How Psychotherapy Treats Anxiety in Adults

Psychotherapy treats anxiety by changing the learned patterns that keep it alive. Over time, anxiety trains your brain to avoid anything that might trigger fear and to catastrophize about the future and to overestimate danger in situations that are objectively safe. These patterns feel automatic because they’ve been reinforced every time you sought reassurance or talked yourself out of doing something because the “what ifs” were too loud. Therapy interrupts those patterns at the source and replaces them with responses that serve you better.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is one of the most effective treatments for anxiety disorders. It works by helping you identify the specific thoughts driving your anxiety and evaluate whether those thoughts are accurate. Most of the time, they’re not. Your brain has been generating worst-case predictions and treating them as facts. CBT teaches you to catch that process in real time, test those predictions against evidence and respond to uncertainty without spiraling. A typical course runs 8 to 16 sessions, and the skills you learn become tools you keep long after therapy ends.

Exposure therapy

Exposure therapy addresses avoidance directly. Every time you avoid something that scares you, your brain registers that as proof the threat was real. The avoidance works in the short term because your anxiety drops, but it strengthens the cycle over time. Exposure reverses this by gradually and deliberately bringing you into contact with the situations or thoughts you’ve been avoiding, in a structured and supported way. For panic disorder, this includes interoceptive exposure where your therapist recreates the physical sensations of panic (a racing heart, dizziness, shortness of breath) in a safe environment so your nervous system can learn that those sensations are uncomfortable but not dangerous. For specific phobias, targeted exposure protocols can resolve fears you’ve carried for decades in as few as five sessions.

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is particularly effective when anxiety has narrowed your world through avoidance. Instead of trying to eliminate anxious thoughts, ACT teaches you to notice them without giving them authority over your decisions. You learn to hold anxiety at arm’s length while still engaging with the people and activities that give your life meaning, even when some anxiety is still present.

The approach your therapist recommends depends on what you’re dealing with. Generalized anxiety often responds well to CBT combined with techniques targeting your relationship with uncertainty. Social anxiety involves structured social exposures paired with work on the assumptions you’re making about how others perceive you. Panic disorder typically calls for a combination of CBT and interoceptive exposure.

At Inspire, our therapists work in coordination with our psychiatric team.

If you’re taking medication for anxiety, your therapist and prescriber communicate about your progress, ensuring your therapy goals and medication adjustments stay aligned.

Many patients find that medication reduces their symptoms enough to engage with the exposure work that therapy requires. Others discover that therapy gives them the skills to eventually taper off medication with their prescriber’s support. The combination is tailored to where you are right now and adjusted as you improve.

How Psychotherapy Treats Childhood Anxiety

Children can’t always tell you what they’re afraid of or why, but their anxiety shows up in everything they do. There may be school refusal, stomach aches, meltdowns at bedtime, or the constant need for reassurance that you’re not going to die. Psychotherapy for childhood anxiety works differently than adult treatment because it has to meet your child where they are developmentally. A seven-year-old can’t sit in a chair and analyze their thought patterns but they can learn through play to face the things that frighten them instead of running from them.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is the most widely supported treatment for anxiety in children and adolescents. For younger children, CBT is adapted to be concrete and interactive. Your child learns to identify their “worry brain” as something separate from themselves, to recognize when it’s talking and to evaluate whether what it’s saying is true. Older children and teenagers engage with CBT more directly, learning to catch catastrophic thinking, challenge it with evidence and develop plans for handling situations that they’ve been avoiding. A typical course runs 12 to 16 sessions, and the skills are designed to become your child’s own toolkit for managing anxiety long after therapy ends.

Exposure therapy

Exposure therapy is where the real progress happens for most anxious children. Avoidance is the engine that keeps childhood anxiety running. Every time you let your child stay home from school because their stomach hurts and when you answer the same reassurance question for the twentieth time that day, the anxiety gets a little stronger. Exposure therapy works by helping your child face feared situations gradually, starting with things that feel manageable and building towards the harder ones. A child with separation anxiety might begin by staying in a room alone for two minutes and work up to being dropped off at a friend’s house without you staying over the course of several weeks. A teenager with social anxiety might start by ordering food at a restaurant and progress to initiating conversations with peers. The therapist builds a fear hierarchy with your child so they always know what’s coming and feel in control of the pace.

Parent Involvement

Parent involvement is a central part of treatment for younger children because you are the person your child turns to when anxiety strikes. Therapy teaches you how to respond to your child’s anxiety in ways that support them without reinforcing avoidance. This often means learning to tolerate your child’s distress in the short term because stepping in to rescue them from uncomfortable situations, while completely understandable, prevents them from learning they can in fact cope. Your therapist coaches you on when to validate, when to encourage and when to hold a boundary, even when your child is begging you not to make them go.

Play Therapy

Play therapy is used with younger children who can’t engage verbally with their fears. Through structured play, drawing and storytelling, therapists help young children express and process anxiety they don’t have words for. Play therapy also allows the therapist to observe your child’s anxiety patterns in real time and introduce coping strategies in a language your child understands.

Working with Teenagers

For teenagers, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) can be particularly effective. Adolescents often respond well to the idea that the goal isn’t eliminating anxiety completely but learning to do the things that are important to them even when anxiety is present. ACT helps teenagers stop fighting with their anxious thoughts and start making choices based on their values rather than their fears.

At Inspire, your child’s therapist works in coordination with our psychiatric team.

If your child is taking medication for anxiety, their therapist and prescriber stay in regular contact about progress, side effects and treatment goals. For many children, therapy alone resolves anxiety without medication.

For others, medication reduces symptom intensity enough that your child can engage with the exposure work that therapy requires.

We tailor the combination to your child’s needs and adjust as they grow and improve.

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Your first session is all about getting to know each other. Your therapist will want to understand what brought you in and what you’re hoping to get out of the process. From there, your treatment plan takes shape around you.