Anxiety Therapy

Anxiety can make you feel like you are constantly bracing for something, even when nothing is actually happening in the moment.

Therapy can help you slow down, understand what is really triggering your anxiety, and learn how to respond instead of constantly reacting, shutting down, overthinking, or pushing through.

The goal is not for you to never feel anxious again. You are human. The goal is for anxiety to stop running your life.

High Functioning Anxiety may look like:

What Others See

  • Reliable, organized, productive, polished

  • Always prepared and overthinking ahead

  • Helpful, accommodating, hard-working

  • Successful at work, parenting, or leadership

  • “She always has it together.”

What May Be Happening Underneath

  • Constant overthinking and mental rehearsal

  • Perfectionism, fear of mistakes, trouble relaxing

  • People-pleasing, overcommitting, difficulty saying no

  • Irritability, racing thoughts, insomnia, muscle tension

  • Productivity used to manage anxiety rather than peace

High-Functioning Anxiety Therapy for Women Who Look Calm but Feel Overwhelmed Inside

Some people experience anxiety in a way that is easy for others to see. They may panic, avoid things, cry often, or seem visibly nervous. But high-functioning anxiety can look very different. You may show up, handle your responsibilities, care for your family, go to work, answer the messages, and make life look “fine” from the outside, while inside, your mind is racing, your body feels tense, and you feel like you are carrying more than people realize. High-functioning anxiety can be hard to recognize because you may still be performing well, but that does not mean you are at peace. Therapy can help you stop just pushing through and start understanding what your anxiety is really asking for.

Common Symptoms of Anxiety may include:

  • Overthinking almost everything

  • Feeling like your mind will not shut off

  • Worrying about things that have not happened yet

  • Feeling tense, restless, or on edge

  • Trouble relaxing without feeling guilty

  • Difficulty sleeping because your thoughts keep running

  • Feeling overwhelmed by responsibilities

  • Second-guessing yourself often

  • Needing reassurance but still not feeling settled

  • Feeling emotionally drained from trying to keep everything together

  • Avoiding certain conversations, decisions, or situations

  • Feeling like something bad is going to happen, even when things seem okay

Through therapy you can begin working toward: 

  • Feeling calmer in your mind and body

  • Trusting yourself instead of second-guessing everything

  • Being able to pause before spiraling into worst-case scenarios

  • Sleeping better because your mind is not racing all night

  • Feeling more confident in making decisions

  • Learning how to set boundaries without so much guilt

  • Responding to stress without feeling completely overwhelmed

  • Letting go of the pressure to hold everything together perfectly

  • Feeling more present with your family, work, and daily life

  • Having tools you can actually use when anxiety shows up

FAQS

Still Have Questions?

  • Yes, in-person in Salisbury, NC and telehealth across NC/SC. If your anxiety is showing up as overthinking, constant worry, perfectionism, people-pleasing, or that “I can’t relax” feeling, therapy can help you get out of the cycle and feel steadier.

  • Yes. We’ll work on both the mental patterns (catastrophizing, “what if” loops, perfectionism) and the body piece (nervous system regulation), because anxiety isn’t just thoughts—it’s a whole-body experience. You’ll learn tools to interrupt spirals, feel more grounded, and respond to stress with more control instead of getting swept away by it.

  • Because being capable often comes with pressure: to perform, to keep everyone happy, to not drop the ball. Many high-achieving women cope by staying busy, staying in control, and staying “on,” which works… until it doesn’t. Therapy helps you understand what’s driving the anxiety, soften the perfectionism/people-pleasing patterns, and build steadier coping so you can still be successful without feeling like you’re constantly bracing for impact.

  • Yes. Panic and chronic “on edge” feelings are often nervous system responses to stress, overwhelm, or old survival patterns. In therapy, we work on identifying triggers, building regulation skills, and creating a plan for what to do in the moment so you feel more prepared and less afraid of the fear. The goal is for the intensity to reduce and for you to recover faster when anxiety hits.

  • Warm, practical, and direct (in a supportive way). We’ll talk honestly about what’s happening, name the patterns, and build tools you can use in real-life regulation, boundaries, coping strategies, and mindset shifts that don’t require you to become a completely different person. We’ll also check in along the way to make sure therapy is actually helping, not just “more talking.”

  • I accept BCBS, Aetna, and United Healthcare/Optum, and private pay is also available. Residents of South Carolina would be private pay, as I am not paneled with any insurance in the state of South Carolina. Some clients choose private pay because it can offer more privacy and flexibility, with care shaped around their goals—not insurance requirements. We can talk through what works best for you during a consult.

Let’s get you moving closer to clarity

This quick consult helps us talk through what’s going on, what you’re looking for and what the next step should be.