstanding. Anxiety often feels uncomfortable, leading to elevated cortisol levels, increased heart rate, shallow breathing, panic, and other physical sensations. These experiences are normal and natural, even when they feel uncomfortable. Therapy for anxiety can help you understand your symptoms, develop coping strategies, and regain control over your daily life.
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Therapy can be very helpful when anxiety starts interfering with daily life. While anxiety may initially help you stay alert, it can later make it harder to focus, sleep, or feel calm. Mental health professionals understand how anxiety works in the body and can teach strategies to manage symptoms, reduce stress, and improve overall well-being. Therapy isn’t mandatory; it’s a tool to help you regain control and live more comfortably.
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I work with different types of anxiety. This includes social anxiety, performance-based anxiety, generalized anxiety, and anxiety related to life transitions.
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This is a very common and understandable question. There isn’t one clear timeline, as everyone’s experience and needs are different. Therapy is a process, and research shows that many people begin to notice meaningful changes around the 10–15 session range, though this can vary based on individual needs and goals.
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Each therapy session has its own purpose and structure to help you work toward your treatment goals. The first session is like an extended consultation, where you’ll have the chance to share your background, past experiences with therapy, current and past relational experiences, and any stressors in work or life. Together, we will also collaborate to identify one or more treatment goals that feel meaningful to you.
Have More Questions?
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