Anxiety Treatment in Lake Charles and Across Louisiana

If just talking about your anxiety hasn’t helped, there’s a reason.

Many folks with anxiety have already tried therapy. They've spent months, sometimes years, exploring where their anxiety came from, identifying patterns, and gaining insight into their triggers. And yet they still have symptoms.

Effective treatment for anxiety doesn't look like one thing. The treatments used here are all evidence-based, meaning they have been studied rigorously and shown to produce meaningful, lasting change, not just temporary relief.

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Exposure Therapy

Exposure therapy is among the most consistently supported interventions in all of medicine, not just mental health. For anxiety disorders, it involves gradual, systematic contact with feared situations, sensations, or thoughts in a way that allows the nervous system to recalibrate through direct experience rather than continued avoidance. The core principle is straightforward: anxiety is maintained by avoidance and safety behaviors, which avoidance prevents the brain from learning that feared outcomes either don't occur or are more manageable than anticipated. Repeated exposure interrupts that cycle and produces meaningful, durable reductions in symptoms across most anxiety disorders.

Exposure therapy looks different depending on the presentation. For OCD specifically, it involves confronting feared thoughts or situations while resisting compulsions or rituals. For phobias, panic disorder, and social anxiety, exposures are designed around the specific situations or sensations that trigger anxiety. In all cases, exposures are designed collaboratively and calibrated carefully to match where a client is in treatment.

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

ACT takes a different approach than traditional cognitive interventions like conventional CBT. Rather than directly challenging the content of anxious thoughts or trying to replace them with more rational alternatives, ACT focuses on changing a person's relationship to those thoughts. The goal isn't to think differently so much as to hold thoughts differently — to be able to notice anxiety without being controlled by it, and to act in line with what matters even when discomfort is present.

This is particularly useful for anxiety because the effort to suppress or eliminate anxious thoughts often backfires, making them more frequent and more distressing. ACT works with that reality rather than against it, building psychological flexibility — the ability to stay present, connected to your values, and capable of meaningful action even when anxiety shows up. ACT principles are woven into treatment across presentations rather than used as a standalone protocol, and they complement exposure-based work especially well.

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Metacognitive Therapy (MCT)

MCT targets something slightly different from the other approaches — not the content of anxious thoughts, but the beliefs a person holds about their own thinking. Most people with anxiety disorders have developed strong beliefs about worry itself: that worrying is necessary to stay safe, that anxious thoughts are meaningful signals that demand attention, or that certain thoughts are dangerous and must be controlled. These beliefs about thinking, rather than the thoughts themselves, are what MCT identifies as the primary driver of anxiety disorders.

Treatment involves examining and revising these metacognitive beliefs, which changes how a person responds to anxious thoughts when they arise. Rather than engaging with worry or trying to resolve it, clients learn to relate to anxious thinking as a passing mental event rather than something that requires action. MCT has a strong and growing evidence base across generalized anxiety disorder, health anxiety, and OCD, and tends to be a good fit for people whose anxiety is heavily driven by rumination or persistent worry that feels impossible to turn off.

For a more in-depth look at Metacognitive Therapy (MCT), click here.

Ready to start?

I offer specialized, evidence-based treatment for anxiety and OCD in-person in Lake Charles, Louisiana, and online throughout Louisiana. Reach out now to schedule a free consultation.