Depression and Anxiety Therapy in Los Altos, California
Depression and Anxiety sucks the joy out of life and makes everything heavy
The wear and tear of depression and anxiety cut off your ability to just BE. Do these sound Familiar?
I wake up exhausted, even after sleeping eight hours.
I scroll on my phone for hours, yet have no energy to start my day.
I know I should feel grateful for what I have, but feel empty anyway.
I don’t recognize myself anymore — I used to have passions, now I can’t feel much of anything.
My mind doesn’t have an off switch — it’s constantly running through worst-case scenarios.
Even when nothing’s wrong, my body feels tense, like I’m bracing for something bad.
I check my email over and over, worried I missed something important.
I have no idea how to actually relax
I crave connection but I also avoid people.
I’m constantly overthinking, and then I beat myself up for not doing enough.
I cancel plans at the last minute because I can’t bring myself to be around people.
Depression and Anxiety aren't forever
Therapy is a wonderful way to work through depression and anxiety.
In therapy together, we will work to understand the unique ways your depression and or anxiety show up. Working through these feelings, fears and uncovering the meaning behind it can begin to remove the barriers keeping you from your authentic self. Our bodies often hide our authentic feelings, due to these complex emotions seeming unsafe to feel.
Therapy is a worthwhile step in the direction of removing the shackles of depression and anxiety.
Depression and Anxiety
Depression often relates to grieving something in the past, while anxiety often relates to a fear in the future.
Depression and anxiety show up in many different ways. On one extreme it can look like being cut off from emotions, disconnected from yourself, and avoidant of others. It can be debilitating and silently take over your life.
On the other end of the spectrum it manifests as a louder sadness and bouts of tears, panic attacks, an attack on who you are and a flood of feelings that don’t give you a break. You'll feel like too much for yourself and others.
Depression and anxiety FAQs.
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Depression and anxiety often show up together, but they affect people in different ways. Depression usually feels like a heaviness or emptiness — low mood, low energy, and difficulty finding joy in things that once mattered. Anxiety often feels like a constant state of worry or tension, with your mind racing and your body bracing for something bad to happen. Many people experience both at the same time: feeling weighed down and exhausted by depression while also restless and on edge from anxiety.
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This is one of the hardest parts about depression and anxiety — they don’t always match what’s happening in your life. From the outside, things might seem “good enough,” but inside, you may feel disconnected, drained, or overwhelmed. Depression and anxiety aren’t just about circumstances; they’re also shaped by your history, your relationships, your body, and patterns that have built up over time. Therapy can help uncover these layers so you can understand what’s really going on and begin to feel more like yourself.
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Yes. While depression and anxiety can feel like permanent fixtures in your life, therapy offers a safe space to understand what drives them. Instead of just managing symptoms, therapy helps you look at the deeper patterns that keep you feeling stuck — whether that’s self-criticism, old wounds from family dynamics, or ways of relating that don’t serve you anymore. By bringing these into the open with someone who’s fully present with you, it becomes possible to loosen their grip and make real, lasting change.
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If you’ve ever been told to “just relax” or “just be positive,” you know how frustrating that advice can feel. Depression and anxiety aren’t about willpower — they’re about how your mind, body, and emotions respond to stress, relationships, and your inner world. It’s not about weakness or laziness. Therapy respects that these struggles are complex and real, and gives you space to work through them with compassion instead of judgment.
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That’s more common than you might think. Depression and anxiety don’t always announce themselves clearly. Sometimes it’s a vague sense of emptiness, irritability, or restlessness you can’t explain. Other times, it’s not feeling connected to the people around you or not recognizing the version of yourself you’ve become. Therapy can help put words to these experiences and open up new ways of understanding what’s happening inside you.
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Does mThere’s no set timeline. For some people, even having a space to talk openly for the first time brings relief. For others, it takes time to peel back the layers and really understand the roots of depression and anxiety. What matters most is that therapy isn’t about quick fixes — it’s about creating lasting change by helping you know yourself more deeply and find new ways of living and relating.
Contact Me
Ready to take the next step? Please don’t hesitate to reach out with any questions or to request a consultation.