Anxiety; Obsessive-Compulsive (OCD); Trauma and PTSD Therapists in Oregon
4,823 providers found
Find Oregon therapists specializing in Anxiety; Obsessive-Compulsive (OCD); Trauma and PTSD.
Sara Blackwood
PCA · Bend, OR
Do you ever feel misunderstood or like you don’t fit in? Is this causing you to feel anxious or disconnected from life? As a queer mental health professional, I have experience…
Erika Klyce
MCOUN, NCC · Redmond, OR
I have immediate availability and am ACCEPTING NEW CLIENTS! Reach out via email or phone to schedule a free, 15-minute phone consultation. If you reach out via phone, please make…
Dr. Carrie Anderson
PMHNP · Portland, OR
Current Openings! To get started, please complete form at www.upwellpsych.com/contact. As a Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) and board-certified Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse…
Wes Murph
BS, MA, NCC, Professional Counselor Associate · Portland, OR
If you’re looking for a supportive and easy-to-talk-to therapist, to help you achieve your goals, we may be a good fit. I help adults and adolescent boys struggling with…
Mary Andrus
LPC, LCAT, ATCS, ATR-BC® · Oregon City,, OR
I am a registered board-certified art therapist, licensed professional counselor, licensed certified art therapist and art therapy certified supervisor. I have a Doctorate in Art…
Kavitha Goldowitz
MFT · Portland, OR
I am a licensed psychotherapist as well as a certified Life Coach. I have over 15 years of experience working with individuals and couples. My areas of expertise include…
Suenia Villa
LCSW · Portland, OR
Virtual Sessions Only. I work well with anyone who seeks therapy and is ready to work on themselves. I have worked with about every population, culture and age group. Issues that…
Kaden Winterkorn
LPC · Portland, OR
I offer individual counseling and support groups for the trans and non-binary community. I love working with clients who are ready for change and want support in the process of…
Related Articles
From Oregon providers writing about this topic.

What to Do After Your Client Uses Psychedelics
Most clinicians were never trained for this moment. Now it’s happening in session. A client mentions a recent psilocybin experience through Oregon’s legal services. Another discloses they’ve been using ketamine recreationally, and something shifted. A third describes a profound, disorienting experience from years ago that they’ve never shared with anyone — until now.

Preparing for a Psilocybin or Ketamine Session in Oregon: You Don't Need to Feel Ready. You Need to Feel Steady.
Feeling anxious before your session is more common than people admit You might be looking forward to it. And also feeling unsure, overwhelmed, or quietly afraid. Both things can be true at once. Maybe you’ve been thinking about this for months — researching, talking with a facilitator, weighing options. You’ve read, made the appointment. Now, with the date approaching, you won

SEO, AEO, and GEO for Beginners — and How OR Counselors Wins All Three
Three acronyms decide whether clients find your therapy practice in 2026: SEO (Google), AEO (answer engines), and GEO (AI-generated answers). Here's what each one means, why all three matter now, and how the Oregon Counselor Directory engineered every page to rank in all three. If you are a therapist trying to grow your caseload in 2026, the rules of search have changed. Three acronyms now decide

I'll Always Trade My Rook to Keep My Knight. On why we need to stop pathologizing the people-pleasers of this world.
I want to talk about people-pleasing, but not in the way it usually gets talked about. I'm tired of the version that frames it as a personality quirk, a boundary problem, or a self-esteem issue we just need to do the work on. That framing skips over the most important thing, which is that people-pleasing is a survival strategy that worked. It equated to safety, and sometimes to love, which kind of

What We Lose When We're Not Believed
There's a kind of tired I want to talk about, because I don't think it gets named enough, and because I've lived inside of it, and because the people who walk into my office almost always know exactly what I mean before I finish the sentence. It's the tired that comes from being the one who notices. It's exhausting being the one who feels the shift in the room, who registers the tightness in som

The Middleman’s Toll: My War Against the Venture Capital Siege on Mental Health
The Silicon Valley land grab for the human soul didn't happen overnight. It was a slow, calculated siege, masked by the friendly blue-and-white interfaces of platforms promising to "democratize" mental health. But as we move into 2026, the sleek UX of these multi-billion-dollar intermediaries has revealed a cold, extractive reality. This is the industrialization of intimacy, a structural disruptio