Specialties

ADD / ADHD
addictions
anger management
anxiety
boundaries
CBT and exposure therapy
children and adolescents
clergy
codependency
communication skills
couples
depression
divorce prevention
eating disorders
eye movement desensitization reprocessing (EMDR)
grief and loss
hypnotherapy
intensive outpatient therapy
men's issues
mindfulness
obsessive compulsive disorder
pain management
personality disorders
intimacy and relationships
sex addiction
sex offender treatment
sex therapy
single parent and blended families
sports performance enhancement
teen depressions
trauma resolution
women's issues

Anxiety

Anxiety is one of the most distressing emotions that people feel. It is sometimes called fear or nervousness. The word “anxiety” describes a number of problems including phobias (fear of specific things or situations, such as heights, elevators, insects, flying in airplanes), panic attacks (intense feelings of anxiety in which people often feel like they are about to die or go crazy), posttraumatic stress disorder (repeated, memories of terrible traumas with high levels of distress), or obsessive-compulsive disorder (a mixture of worries and anxiety symptoms experienced most of the time). We also use the word “anxiety” to describe brief periods of nervousness or fear that we experience when faced with difficult experiences in our life.



PCS Anxiety


Most people who are anxious are very aware of a change in physical symptoms; jitteriness, tension, sweaty palms, light-headedness, difficulty breathing, increased heart rate, and flushed cheeks. Important events in our lives can contribute to increased feelings of anxiety. Sometimes, those feelings become overwhelming. All the physical, behavioral, and thinking changes we experience when we are anxious are part of the anxiety responses called “fight, flight, or freeze.” To learn more about anxiety and phobias click here. (Source: Mind Over Mood by Christine A. Padesky Ph.D. and Dennis Greenberger Ph.D.)