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Filtered by Specialty: Anxiety
Related Trauma & PTSD (251) Depression (228) Stress (197) OCD (63)
MC
Maya Calloway
LCSW Portland, OR Telehealth
Anxiety

Warm, collaborative therapy for adults navigating anxiety, burnout, and the transitions life hands us — we go at your pace.

Accepting $130–$180 /session OHP, Aetna, CareOregon +3 Request Intro
TB
Thomas Bui
MA, LPC associate Portland, OR Telehealth
Anxiety

Practical, skills-based work for anxiety and stress — expect warmth, structure, and zero judgment.

Accepting $160–$200 /session OHP, PacificSource +2 Request Intro
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Therapists accepting new clients Telehealth therapists who take OHP Anxiety therapists in Portland What is OHP?
Found 50 verified providers — matches are highlighted on each card.
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TA
Tess Arden
PMHNP · Portland, OR · In-person & Telehealth
Depression Sadness OHP · Telehealth
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Filtered by Specialty: Anxiety
MC
Maya Calloway
LCSWPortland, OR· Telehealth
Anxiety
Accepting $130–$180 /session
Request Intro
TB
Thomas Bui
LPC associatePortland, OR· Telehealth
Anxiety
Accepting $160–$200 /session
Request Intro
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Ask & find your therapist
Plain English · verified directory
Accepting new clients Telehealth · takes OHP Anxiety in Portland What is OHP?
Found 50 verified providers — matches are highlighted on each card.
Verified providers 50
TA
Tess Arden
PMHNP · Portland, OR
Depression Sadness OHP · Telehealth
Ask anything…Ask
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From the community

Latest Articles

Fresh insights from our partners and editorial team — therapy guides, Oregon-specific insurance answers, and clinical thinking.

Anxiety and Emotional Exhaustion: Why You Feel So Tired
Featured Article

Anxiety and Emotional Exhaustion: Why You Feel So Tired

Anxiety can feel incredibly tiring. If you feel overly anxious or worried, you might notice: Feeling drained, even after a typical day Frequently feeling on edge, followed by having very little energy left for everyday tasks Wanting to isolate or pull back from others due to fatigue Why Anxiety Is So Exhausting Your brain and body are always “on.”When anxi

What I Learned from Goodbye

What I Learned from Goodbye

The first time the floor fell out from under me, I was only ten years old. My mother died just six months after being diagnosed with cancer, a timeline so fast it felt less like a passing and more like a theft. By the time I got to college, I had already built a personal relationship with depression.So, when my best friend’s brother was shot and killed, it didn't just sadden me—it leveled me. I was trying to cope with my first internship, to maintain friendships, be 21, and graduate college. That family had become my second family, my safety net. When they broke, I broke. I didn’t just fall into a depression; I dove into it, sinking into my bed with my bottles drowning me. Slowly everything I was working towards slipped away. When you’re in that deep, the world shrinks to the size of a liquor bottle and the four walls of a bedroom you can’t bring yourself to leave. My dad’s neighbor, a therapist herself, eventually threw me a rope. She recommended a friend of hers to work with me.For nearly two years, that woman was my entire world. We met weekly, sometimes twice a week. She was there when the addiction took hold, and she was there when things got even darker—after I was sexually assaulted and the depression curdled into suicidal ideation. I was failing every class, a ghost in my own life, only stumbling to the nearest 7-11 or liquor store to refill my cup.She was the one who finally got me into rehab after two different stints in the psych ward. But addiction isn't a straight line. I left rehab early, promising my father I wouldn’t drink for 6 months so I would be able to learn to drink properly afterwards, and graduate college. Upon returning home, my roommates kicked me out of our house after finding me hidden in my closet; high, but not drunk. I didn’t drink for those 6 months, but I didn’t stay clean. I moved into my own apartment where I could hide how bad things really got. I continued to work with my therapist, showing up to our sessions high and not working towards any of the goals we were setting. Somehow, through a haze of survival instinct I didn't know I still had, I managed to graduate. My 6 months of no drinking had finished and against my therapist's advice, I ran. I fled to Mexico. I spent months there, thinking a change of scenery would fix a broken spirit, but I only spiraled further. By the time I touched back down in Oregon, I was desperate. I knew I was dying. I reached out to the one person who had always held the rope for me, expecting her to pull me up again.She said no.She declined to work with me. At the time, it felt like the ultimate betrayal. I had trusted her with the most jagged pieces of my soul, and in my moment of greatest need, she closed the door. She said she couldn’t help me anymore, even if I got sober as she couldn’t trust me. I ended up back in the psych ward shortly after, vibrating from a week of no sleep and a body fueled by nothing but chemicals and alcohol.But that "no" did something "yes" never could. It forced me to realize that no one person could carry me—I had to learn how to stand on my own shaky legs.I was able to find a new therapist. I moved in with my lifelong best friend. I started attending meetings. I learned to ask for help, and hold myself accountable. There wasn’t a choice anymore.Today, I am nearly two years sober. I’ve held the same job for over a year, and I’m in a beautiful, loving relationship. After nearly a year of working with my new therapist she told me something I never thought I would hear, “Leah, I think our work here is done. It’s time for you to put your skills to work. You may always reach back out to me, but it’s time for you to start living your life.”  Each goodbyes has set me free, and for that I am grateful. Goodbye, Leah.

What Makes BCB Therapy Different from Basic Talk Therapy?

What Makes BCB Therapy Different from Basic Talk Therapy?

When people think about therapy, they often imagine sitting with a therapist and talking through problems, emotions, or stressful life events. Being heard and supported matters, but for many people dealing with anxiety, trauma, depression, or relationship stress, talking alone is not always enough. BCB Therapy works with clients who often feel like they have already tried therapy, already un

Building Daily Resilience

Building Daily Resilience

Stress isn’t only something to “treat” after it overwhelms you. In Bend, many people juggle demanding work, family responsibilities, seasonal changes, and the pace of a growing community. Preventative therapy is a proactive way to build resilience and keep stress from quietly turning into burnout, anxiety, or depression. Think of it as mental health maintenance: you build skills

How to Find the Right Therapist: What Research Says Actually Matters

How to Find the Right Therapist: What Research Says Actually Matters

Starting therapy can feel overwhelming. Many people wonder: How do I find the right therapist? Does the type of therapy matter? What if I pick the wrong one? You might see terms like EMDR, CBT, or IFS and wonder which approach is “best.” While finding a therapist whose approach aligns with your goals is important, research consistently shows that the therape

Is Psychodynamic Psychotherapy “Evidence-Based?” What Does “Evidence-Based” Mean?
Article

Is Psychodynamic Psychotherapy “Evidence-Based?” What Does “Evidence-Based” Mean?

If you’re looking for a therapist—whether here in Portland or the surrounding areas—you’ve likely come across the term “evidence-based.” It’s used often, but not always explained. What does evidence-based actually mean? Evidence-based treatment means an approach towards mental health care that has been studied using systematic, empirical research. A speci

OCD and Alcoholism: My Answer to Life's Uncertainties
Caroline

OCD and Alcoholism: My Answer to Life's Uncertainties

Many reminisce on simple, carefree childhoods. I never knew such a thing. I have always been burdened with an intense fear of all that is uncertain, and because life is uncertain, I became afraid of life itself. From the age of six onward, my brain was inundated with disturbing images beyond my control. The only way I knew how to cope with these thoughts was by repeating words to myself that counteracted the ugliness of the thoughts in my head. With each hideous, perverse thought, I whispered the word "pony" to myself. Ponies were innocent and sweet. They served as a very brief distraction to this noise. My obsessions have waxed and waned throughout the years, and I have struggled with many different subtypes, ranging from the more taboo types to the more stereotypical ones revolving around cleanliness and order. When I was diagnosed with OCD at age 11, I was perplexed. To me, and to many others still, OCD was not a disorder. OCD was a quirk. It was actually a gift in some ways. OCD meant that you were supernaturally neat and tidy. Even now in an age where mental health has become less stigmatized, OCD is often not taken seriously. People laugh as they say things like, "I am so OCD," perhaps oblivious to the pain that those with OCD suffer through every day. My disorder was a joke. That was the message I got from society. As my pain grew, I began to over-identify with my mental health problems. I went from therapist to therapist where I received diagnosis after diagnosis. It didn't matter what the diagnosis was because the message was the same. You are messed up. You are broken. We must fix you. I didn't understand myself or my personality beyond my pathologies. By the time I entered college, I felt that no one truly knew me unless they knew the laundry list of my diagnoses and every which way they were screwing up my life. I felt like a liability, not a person. I was a ball of shame. Naturally, I turned to substances as I was absolutely through with thinking. I wanted so badly to escape myself. The OCD brain is very accustomed to having the same thoughts loop day in and day out. It is a broken record. I took to substance abuse quickly. When my obsessions began revolving around drugs and alcohol, it felt like a natural continuation of the OCD cycle. I went on like this for years. I was stuck in self-pity. This was my lot in life. My mental health problems were an easy excuse for my substance abuse and my substance abuse was an easy excuse for my bad behavior. It didn't occur to me that I had any power over my life. I didn't think my actions mattered. It took me getting sober to realize what is and what is not in my control. The serenity prayer is my lifeline, and it helps with my OCD as well. I cannot control the thoughts and images that enter into my head, but I get to choose how I react to them, and whether or not I engage in a compulsion. This applies whether my brain convinces me my family is going to die if I don't say ten hail mary's or if it convinces me I need a drink to not go insane. I am still looking for a therapist that truly feels like a good fit. Finding a therapist that is right for me is within my control, and it is empowering to be able to decide who will help me on my journey. For once in my life, I have hope that if I persevere, I will be okay.

The Library

Read all articles

Therapy guides, insurance breakdowns, and clinical thinking from Oregon providers.

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Anxiety and Emotional Exhaustion: Why You Feel So Tired

Anxiety and Emotional Exhaustion: Why You Feel So Tired

Anxiety can feel incredibly tiring. If you feel overly anxious or worried, you might notice: Feeling drained, even after a typical day Frequently feeling on edge, followed by having very little energy left for everyday tasks Wanting to isolate or pull back from others due to fatigue Why Anxiety Is So Exhausting Your brain and body are always “on.”When anxi

What I Learned from Goodbye

What I Learned from Goodbye

The first time the floor fell out from under me, I was only ten years old. My mother died just six months after being diagnosed with cancer, a timeline so fast it felt less like a passing and more like a theft. By the time I got to college, I had already built a personal relationship with depression.So, when my best friend’s brother was shot and killed, it didn't just sadden me—it leveled me. I was trying to cope with my first internship, to maintain friendships, be 21, and graduate college. That family had become my second family, my safety net. When they broke, I broke. I didn’t just fall into a depression; I dove into it, sinking into my bed with my bottles drowning me. Slowly everything I was working towards slipped away. When you’re in that deep, the world shrinks to the size of a liquor bottle and the four walls of a bedroom you can’t bring yourself to leave. My dad’s neighbor, a therapist herself, eventually threw me a rope. She recommended a friend of hers to work with me.For nearly two years, that woman was my entire world. We met weekly, sometimes twice a week. She was there when the addiction took hold, and she was there when things got even darker—after I was sexually assaulted and the depression curdled into suicidal ideation. I was failing every class, a ghost in my own life, only stumbling to the nearest 7-11 or liquor store to refill my cup.She was the one who finally got me into rehab after two different stints in the psych ward. But addiction isn't a straight line. I left rehab early, promising my father I wouldn’t drink for 6 months so I would be able to learn to drink properly afterwards, and graduate college. Upon returning home, my roommates kicked me out of our house after finding me hidden in my closet; high, but not drunk. I didn’t drink for those 6 months, but I didn’t stay clean. I moved into my own apartment where I could hide how bad things really got. I continued to work with my therapist, showing up to our sessions high and not working towards any of the goals we were setting. Somehow, through a haze of survival instinct I didn't know I still had, I managed to graduate. My 6 months of no drinking had finished and against my therapist's advice, I ran. I fled to Mexico. I spent months there, thinking a change of scenery would fix a broken spirit, but I only spiraled further. By the time I touched back down in Oregon, I was desperate. I knew I was dying. I reached out to the one person who had always held the rope for me, expecting her to pull me up again.She said no.She declined to work with me. At the time, it felt like the ultimate betrayal. I had trusted her with the most jagged pieces of my soul, and in my moment of greatest need, she closed the door. She said she couldn’t help me anymore, even if I got sober as she couldn’t trust me. I ended up back in the psych ward shortly after, vibrating from a week of no sleep and a body fueled by nothing but chemicals and alcohol.But that "no" did something "yes" never could. It forced me to realize that no one person could carry me—I had to learn how to stand on my own shaky legs.I was able to find a new therapist. I moved in with my lifelong best friend. I started attending meetings. I learned to ask for help, and hold myself accountable. There wasn’t a choice anymore.Today, I am nearly two years sober. I’ve held the same job for over a year, and I’m in a beautiful, loving relationship. After nearly a year of working with my new therapist she told me something I never thought I would hear, “Leah, I think our work here is done. It’s time for you to put your skills to work. You may always reach back out to me, but it’s time for you to start living your life.”  Each goodbyes has set me free, and for that I am grateful. Goodbye, Leah.

What Makes BCB Therapy Different from Basic Talk Therapy?

What Makes BCB Therapy Different from Basic Talk Therapy?

When people think about therapy, they often imagine sitting with a therapist and talking through problems, emotions, or stressful life events. Being heard and supported matters, but for many people dealing with anxiety, trauma, depression, or relationship stress, talking alone is not always enough. BCB Therapy works with clients who often feel like they have already tried therapy, already un

Building Daily Resilience

Building Daily Resilience

Stress isn’t only something to “treat” after it overwhelms you. In Bend, many people juggle demanding work, family responsibilities, seasonal changes, and the pace of a growing community. Preventative therapy is a proactive way to build resilience and keep stress from quietly turning into burnout, anxiety, or depression. Think of it as mental health maintenance: you build skills

How to Find the Right Therapist: What Research Says Actually Matters

How to Find the Right Therapist: What Research Says Actually Matters

Starting therapy can feel overwhelming. Many people wonder: How do I find the right therapist? Does the type of therapy matter? What if I pick the wrong one? You might see terms like EMDR, CBT, or IFS and wonder which approach is “best.” While finding a therapist whose approach aligns with your goals is important, research consistently shows that the therape

Is Psychodynamic Psychotherapy “Evidence-Based?” What Does “Evidence-Based” Mean?

Is Psychodynamic Psychotherapy “Evidence-Based?” What Does “Evidence-Based” Mean?

If you’re looking for a therapist—whether here in Portland or the surrounding areas—you’ve likely come across the term “evidence-based.” It’s used often, but not always explained. What does evidence-based actually mean? Evidence-based treatment means an approach towards mental health care that has been studied using systematic, empirical research. A speci

View all articles

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