Work and Career Anxiety
When Your Job Is Taking Over Your Mental Health
Mario Juster-Kruse, LMHC | Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists | Tampa, FL
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You dread Sunday evenings. You check your emails before you get out of bed. You replay a comment your manager made three days ago and cannot let it go. You are performing well at work, but inside, you are running on fear, not confidence. The anxiety about your job is bleeding into everything else.
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Work and career anxiety is one of the most common reasons adults seek therapy, and one of the least talked about. There is a pervasive myth that anxiety at work is just a sign you care and that ambitious people are supposed to be stressed. This is not true. Anxiety that is running your work life is not the same as healthy motivation. And it responds very well to the right support.
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We provide therapy for work and career anxiety in Tampa, Florida, and virtually across Florida and New York.
Quick Answer: What Is Work Anxiety??
Work anxiety is persistent, excessive worry and fear related to your job, career, or workplace. It goes beyond normal job stress. It affects your sleep, your relationships, your physical health, and your sense of self. Work anxiety can look like fear of failure, imposter syndrome, dread of performance reviews, anxiety about job security, or constant worry about whether you are doing enough. It is very treatable with the right therapeutic approach.
What Work Anxiety Looks Like
| In Your Thoughts | In Your Body and Behavior |
|---|---|
| Constantly replaying mistakes or conversations | Difficulty sleeping on workdays or Sunday nights |
| Fear that you will be found out or fired | Physical tension, headaches, or stomach issues before work |
| Comparing yourself to colleagues and feeling inferior | Checking work emails constantly even on weekends |
| Catastrophizing about small mistakes | Avoiding tasks or procrastinating due to fear of failure |
| Difficulty making decisions at work | Snapping at family or friends after a hard workday |
| Imposter syndrome feeling like you do not belong | Dreading Monday from Friday afternoon onward |
Types of Work and Career Anxiety
Imposter Syndrome
Imposter syndrome is the persistent belief that you do not deserve your position, that you are less competent than others think, and that it is only a matter of time before you are exposed as a fraud. It is extremely common among high achievers, perfectionists, and it is not a reflection of your actual competence. It is a reflection of anxiety. Therapy helps you develop a more accurate and stable sense of your own abilities.
Fear of Failure and Performance Anxiety
Some people’s work anxiety centers on the fear of making mistakes, failing to meet expectations, or performing poorly in high-stakes situations. This can produce procrastination (avoiding starting because failure feels too threatening), perfectionism (spending hours on tasks to eliminate any risk of error), or avoidance of new challenges altogether. Therapy addresses both the thinking patterns and the behavioral patterns that maintain this fear.
New Job Anxiety
Starting a new job even one you wanted frequently produces intense anxiety. The unfamiliarity, the pressure to prove yourself quickly, the social navigation of a new workplace, and the fear of not meeting expectations produce a specific and very common anxiety pattern. For many people, new job anxiety fades within the first few months. For others, it persists and deepens. Therapy can significantly accelerate the adjustment process.
Job Loss Anxiety and Career Uncertainty
Fear of losing your job whether well-founded or not produces chronic stress that affects everything. Layoffs, company instability, a difficult manager, or a changing industry all create a specific kind of background dread that is hard to shake. Career uncertainty, not knowing what you want to do, whether you are in the right field, or what comes next produces its own anxiety that can feel paralyzing.
Burnout and Anxiety
Burnout and anxiety often co-occur and the relationship runs in both directions. Anxiety about work can produce burnout through chronic stress. Burnout, in turn, can produce anxiety about falling behind. If you are experiencing both, it is important to address both, not just take a vacation and hope the anxiety disappears when you return. See our Depression page for more on the connection between burnout and depression.
How Therapy Helps with Work Anxiety
Identifying What Is Driving the Anxiety
Work anxiety is rarely just about work. It is often connected to deeper beliefs about your worth, your competence, and what happens if you fail. We help you identify what is actually driving the anxiety beneath the surface so that treatment addresses the root, not just the daily stress.
CBT for Work Anxiety
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy helps you catch and challenge the specific thinking patterns that amplify work anxiety catastrophic predictions, all-or-nothing thinking, the tendency to discount your own competence. It also helps with the behavioral patterns checking, avoidance, overworking that provide short-term relief but maintain the anxiety long-term.
Building a Different Relationship With Performance
One of the most important shifts in therapy for work anxiety is moving from a fear-based relationship with performance to a values-based one. Instead of working hard to avoid failure, you work hard because you care about what you are doing. This shift does not happen overnight, but it produces genuine confidence and sustainability that fear-based motivation never does.
In-Person and Virtual Sessions
In-person
730 S Sterling Ave, Suite 306, Tampa, FL 33609
Virtual
Available throughout Florida
Frequently Asked Questions
Is anxiety at work just a sign I care about my job?
Caring about your work and being anxious about your work are not the same thing. People who care deeply about their work can also have healthy, motivated, sustainable careers without chronic anxiety. The difference is what is driving the effort values or fear. Anxiety-driven performance tends to produce diminishing returns, burnout, and misery. Values-driven performance tends to produce genuine engagement and satisfaction. Therapy helps you shift from one to the other.
My anxiety is specifically about my boss or my workplace. Do I need therapy or a new job?
Sometimes both. Therapy helps you identify whether the anxiety is primarily driven by your own thinking patterns in which case it would likely follow you to a new job or whether it is genuinely being produced by a toxic or unsustainable work environment. Often it is some of both. We help you untangle the two and make clearer decisions about what is actually within your control.
Can therapy help with imposter syndrome?
Yes significantly. Imposter syndrome is a very specific anxiety pattern that responds well to CBT. Therapy helps you develop a more accurate and stable sense of your own competence, build resilience to critical feedback, and stop measuring your worth by your performance at any given moment. Many people with imposter syndrome find that therapy produces one of the most meaningful shifts they have ever experienced in their relationship with their work.
You Should Not Have to Dread Going to Work.
Work anxiety is common but it is not something you just have to live with. We work with people who are anxious about their jobs, their careers, and their performance and we help them build a relationship with work that is sustainable, confident, and values-driven.
Happy Clients
EXCELLENT Based on 92 reviews Posted on Bogaci ServicesTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Natalie Noel - great doctor, very professional with individual approach. It was a pleasure to meet her.Posted on SabrinaTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Thanks to Anxiety & OCD Specialists and Matt, I’m now on the road to living a better life with my OCD. Matt is extremely patient, supportive, and knowledgeable. Highly recommend the intensive outpatient program to anyone struggling with OCD!Posted on Fatima SorabiTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. A review for Natalie Noel: hi everyone, I was dealing with severe anxiety for a long time, to the point where I felt completely hopeless. I had intense anticipatory anxiety and could not sleep before any event at all. The insomnia was debilitating and affected every part of my life. I was also carrying severe trauma and PTSD, and I truly felt like I would never be normal again. I tried everything — therapy, EMDR, neurofeedback, and so many other approaches — but nothing fully helped. After doing my own research, I found Natalie Neol and decided to reach out. From the very beginning, Natalie was incredibly insightful and compassionate. After only three sessions, she recognized that I was suffering from severe anxiety and OCD, and she immediately referred me to two excellent doctors for medication support. I scheduled an appointment with one of them, started treatment, and within a month my life has completely changed. I honestly cannot believe how different I feel. For the first time in years, I feel like I am truly living again. Just last week, I had a major presentation — something that would normally have caused overwhelming panic — and I walked in calm, confident, and did amazingly with no anxiety at all. I still can’t believe it. Natalie, God bless you. You are an absolute godsend. I truly owe you my life.Posted on Nate AshbyTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Natalie is the OCD specialist to see around Tampa! She is patient and willing to talk through things as many times as it takes. No case too tough for Natalie. Highly recommend.Posted on Alayna MannTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. This center is great and extremely welcoming! I looked forward to meeting with Natalie and she helped me learn more about myself every session. She also helped redirect negative thought patterns and behaviors and taught me how to handle my thoughts better.Posted on Judy SpigarelliTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Mario Juster-Kruse truly understands my anxiety. Mario's guidance lets me unmask and speak my truth. After just a couple sessions, I felt noticeable positive changes. 30 years of talk therapy didn't get me to the results I need, but Mario's approach has me on the right path. Truly grateful!Posted on Jessica RoseTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. I have been a client of Mario’s for almost a year after having some unexpected, tragic losses as well as coming out of a terrible marriage and being a Covid ER nurse. I’ve always been an anxious person but, after these events, it had become unbearable, and I lost who I was. Things got worse before they got better and the depression was eating at my soul. I feel extremely fortunate to have had Mario as my therapist. He has helped me rebuild myself one broken stick at a time and I’ve started reclaiming control of my life. I’ve had other therapists in the past for various things, but he has been the best I’ve had. I genuinely do not think I would have survived this past year if I had a different therapist and I am extremely grateful for all that he has done to help me. I highly recommend him for anyone seeking treatment.Posted on Anja AlpendreTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. We are incredibly grateful for the care and support our child received from Nona Zamora. She is truly exceptional - kind, compassionate, and deeply knowledgeable. From the very first visit, she created a safe, trusting environment and took the time to truly understand our child’s needs. We felt heard, supported, and confident that our child was in the best possible hands. We were so lucky to be in her care and would wholeheartedly recommend her to any family looking for a thoughtful, skilled, and compassionate psychologist.