Anxiety Therapy
Nanaimo • Squamish • Online Counselling
Individual & Couples Counselling | Workshops & Intensives
Is This You?
The Alarm Sounds, But There’s Nothing to Escape
Your mind rarely rests. You replay conversations, anticipate outcomes, and scan for what might go wrong. Even when things are objectively fine, your body stays tense; braced, alert, and ready.
You may feel driven to stay on top of everything: to plan, prepare, monitor, and fix. Slowing down feels irresponsible or even unsafe. You might ask yourself: “Why can’t I turn this off? Why am I anxious when nothing is actually wrong?” .
Anxiety Isn’t a Personal Failure. It’s a Strategy
Anxiety can be a regulating strategy; that constant vigilance kept you safe. For many people, it developed as a way to monitor relationships, get ahead of disappointment, or manage unpredictability in the past. Your system learned that thinking, anticipating, and controlling reduced risk or harm.
The problem isn’t that you are broken. The problem is that a survival strategy that once protected you has stopped being optional.
Common Signs of Anxiety
Some anxiety is obvious, but other forms are masked as high-functioning or perfectionism. You may recognize yourself in these patterns:
- The Racing Mind: Persistent worry, rumination, or overthinking decisions.
- Physical Tension: A constant sense of being on edge, tight chest, or shallow breathing.
- Inability to Relax: Feeling restless during downtime; needing to be productive to feel okay.
- Vigilance: Feeling responsible for preventing problems or mistakes.
- Avoidance: Steering clear of situations that feel triggering, uncertain, or out of your control.
- Exhaustion: Feeling mentally drained from constantly scanning your environment.
Common Presentations of Anxiety
High-Functioning Anxiety
You are successful and organized on the outside, but inside you are driven by a fear of making mistakes or disappointing people. You over-prepare, over-work, and struggle to ever truly switch off.
The Physical Alarm
Anxiety isn’t just in your head; it’s in your body. You experience rapid heartbeat, stomach issues, jaw tension, or a nervous system that reacts before your mind can even catch up.
Perfectionism & Control
You feel a compulsive need for certainty and for things to be perfect. You struggle to delegate or trust others, believing that if you don’t handle it, something terrible will happen.
Our Approach: Mind & Body
Insight alone doesn’t calm anxiety, and willpower doesn’t override a threat response. At Stone Reef, we address both the mind and the nervous system .
Phase 1:
Calming the Mind (CBT)
Using Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, and Psychodynamic approaches we help you identify the thought patterns keeping the alarm system running, like catastrophizing or overestimating threats. We compassionately challenge these habits so they stop automatically driving your reactions .
Phase 2:
Regulating the Body (DBT)
Where anxiety isn’t logical, we use Dialectical Behaviour Therapy. This focuses on nervous system regulation and distress tolerance. You learn how to stay present with anxiety and uncertainty without escalating into panic or shutdown .
Phase 3:
Regaining Flexibility
The goal isn’t to stop caring or avoiding healthy anxiety. It’s to loosen anxiety’s grip. We help your system regain flexibility so anxiety becomes a helpful signal you can respond to, rather than a state you are trapped inside .
Meet Our Anxiety Therapists
FOUNDER / THERAPIST
- Locations: Nanaimo, Online
- Specialities: Enmeshment Recovery, Sex/Porn Addiction, Process Addictions, PTSD, Complex PTSD, Mood Disorders
ADDICTION & TRAUMA THERAPIST
- Locations: Nanaimo, Online
- Specialties: Substance Addiction, Sex/Porn Addiction, PTSD
Anxiety Therapy: Service Details
Rates & Coverage:
- Standard sessions: 50 mins.
- Many plans cover Registered Clinical Counsellors (RCC).
- Direct billing available for some providers.
Delivery Options:
- In-Person (Nanaimo)
- Online (Secure Video)
- Telephone
Availability:
- Open 7 Days a Week
- 9am - 5pm
FAQs: Anxiety Therapy
Understanding Your Experience
Trauma is not just about what happened to you; it is about how your body and mind responded to it. If you experienced a distressing event (like an accident, abuse, or sudden loss) and now feel overwhelmed, stuck, or unable to cope, that is trauma. Common signs include flashbacks, avoiding reminders, feeling on edge, or feeling numb.
Yes. This is often a sign of Complex Trauma, which comes from repeated exposure to difficult events (like neglect or abuse) rather than a single shock. When trauma is ongoing, the brain sometimes “blocks out” memories to survive. If you struggle with trust, emotional regulation, or self-esteem without knowing exactly why, it may be linked to early complex trauma.
Stress usually goes away when the pressure stops. Anxiety is ongoing worry about the future. Trauma is a biological change in how your brain responds to danger. It often involves flashbacks, physical reactivity (fight/flight/freeze), and a deep sense of unsafety that doesn’t match your current reality.
Absolutely. Early trauma shapes how the brain develops and how we form relationships. Many adults find that they struggle with trust, self-worth, or physical health issues decades later. Therapy helps re-wire these old patterns so they don’t have to run your adult life.