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Gosford (02) 4313 1656Hornsby (02) 8428 9210
Terrigal Beach boardwalk at sunrise, with timber path running alongside the ocean on the NSW Central Coast

Practical therapy for
anxiety, worry, and overthinking

Evidence-based anxiety treatment for adults on the Central Coast & in Hornsby — in-person or via telehealth. Structured, collaborative, and tailored to how anxiety actually shows up in your life.

No referral needed · Medicare & NDIS · Appointments within 7 daysNo referral · Medicare & NDIS · Within 7 days
1Book online in 2 minutes
2Attend your first session
3Start feeling better
AHPRAAPSMedicareNDIS
Gosford: (02) 4313 1656 · Hornsby: (02) 8428 9210
Written by James Wightman, Registered Psychologist & Clinical Psychology Registrar · Last reviewed: April 2026

A clearer, more practical way to work on anxiety

Anxiety has a way of quietly making life smaller. Tasks that used to feel manageable start feeling overwhelming. Decisions take longer. Sleep suffers. You find yourself avoiding things "just in case" — and your world narrows without you really noticing.

If that sounds familiar, therapy offers a structured, evidence-based way to turn it around. Not through vague advice or telling you to "just relax" — but by understanding how your anxiety actually works, and building real skills to respond to it differently.

At MindSure Psychology, I'm James Wightman — a registered psychologist providing anxiety treatment to adults from across the Central Coast, including Erina, Terrigal, Woy Woy, Wyoming, Kariong, Narara, and surrounding suburbs. Sessions are available in-person in Gosford, in Hornsby, or via telehealth anywhere in Australia.

Ready to start? You can book online, or view Fees & Rebates for Medicare rebate information.

View from a rocky lookout over turquoise water at Pearl Beach on NSW's Central Coast, with tree-covered headlands in the distance
Starting should be the easy part

No waitlist. Appointments usually within 7 days. You can book online in under 2 minutes — or call if you'd prefer.

Check availability

Why anxiety is often harder to shift than it should be

Anxiety isn't just "in your head". It's a learned pattern — reinforced over time by small things that feel helpful in the moment but actually keep anxiety going:

  • 1
    Avoidance feels like relief — but strengthens anxiety
    Every time you avoid something uncomfortable, your brain learns that the thing was genuinely dangerous. Short-term relief, long-term shrinkage.
  • 2
    Reassurance quiets anxiety briefly — then feeds it
    Googling symptoms, asking "am I okay?", or mentally reviewing — each round gives brief relief, then the doubt comes back louder.
  • 3
    Controlling everything feels safer — but narrows your world
    Perfectionism, overpreparing, and "just in case" routines start as coping and end as a cage.
  • 4
    The body stays on alert — even when nothing's wrong
    Chronic anxiety leaves the nervous system tuned to threat. Tension, tight chest, and broken sleep become normal, even on "good" days.

Therapy works by gently reversing these loops — not by willpower, but by changing what keeps anxiety going in the first place.

How anxiety actually shows up

Anxiety isn't always obvious worry. More often, it looks like:

Physical
Tight chest, racing heart, gut issues, jaw tension, headaches, shallow breathing, unrefreshing sleep, constant fatigue.
Mental
Racing thoughts, overthinking, "what if" loops, catastrophising, replaying conversations, mental fogginess, difficulty concentrating.
Behavioural
Avoidance, procrastination, reassurance-seeking, overpreparing, perfectionism, checking, difficulty making decisions.
Emotional
Irritability, feeling "on edge", restlessness, dread, flatness, feeling overwhelmed, or quietly waiting for something to go wrong.
You don't need to hit a wall for anxiety to be worth addressing. If it's affecting your sleep, work, relationships, or enjoyment of life — that's enough.
Video thumbnail — James Wightman, psychologist

Meet James in 2 minutes — how therapy works at MindSure Psychology.

A warm, direct, evidence‑based approach

I'm a Registered Psychologist and Clinical Psychology Registrar providing anxiety therapy for adults on the Central Coast and in Hornsby. My approach is warm, collaborative, and grounded in what the research supports — focused on helping you build practical strategies for meaningful, lasting change.

I've worked across Queensland Health, Aurora Healthcare, Griffith University Psychology Clinic, and private practice in Sydney, the Gold Coast, and the Central Coast.

A large proportion of the adults I work with are aged 18–35, but I see clients of all ages.

I've also experienced anxiety myself, and CBT was what helped me work through it — it's part of why I do this work, and why I trust the approaches I use. The goal is meaningful, lasting change — not short-term relief.

— James
Learn more about my background & approach

Four things people ask before starting anxiety therapy

Answered directly — so you know what you're walking into.

1Is my anxiety really "severe enough" for therapy?
You don't need to hit a wall to benefit. Many people who come in are still functioning day-to-day — but quietly exhausted, overthinking constantly, sleeping poorly, or watching their world shrink around avoidance. Starting earlier usually means fewer sessions and faster progress.
2Will you push me into uncomfortable situations too quickly?
No. Exposure is part of effective treatment for some anxiety types (panic, phobias, social anxiety, OCD) — but it's always collaborative, paced, and only begins when you're ready. Nothing happens without your informed agreement. You set the pace. More on exposure therapy →
3What if I can't put what I'm feeling into words?
Very common. Anxiety is often felt in the body before the mind can name it. Part of therapy is learning the language — with prompts, frameworks, and examples that make it easier to describe what's going on. You don't need to arrive articulate.
4I've been anxious my whole life. Can it actually change?
Yes. Even long-standing anxiety responds well to evidence-based therapy. Change isn't about eliminating anxiety entirely — it's about changing your relationship with it, so it stops running the show and your life stops shaping itself around avoidance.

The different shapes anxiety takes

Anxiety is not one thing. Different patterns respond to different strategies — so treatment is tailored to how yours actually operates. Tap any area to learn more.

Generalised worry & overthinking (GAD)

A constant stream of "what ifs", difficulty switching off, and worry that jumps from one thing to the next. You may feel keyed up, tense, or mentally exhausted without being able to pinpoint why.

  • Chronic worry
  • Mental fatigue
  • Difficulty switching off
  • Physical tension
Panic attacks & panic disorder

Sudden waves of intense fear, often with physical symptoms — racing heart, shortness of breath, tingling, derealisation, fear of losing control or dying. Panic often leads to avoidance of places or situations where attacks happened.

  • Racing heart
  • Breathlessness
  • Fear of attacks
  • Avoidance
Social anxiety & fear of judgement

Fear of judgement, over-analysis of social interactions, replaying conversations for days, or avoiding events altogether. Often quietly shapes career choices, friendships, and how much of life you participate in.

  • Fear of judgement
  • Over-analysing conversations
  • Avoidance of social events
  • Performance anxiety
Health anxiety & bodily worry

Persistent fear of having — or developing — a serious illness. Cycles of symptom-checking, Googling, GP visits, and short-lived reassurance that never lasts. Often worsens during stress or after a health scare.

  • Symptom checking
  • Health Googling
  • Reassurance-seeking
  • Fear of serious illness
Phobias & specific fears

Intense fear of a specific situation or object — flying, heights, driving, needles, medical procedures, vomiting, animals. Avoidance can quietly shrink your world or make certain life milestones feel impossible.

  • Flying & heights
  • Needles & medical
  • Driving
  • Animals & insects
Insomnia & anxiety-fuelled sleep issues

Lying awake with a racing mind, waking at 3am unable to switch off, or dreading bedtime because nothing works. Anxiety and sleep difficulties feed each other — fixing one usually improves the other.

  • Difficulty falling asleep
  • Night waking
  • Racing mind at bedtime
  • Daytime fatigue
Intrusive thoughts & OCD‑linked anxiety

Unwanted thoughts, images, or urges that feel disturbing or "not you" — often followed by mental reviewing, checking, or compulsions to feel okay. OCD can attach to almost anything: harm, relationships, contamination, identity.

  • Intrusive thoughts
  • Mental reviewing
  • Compulsions
  • Fear of what thoughts mean
Trauma-linked anxiety & hypervigilance

Anxiety that emerged after a specific event — an accident, medical experience, assault, or ongoing stress. Often involves feeling constantly on edge, easily startled, emotionally numb, or avoiding reminders.

  • Hypervigilance
  • Flashbacks
  • Avoidance
  • Emotional numbing
ADHD-linked anxiety & overwhelm

Anxiety that builds from task paralysis, time blindness, missed deadlines, and the constant feeling of being behind. Often layered with rejection sensitivity, masking fatigue, and burnout from years of over-compensating.

  • Task paralysis
  • Overwhelm
  • Rejection sensitivity
  • Burnout cycles
Not sure what type — or a mix of things

It's very common to recognise parts of several — or to know something isn't right without a clear label. The first session helps make sense of what's actually going on, so treatment can be tailored properly. You don't need a diagnosis to start.

The approaches I use are among the most studied in mental health research

Anxiety disorders are among the most treatable mental health conditions. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) has decades of clinical trial evidence supporting its effectiveness for anxiety — with many people noticing meaningful improvement within the first 6–10 sessions, and full treatment courses typically running 8–16 sessions depending on complexity.

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) and EMDR are also evidence-based approaches with strong research support, used when a different fit is needed. Your treatment plan draws from whichever approach suits your goals best — and adjusts as we go.

The first session, and how you'll know it's working

Straight answers, not marketing — so you know what you're walking into and what changes to look for over time.

First Session

What actually happens

The first session is about getting clarity and building a plan. We'll typically cover:

  • What brought you in now — what's changed, what's reached a limit
  • How anxiety shows up — thoughts, body, behaviour, triggers
  • What keeps it going — avoidance, reassurance, control patterns
  • What you want to be different in practical, real-world terms
  • A personalised treatment plan — paced to what feels manageable

By the end, you should leave with a clearer understanding of your anxiety — and usually one or two strategies to begin straight away.

Progress Markers

How to tell therapy is working

Progress is rarely a sudden "fix". It's usually a set of measurable shifts:

  • You recover faster after being triggered — less stuck
  • You're avoiding less, doing more of what matters
  • Panic or worry episodes reduce in frequency or intensity
  • Sleep improves, even slightly
  • Your body settles — less tension, clearer thinking
  • You ruminate less, with more control over attention
  • You're making decisions from values rather than fear

Real change often shows up in how you respond to anxiety — even before anxiety itself fully settles.

Does any of this feel familiar?

Tap anything that resonates. There's no score and nothing is saved — it's just a way of noticing patterns.

I worry about things I can't control
I replay conversations or decisions in my head
I feel physically tense — jaw, shoulders, chest
I wake during the night with a racing mind
I avoid situations that make me anxious
I seek reassurance but it doesn't last long
I feel "on edge" most of the time
I struggle to switch off or properly relax
I procrastinate because tasks feel overwhelming
My anxiety feels like it's getting worse, not better

Tap any item that feels familiar — your reflection appears here.

This isn't a diagnostic tool — just a prompt for reflection.

Supporting adults across the Central Coast

MindSure Psychology is based in Gosford CBD (Suite 112, 159 Mann St — inside John's Place), a short drive for most of the Central Coast and walkable from Gosford train station.

I regularly see adults travelling in from nearby suburbs, including:

GosfordEast GosfordWest GosfordPoint ClareErinaTerrigalAvocaKincumberGreen PointNararaWyomingKariongWoy WoyUmina Beach

In-person or telehealth — whatever fits

If you're within a short drive of Gosford, sessions are available in person or via telehealth. Appointments include evenings and weekends to suit work and family commitments.

Gosford hours: Wed & Fri 2–7:30pm · Sat 11am–5pm · Sun 9am–7pm

In-person sessions are also available at our Hornsby location, supporting adults from Wahroonga, Waitara, Asquith, Normanhurst, Thornleigh, and Berowra.

Telehealth available anywhere in Australia

A practical option if you're working long hours, travelling, have kids at home, or just prefer the convenience of not having to drive.

Transparent pricing

$141.05 per session

Out-of-pocket cost on weekdays with a Medicare rebate

Full session fee is $240 per 50-minute appointment. A Medicare rebate of $98.95 applies with a GP Mental Health Treatment Plan. Weekend sessions incur a $20 surcharge.

Referrals and Medicare

You can see a psychologist with or without a GP referral. A GP Mental Health Treatment Plan is only needed if you want to claim Medicare rebates. Private health insurance may also provide a rebate — check with your fund.

NDIS psychology support

For NDIS psychology support (plan-managed and self-managed participants), sessions are $232.99 per appointment. MindSure Psychology provides therapeutic mental health-related supports only. We do not offer behaviour support plans or functional capacity assessments.

Common questions about anxiety therapy

Quick answers to what people most commonly ask before starting.

Do I need a GP referral to see a psychologist for anxiety?

No. You can book directly without a referral. If you'd like a Medicare rebate, you'll usually need a GP appointment for a Mental Health Treatment Plan — but many people start therapy first and organise that afterwards.

How long does anxiety therapy usually take?

It varies depending on complexity. Many people notice meaningful improvement within 6–10 sessions; others benefit from longer-term support, particularly if anxiety has been long-standing or is layered with trauma or ADHD. We review progress together regularly and adjust the plan as needed.

My MHTP is addressed to another psychologist — is that okay?

Yes. In most cases, you can still use a valid GP Mental Health Treatment Plan even if it's addressed to a different psychologist. As long as the referral is current and you consent to seeing a different provider, Medicare rebates are usually still available.

What if my anxiety doesn't feel "severe enough" for therapy?

You don't need to reach a breaking point. Many people seek help for ongoing worry, overthinking, or stress that's affecting quality of life even while they're still "functioning". Starting earlier usually means faster, easier progress.

Will I have to do exposure?

Only when it's appropriate for the type of anxiety, and only when you're ready. Exposure is always collaborative and paced — nothing is forced. You can read more about what exposure therapy actually involves.

Is therapy confidential?

Yes — with standard limits (such as immediate risk of harm, child safety, or legal requirements). Records are stored securely in line with Australian Privacy Principles.

Do you offer telehealth?

Yes. Telehealth is available anywhere in Australia — a practical option if you're working long hours, have kids at home, or just prefer not to drive.

What happens in the first session?

We'll focus on understanding how anxiety shows up for you — triggers, thoughts, body signals, patterns — and what you want to be different. Many people find that simply mapping it out is relieving in itself. You'll usually leave with one or two practical strategies to start using.

AHPRA Registered PsychologistMember of the Australian Psychological SocietyAssociate Member of the Australian Clinical Psychology AssociationMedicare rebates availableNDIS registered providerLGBTQI+ affirming psychologist

MindSure Psychology is a proud community partner and sponsor of local sporting clubs.

Gosford Golf Club community partnerGosford Kariong Rugby Club community partner
Long wooden jetty stretching into calm water at sunrise on the Central Coast
Appointments available within 7 days

Ready to start working on anxiety?

It's normal to feel unsure about starting — we'll take it at your pace, and you don't need to have it all figured out before the first appointment.