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Anxiety Therapist in Tokyo | English 

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) Specialist

Credentials

When Anxiety Stops Feeling Like a Phase

Most people who come to me for anxiety didn't wake up one day and decide to get help. They got here gradually. Sleep got worse. Worry about work crept into the weekend, then into the evenings, then into everything. Decisions that used to be simple started feeling impossible. Eventually, "anxious" stopped being something that happened to them sometimes and started being how they described themselves.

If that sounds familiar, you're not alone, and you're not broken. Anxiety is one of the most common reasons people in Tokyo's international community reach out for therapy. Living abroad adds its own layer: less of a support network, more pressure to perform, and a culture around you that doesn't always make space for talking about it openly.

I'm a licensed therapist based in Roppongi, working with English speakers across Japan. I help people change how anxiety affects their lives, not by trying to eliminate it, but by helping them stop being controlled by it.

 

For my full background, training, and clinical philosophy, please visit the About page.

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What Anxiety Looks Like in Practice

Anxiety shows up differently for different people. Some of the patterns I work with most often:

  • Generalized worry — a background hum of "what if" that doesn't attach to one specific thing and rarely fully switches off.

  • Workplace anxiety — dread before meetings, perfectionism that never feels satisfied, the sense that one mistake will undo everything.

  • Social anxiety — overthinking interactions before and after they happen, avoiding situations that shouldn't feel difficult, exhaustion from monitoring how you're coming across.

  • Panic — sudden physical symptoms (racing heart, shortness of breath, a feeling of losing control) that can be frightening even once you understand what's happening medically.

  • Health anxiety — persistent worry about symptoms, frequent checking, and difficulty being reassured even after medical confirmation that things are fine.

  • Anxiety tied to being abroad — uncertainty about visas, work status, or long-term plans; the strain of navigating a culture and language that aren't fully yours; the particular loneliness of managing all of this without your usual support system nearby.

If your experience doesn't match any of these exactly, that's fine. Anxiety rarely fits a clean category, and the first consultation is a good place to start figuring out what's actually going on.

For information on other treatments such as OCD, depression, or other challenges I work with, please visit my Individual services​ page.

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How I Treat Anxiety

My approach starts from a different premise than most anxiety treatment you'll find described online. I don't aim to get rid of your anxiety completely. Anxiety is a normal part of being human, and trying to eliminate it entirely usually backfires, creating a second layer of anxiety about the anxiety itself.

Instead, we work on your relationship with it using Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT).

That means learning to notice anxious thoughts without immediately believing or obeying them. It means understanding what's happening physically when anxiety spikes, so the sensations themselves become less frightening. And it means practicing staying present and taking action in line with what matters to you, even while anxiety is in the room.

Over time, most people find that the anxiety doesn't need to disappear for life to open back up. It becomes something you carry differently rather than something that runs the show.

For people whose anxiety has a strong OCD component, like intrusive thoughts or compulsive checking, I also draw on Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP). You can read more about it on the dedicated OCD page if that sounds closer to your experience.

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Why ACT, Not Just Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

A lot of anxiety treatment in Tokyo, and elsewhere, defaults to standard Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT): identifying anxious thoughts and trying to argue with them or replace them with more rational ones. This can help some people. For others, especially those who've already tried to "think their way out" of anxiety for years, it doesn't go far enough.

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy takes a different angle. Rather than treating anxious thoughts as something to fight or correct, ACT treats them as mental events you can notice and let pass, while still moving toward the life you want. It builds psychological flexibility instead of trying to win an argument with your own mind.

In practice, this often feels like a relief to clients who've spent years trying to reason their anxiety away and felt like they were failing when it didn't work. You weren't failing. You were using a tool that wasn't built for the whole problem.

I also incorporate self-compassion work for clients whose anxiety is tangled up with self-criticism, which is common.

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Who I Work With

Most of my anxiety clients are professionals and expats living in Tokyo, though I work with English speakers anywhere in Japan or the US, since all sessions are online. Many are managing demanding jobs alongside the adjustment of living abroad. Some have dealt with anxiety for years and tried other approaches without lasting change. Others are newer to it and want help before it becomes more entrenched.

I work with adults of all backgrounds, including men, women, and members of the LGBTQ community. Sessions are conducted in native-level English, which matters more than people often expect when describing something as layered as anxiety.

For the full list of services I offer, including anxiety, workplace stress, perfectionism, and OCD, please visit the Individual Services page.

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An initial 30-minute Connection Session is complimentary, for us to meet, make an initial assessment, and to determine if you are comfortable with our working relationship. 

All sessions are conducted online.

Connection Session (30-mins)

Complimentary

Weekly Session (50-mins)

Sliding Scale: 12,000-20,000 yen + tax

Have questions? Please scroll below or visit the FAQ section.

Sliding Scale Rates

Appointments

Please message me using the contact form below or email me and we can set a date to have a complimentary session, where we can get to know each other a bit and discuss how we might work together.

Hours vary but in general are early mornings, evenings and weekend mornings.

​​I will do my best to work with you. If for some reason I can't, I will make efforts to refer you to someone who can help you.​

Man using a laptop on a video therapy call.
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Client Case Studies

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Frequently Asked Questions

Empowering change, one step at a time

Contact

Please send a message to schedule a free 30-minute consultation or inquire about any services.

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