Stress is your body’s natural response to pressure, change, responsibility, or threat. In short bursts, it can help you focus and respond. But when stress becomes constant, it can affect your sleep, mood, health, relationships, concentration, and sense of control. Stress management means recognizing your triggers and using practical tools such as breathing exercises, mindfulness, movement, CBT, time management, healthier routines, and therapy to reduce the impact of stress before it turns into burnout, anxiety, depression, or ongoing physical strain. At Dallas Whole Life Counseling, we offer online stress management therapy through secure Zoom sessions for clients anywhere in Texas.
Stress can become so normal that you stop noticing how much it is affecting you.
You wake up already tense.
You check your phone before your feet hit the floor.
You feel behind before the day even starts.
You snap at people, then feel guilty.
You lie down at night, but your brain keeps working.
You tell yourself, “This is just life right now.”
Maybe it is work. Maybe it is money. Maybe it is parenting. Maybe it is your relationship. Maybe it is caring for everyone else while quietly running on empty.
Stress is not always dramatic. Sometimes it looks like being functional on the outside and exhausted on the inside.
That does not mean you are weak. It means your mind and body may have been in survival mode for too long.
What Is Stress?
Stress is the body’s response to pressure. It can happen when you face something demanding, uncertain, frustrating, exciting, threatening, or emotionally heavy. Your nervous system reacts by preparing you to respond. Your heart may beat faster, your muscles may tense, your breathing may change, and your mind may become more alert.
When your body stays activated for days, weeks, or months, stress can stop being helpful and start wearing you down. The American Psychological Association explains how stress affects the body, including the musculoskeletal, respiratory, cardiovascular, endocrine, gastrointestinal, nervous, and reproductive systems.
When Does Stress Become a Problem?
Stress becomes a problem when it is intense, constant, or hard to recover from.
You may still be getting through the day, but you might feel like you are paying for it at night, on weekends, or in your relationships.
Stress may be becoming a problem if:
- You feel tense most of the time
- You cannot relax without feeling guilty
- You are sleeping poorly
- You are more irritable than usual
- You feel emotionally drained
- You have headaches, stomach issues, muscle tension, or chest tightness
- You are relying on caffeine, alcohol, food, scrolling, or avoidance to cope
- You are withdrawing from people
- You feel like small things push you over the edge
- You are losing motivation
- You feel anxious, low, or numb
- You keep thinking, “I cannot keep doing this”
At Dallas Whole Life Counseling, our stress management therapy helps people recognize the causes of stress and prepare for stressful situations in healthier ways.
Stress vs Anxiety: What Is the Difference?
Stress and anxiety can feel similar, but they are not exactly the same.
Stress is usually connected to a specific pressure or demand. For example, a deadline, financial problem, conflict, health concern, or major life change.
Anxiety can continue even when the stressor is unclear or has passed. It often involves worry about what might happen, fear of uncertainty, or a sense of dread.
Stress may sound like:
“I have too much to do.”
Anxiety may sound like:
“What if I cannot handle what is coming?”
The two can overlap. Long-term stress can contribute to anxiety, and anxiety can make everyday stress feel harder to manage.
If worry, panic, tension, or fear is a major part of what you are experiencing, anxiety counseling may also be helpful.
Signs You Are More Stressed Than You Realize
Stress is not always obvious. Some people do not notice it until their body starts speaking loudly.
Common signs of stress include:
- Racing thoughts
- Trouble sleeping
- Waking up tired
- Irritability
- Feeling overwhelmed
- Headaches
- Muscle tension
- Jaw clenching
- Digestive issues
- Chest tightness
- Shortness of breath
- Forgetfulness
- Trouble focusing
- Restlessness
- Low patience
- Withdrawing from people
- Procrastinating
- Overworking
- Feeling emotionally flat
- Crying more easily
- Losing interest in things you usually enjoy
The Mayo Clinic notes that stress symptoms can affect your body, thoughts, feelings, and behavior. That is why stress can sometimes feel confusing. You may think you have a motivation problem, a sleep problem, a relationship problem, or a health problem when stress is part of the picture.
Why Am I Always Stressed?
If you feel stressed all the time, the issue may not be one single thing.
It may be the stack.
Work pressure.
Financial concerns.
Family responsibilities.
Relationship tension.
Parenting demands.
Health worries.
Unclear boundaries.
Too much screen time.
Not enough sleep.
Not enough help.
Too many decisions.
Too little recovery.
Sometimes stress also comes from internal pressure, such as perfectionism, people-pleasing, fear of failure, guilt, or feeling responsible for everyone else’s emotions.
You may not be able to remove every stressor from your life. But therapy can help you understand what is driving the stress, what can be changed, what needs boundaries, and what support you need.
Constant Stress and Overthinking
Stress and overthinking often feed each other.
Stress gives your brain something to solve. Overthinking tries to solve it by running every possible scenario.
You replay conversations.
You rehearse arguments.
You check every detail.
You imagine worst-case outcomes.
You tell yourself you are preparing, but you end up feeling more drained.
The brain does this because it wants certainty. It is trying to protect you.
But when thinking turns into rumination, it stops helping. It keeps your nervous system activated and makes it harder to rest, focus, or make clear decisions.
In therapy, we may use Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy to help you notice the thoughts that intensify stress and practice more useful ways of responding.
Acute Stress vs. Chronic Stress
Acute stress is short-term. It happens around a specific event, then your body usually returns to baseline.
Examples include:
- A work presentation
- A difficult conversation
- A near accident
- A deadline
- A sudden change of plans
Chronic stress lasts longer. It may come from ongoing pressure, unresolved problems, or living in a constant state of tension.
Examples include:
- Long-term financial pressure
- A toxic work environment
- Caregiving stress
- Ongoing relationship conflict
- Chronic illness
- Parenting without enough support
- Prolonged uncertainty
- Repeated trauma or unsafe environments
Chronic stress matters because your body is not designed to stay in high-alert mode all the time. Long-term activation of the stress response can increase the risk of problems such as anxiety, depression, digestive issues, headaches, muscle tension, heart disease, sleep problems, weight gain, and difficulty with memory and focus.
Where Is All This Stress Coming From?
When stress feels constant, it can be hard to name what is actually causing it.
You might say, “Everything.”
That may be true. But in therapy, we often slow it down and look at the main sources one by one.
Stress usually becomes more manageable when you can separate the triggers instead of carrying them as one giant blur.
Common Causes of Stress in Daily Life
Common sources of stress include:
- Workload
- Deadlines
- Financial pressure
- Parenting demands
- Relationship conflict
- Health concerns
- Family expectations
- Grief
- Divorce or separation
- Caregiving
- Major decisions
- Moving
- College or school pressure
- Social pressure
- Lack of sleep
- Poor boundaries
- Loneliness
- Uncertainty about the future
Not all stressors are negative. Marriage, a new baby, a promotion, a move, or a career change can all bring stress, even when they are wanted.
That can make people feel guilty. They think, “I should be happy.”
But stress is not always a sign that something is bad. Sometimes it means something is demanding a lot from you.
Work Stress Symptoms You Should Not Ignore
Work stress can start quietly and build over time.
You may notice:
- Sunday night dread
- Trouble switching off after work
- Checking emails constantly
- Feeling irritable with co-workers or clients
- Perfectionism
- Procrastination
- Fear of making mistakes
- Feeling undervalued
- Working longer but getting less done
- Feeling emotionally detached
- Loss of motivation
- Physical tension during the workday
Work stress can also affect your home life. You may be present physically but mentally still at work. You may have less patience, less energy, and less emotional space for the people you care about.
If work stress is tied to purpose, direction, boundaries, or leadership pressure, career coaching or life coaching may be part of your support.
Parenting Stress
Parenting stress can be intense because there is often no clear finish line.
You may be managing school, meals, emotions, appointments, work, behavior, screens, sleep, activities, and your own adult responsibilities at the same time.
Parenting stress may show up as:
- Feeling touched out or overstimulated
- Snapping, then feeling guilty
- Worrying constantly about your child
- Feeling like you are never doing enough
- Comparing yourself to other parents
- Losing time for yourself
- Feeling disconnected from your partner
- Struggling to rest without guilt
Parenting can be meaningful and stressful at the same time. Both can be true.
When stress is affecting the family system, family counseling can help improve communication, support, and understanding at home.
Financial Stress
Financial stress can feel heavy because money is connected to safety, freedom, identity, relationships, and the future.
It can affect your sleep, mood, confidence, and decision-making.
Financial stress may include:
- Worrying about bills
- Debt pressure
- Income changes
- Job insecurity
- Medical costs
- Family financial responsibilities
- Conflict with a partner about spending
- Feeling ashamed or embarrassed
- Avoiding bank accounts or bills because they feel too overwhelming
Therapy cannot remove every financial pressure, but it can help you cope more clearly, reduce shame, communicate better, make decisions from a steadier place, and manage the anxiety that financial stress can create.
Relationship Stress
Relationship stress can be one of the most emotionally draining forms of stress because it affects your sense of safety, belonging, and support.
It may involve:
- Repeated arguments
- Lack of communication
- Trust issues
- Emotional distance
- Conflict about money, parenting, intimacy, or priorities
- Feeling unheard
- Carrying more than your share
- Walking on eggshells
- Feeling lonely in the relationship
Long-term relationship stress can spill into sleep, work, parenting, physical health, and self-esteem.
Support may include individual therapy, couples counseling, or both, depending on what is happening and what feels safe.
Stress and Sleep Problems
Stress and sleep have a two-way relationship.
Stress can make it harder to sleep. Poor sleep can make stress harder to handle the next day.
You may notice:
- Trouble falling asleep
- Waking in the night
- Early morning waking
- Racing thoughts at bedtime
- Checking the clock
- Feeling tired but wired
- Needing caffeine to function
- Feeling more emotional after poor sleep
This creates a loop. The less you sleep, the harder it is to regulate emotions, focus, problem-solve, and respond calmly.
Stress therapy can help you look at both sides of the loop: what is keeping your nervous system activated, and what daily habits may be making recovery harder.
How Chronic Stress Can Lead to Burnout, Anxiety, or Depression
Chronic stress can slowly drain your emotional reserves.
At first, you may push through.
Then you may start feeling tired, cynical, resentful, anxious, numb, or unmotivated.
Burnout can feel like:
- Emotional exhaustion
- Loss of motivation
- Feeling detached
- Reduced performance
- Irritability
- Feeling trapped
- Feeling like rest does not help
- Difficulty caring about things you used to care about
Stress can also overlap with anxiety and depression. If your stress has started affecting your mood, motivation, interest in life, or sense of hope, depression counseling may be helpful alongside stress support.
How Stress Affects the Immune System, Heart, and Hormones
Stress is a whole-body experience.
When your stress response is activated, your body releases stress hormones that prepare you for action. In short bursts, that can be useful. Over time, constant activation can strain the body.
Chronic stress may affect:
- Immune function
- Blood pressure
- Heart and circulation
- Digestion
- Muscle tension
- Sleep hormones
- Reproductive hormones
- Appetite
- Inflammation
- Memory and focus
- Pain sensitivity
Stress management is not only about feeling calmer. It is part of caring for your overall wellbeing.
Stress Management Techniques That Actually Help
You do not need a perfect wellness routine to manage stress.
You need tools that are realistic enough to use on a hard day.
Stress management works best when it combines short-term relief with long-term change. Breathing can help in the moment. Therapy can help you understand patterns. Boundaries can reduce future stress. Sleep and movement can support your nervous system over time.
Breathing Exercises for Immediate Stress Relief
When you are stressed, your breathing often becomes shallow, fast, or tight.
Slowing your breathing can send a signal to your nervous system that you are not in immediate danger.
Try this simple breathing exercise:
- Inhale through your nose for 4 seconds.
- Hold gently for 2 seconds.
- Exhale slowly for 6 seconds.
- Repeat for 2 to 5 minutes.
You can also try box breathing:
- Inhale for 4 seconds.
- Hold for 4 seconds.
- Exhale for 4 seconds.
- Hold for 4 seconds.
- Repeat several rounds.
Breathing will not solve every source of stress. But it can help lower the intensity enough for you to think more clearly.
How to Calm Your Mind in 5 Minutes
When stress is high, start small.
A five-minute reset can help your body shift out of full-alert mode.
Try this:
- Put both feet on the floor.
- Relax your shoulders.
- Take three slow breaths.
- Name five things you can see.
- Name four things you can feel.
- Name three things you can hear.
- Name two things you can smell.
- Name one thing you can taste.
- Ask yourself, “What is the next useful step, not the perfect step?”
This kind of grounding can help when your mind is racing or you feel pulled into worst-case thinking.
Mindfulness for Stress Reduction
Mindfulness means paying attention to the present moment with more awareness and less judgement.
It does not mean clearing your mind. It does not mean forcing yourself to relax. It does not mean pretending things are fine.
Mindfulness may look like:
- Noticing your breath
- Observing your thoughts without following every one
- Paying attention to body sensations
- Eating slowly
- Walking without your phone
- Taking a pause before reacting
- Naming the emotion you are feeling
At Dallas Whole Life Counseling, meditation and mindfulness training can help you learn techniques to calm your mind and relax your body in everyday life.
CBT Techniques for Stress Management
CBT helps you understand the connection between thoughts, feelings, body sensations, and behaviour.
Stress often becomes worse because of the way your mind interprets pressure.
For example:
“I cannot make a mistake.”
“Everyone will be upset with me.”
“I should be able to handle this.”
“If I say no, I will disappoint them.”
“I am failing.”
“I will never catch up.”
These thoughts can increase tension, avoidance, guilt, or overworking.
CBT helps you pause and ask:
- Is this thought accurate?
- Is it helpful?
- What evidence supports it?
- What evidence challenges it?
- What would I say to a friend in this situation?
- What is a more balanced way to look at this?
- What action would help rather than fuel the stress?
CBT is not about fake positivity. It is about learning to think more clearly when stress is pulling you into extremes.
How ACT Helps With Stress
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, or ACT, can also help with stress.
ACT does not focus on getting rid of every uncomfortable thought or feeling. Instead, it helps you notice difficult internal experiences and take action based on your values.
That can be useful when stress sounds like:
“I cannot do this unless I feel calm first.”
“I need certainty before I make a decision.”
“I have to avoid this because it feels uncomfortable.”
ACT helps you ask:
“What matters here?”
“What kind of person do I want to be in this situation?”
“What can I do even if stress is present?”
Our Acceptance and Commitment Therapy approach may support stress, anxiety, depression, OCD, chronic pain, and other concerns.
How Exercise Reduces Stress Naturally
Movement is one of the most practical ways to support stress recovery.
You do not need to become an athlete. Walking, stretching, dancing, swimming, cycling, yoga, strength training, or gentle movement can all help.
The CDC states that adults need at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity per week, and that physical activity can reduce short-term feelings of anxiety, improve sleep, and support brain health.
Start smaller than you think you should.
A 10-minute walk is better than waiting for the perfect hour-long workout that never happens.
Time Management That Actually Reduces Stress
Time management is not just about squeezing more into your day.
Sometimes it is about admitting that too much is already there.
Helpful time management may include:
- Writing tasks down instead of carrying them mentally
- Choosing the top three priorities for the day
- Breaking large tasks into smaller steps
- Adding buffer time
- Saying no earlier
- Setting a stop time
- Grouping similar tasks
- Reducing unnecessary decisions
- Delegating where possible
- Planning recovery time, not only productivity time
If your schedule only works when nothing goes wrong, the schedule is too tight.
Stress management often means building a life with more breathing room.
Healthy Habits That Lower Stress Long Term
Stress is easier to manage when your body has basic support.
That does not mean you need a perfect routine. It means small, consistent habits can make stress less overwhelming.
Helpful habits may include:
- Keeping a regular sleep schedule
- Eating enough throughout the day
- Drinking water
- Moving your body
- Taking breaks before you crash
- Spending time outside
- Reducing late-night scrolling
- Limiting caffeine if it worsens anxiety
- Creating a short evening wind-down
- Talking to supportive people
- Making space for something enjoyable
- Practicing mindfulness or prayer
- Getting professional support when needed
The CDC recommends small daily steps to manage stress, including identifying triggers and finding healthy coping strategies that work for you.
Stress Management Therapy vs Self-Help
Self-help can be useful. Breathing exercises, movement, journaling, sleep changes, mindfulness, and better time management can all make a difference.
But self-help may not be enough when stress is chronic, intense, tied to trauma, affecting relationships, or connected to anxiety or depression.
Therapy helps because you are not only collecting tips. You are looking at the deeper pattern.
A therapist can help you explore:
- What triggers your stress
- What keeps it going
- How your thoughts intensify it
- What boundaries are missing
- What emotions do you avoid
- What patterns come from family, trauma, or past experiences
- What skills would help now
- What changes are realistic
- How to prevent burnout from returning
Self-help can reduce symptoms. Therapy can help you understand the system underneath them.
Is Online Stress Counseling Effective?
Online therapy can be helpful for many people managing stress, anxiety, burnout, and related concerns. It may be especially helpful if:
- Your schedule is full
- You live outside the Dallas/Fort Worth area
- You prefer therapy from home
- Travel adds more stress
- You need evening or weekend options
- You want support anywhere in Texas
- You are more likely to attend consistently when therapy is easier to access
At Dallas Whole Life Counseling, online virtual therapy happens through secure Zoom sessions and is available for individuals, kids, teens, couples, and families.
When Should You Seek Stress Management Therapy?
You do not need to wait until you are falling apart.
It may be time to seek therapy if:
- Stress is affecting your sleep
- You feel overwhelmed most days
- You are more irritable than usual
- You feel anxious, low, numb, or hopeless
- Your relationships are being affected
- You feel burned out
- You cannot relax
- You are using unhealthy coping habits
- You are having frequent physical symptoms
- You feel stuck in overthinking
- You are struggling to complete normal tasks
- You keep saying, “I cannot keep doing this”
The NIMH recommends seeking professional help when severe or distressing symptoms last two weeks or more, including sleep trouble, appetite changes, difficulty concentrating, loss of interest, difficulty completing usual tasks, irritability, frustration, or restlessness.
If you are in immediate danger or thinking about harming yourself, call emergency services or use crisis support right away.
Online Stress Management Therapy at Dallas Whole Life Counseling
At Dallas Whole Life Counseling, we help clients manage stress with practical, compassionate, and personalized support.
We work with individuals, couples, teens, kids, and families across a wide range of mental and emotional health concerns. We offer in-person sessions in the Dallas/Fort Worth area and virtual counseling sessions anywhere in Texas.
For stress management, we may use a combination of:
- CBT
- Mindfulness
- Meditation training
- ACT
- Individual counseling
- Couples counseling
- Family therapy
- Life coaching
- Career coaching
- Practical coping skills
- Personalized stress management planning
Stress therapy is not just about telling you to breathe more. It is about helping you understand what is causing your stress, how it affects you, and what changes can help you feel more steady.
What to Expect in Your First Online Stress Therapy Session
Your first session is usually about understanding what has been happening and what you need support with.
We may talk about:
- Your main stressors
- How long you have felt stressed
- Sleep, appetite, energy, and focus
- Work, family, financial, or relationship pressure
- Physical stress symptoms
- Anxiety or mood changes
- Current coping habits
- Past therapy or mental health history
- Your goals for therapy
- Whether online, in-person, individual, couples, or family support fits best
You do not have to have everything organized before the session.
You can start with:
“I’m overwhelmed.”
“I’m tired all the time.”
“I cannot switch off.”
“I do not know what needs to change.”
“I just need help making sense of this.”
That is enough.
How Therapy Helps With Chronic Stress and Burnout
Chronic stress and burnout usually need more than a quick break.
Therapy can help you understand what has been draining you and what has made it hard to stop.
This may include:
- Perfectionism
- People-pleasing
- Poor boundaries
- Relationship conflict
- Work overload
- Financial pressure
- Trauma responses
- Family expectations
- Avoidance
- Emotional suppression
- Lack of recovery time
- Fear of letting people down
From there, we can help you create a plan that fits your actual life.
That may include coping skills, communication support, schedule changes, boundary work, mindset shifts, values work, or deeper therapy around long-standing patterns.
Individual Stress Therapy, Couples Stress Counseling, and Life Coaching
Stress does not always sit inside one person. Sometimes it lives in the relationship, family system, work environment, or life structure.
That is why support may look different depending on the situation.
Individual therapy can help you understand your stress patterns, emotions, thoughts, and coping habits.
Couples counseling can help when stress is causing conflict, distance, resentment, or communication breakdown.
Family therapy can support families dealing with parenting pressure, major transitions, conflict, or shared stress.
Life coaching can help when stress is tied to goals, direction, confidence, structure, or personal growth.
Career coaching can help when work stress is connected to leadership, career decisions, burnout, or major professional change.
The goal is to match the support to the real source of the stress.
Evening, Weekend, Insurance, and Sliding-Scale Options
Stress does not wait for a quiet season of life.
That is why we offer appointments during normal business hours, evenings, and weekends, depending on availability. We also offer online sessions, so therapy can be easier to fit into your schedule.
Dallas Whole Life Counseling works with clients who use insurance and clients who pay out of pocket. In-network co-pays depend on your benefits. Out-of-network payments usually range from $150 to $200 per session. For uninsured clients, sliding-scale rates may start as low as $60 per session, depending on need and financial situation.
You can use therapy rates and insurance information to understand payment options, or use find a counselor to search by concern, therapist fit, and insurance.
Stress Is Normal. Staying Stuck in It Does Not Have to Be.
Stress is part of life. But constant stress does not have to become your normal.
You deserve support before burnout takes over.
You deserve sleep that feels restful.
You deserve relationships that are not running on short tempers and exhaustion.
You deserve tools that help in real life, not just advice that sounds nice on paper.
At Dallas Whole Life Counseling, we offer online stress management therapy anywhere in Texas through secure Zoom sessions. Our licensed Texas therapists can help with chronic stress, burnout, anxiety, overthinking, relationship stress, work stress, parenting stress, and life transitions.
If stress is affecting your sleep, health, mood, focus, relationships, or peace of mind, we are here to help you take the next step.
FAQs
What is stress management and why does it matter?
Stress management is the process of recognizing your stress triggers and using healthy tools to reduce their impact. It matters because chronic stress can affect your sleep, mood, body, relationships, work, and long-term wellbeing.
What is the difference between stress and anxiety?
Stress is usually connected to a specific pressure or demand. Anxiety can continue even when the stressor is unclear or has passed, and often involves fear, worry, or dread about what might happen.
What are signs that I am too stressed?
Common signs include trouble sleeping, irritability, racing thoughts, muscle tension, headaches, stomach discomfort, low patience, trouble focusing, emotional exhaustion, and feeling overwhelmed most days.
What causes chronic stress?
Chronic stress can come from ongoing work pressure, financial concerns, caregiving, parenting, relationship conflict, trauma, health issues, poor boundaries, uncertainty, or trying to carry too much for too long.
How does stress affect the body?
Stress can affect the nervous system, muscles, digestion, sleep, hormones, heart health, immune function, breathing, appetite, and concentration. Chronic stress can place ongoing strain on the body.
What are the most effective stress management techniques?
Helpful techniques may include breathing exercises, mindfulness, CBT tools, movement, better sleep routines, time management, boundaries, social support, relaxation practices, and therapy.
What breathing exercise helps reduce stress quickly?
A simple option is to inhale for 4 seconds, hold gently for 2 seconds, and exhale for 6 seconds. Repeating this for a few minutes can help calm the nervous system.
How does CBT help with stress management?
CBT helps you identify thoughts and behaviors that increase stress. It teaches you to respond to pressure with clearer thinking, healthier coping skills, and more useful actions.
How does mindfulness help with stress?
Mindfulness helps you notice thoughts, emotions, and body sensations without reacting automatically. It can reduce rumination and help you return to the present moment.
Can exercise reduce stress?
Yes. Movement can help reduce tension, support sleep, improve mood, and lower short-term anxiety. Even a short walk can help your body shift out of high-alert mode.
What is the difference between stress therapy and self-help?
Self-help gives you tools you can use on your own. Stress therapy helps you understand deeper patterns, triggers, boundaries, thoughts, and emotional habits that may be keeping stress active.
Is online stress counseling effective?
Online stress counseling can be helpful for many people, especially when therapy uses evidence-based tools and the person has privacy, a stable connection, and a good fit with the therapist.
When should I seek professional help for stress?
Consider therapy if stress affects your sleep, mood, health, relationships, focus, work, parenting, or ability to complete daily tasks, especially if symptoms last two weeks or more.
What happens in a first online stress therapy session?
Your first session usually focuses on your stressors, symptoms, history, coping habits, goals, and what kind of support may fit best. You do not need to know exactly what to say before starting.
Can stress management therapy help with burnout?
Yes. Therapy can help you understand what led to burnout, rebuild coping skills, set boundaries, address thought patterns, and create a more sustainable way forward.
Does Dallas Whole Life Counseling offer online stress management therapy in Texas?
Yes. We offer virtual counseling sessions anywhere in Texas, as well as in-person sessions in the Dallas/Fort Worth area.
Does Dallas Whole Life Counseling accept insurance for stress therapy?
We accept many major Texas insurance plans. Costs depend on your plan, benefits, therapist, and network status. Sliding-scale options may be available for uninsured clients based on need.





