Yanina Lambert
LMFT· Accepting clientsCalifornia · 20 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, trauma and abuse, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Trauma and abuse · Depression · +12 more
Read profileThe therapist listings are provided by BetterHelp and we may earn a commission if you use our link — at no cost to you.
This page helps you find therapists who use Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) to treat OCD. Explore clinician profiles that emphasize ACT-based approaches and browse listings below to find a good match and book a consult.
California · 20 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, trauma and abuse, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Trauma and abuse · Depression · +12 more
Read profileLouisiana · 15 yrs exp
My goal is to walk alongside you as you develop resilience, insight, and hope.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Family · Trauma and abuse · +12 more
Read profileAlabama · 22 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, trauma and abuse, anger management, self esteem, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Anger · Self esteem · +16 more
Read profileFlorida · 20 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, addictions, relationship issues, self esteem, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · Relationship · Self esteem · +16 more
Read profileOregon · 26 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, trauma and abuse, grief, depression, and coping with life changes.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Grief · Depression · +10 more
Read profileCalifornia · 7 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, addictions, trauma and abuse, grief, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · Trauma and abuse · Grief · +8 more
Read profileNew York · 9 yrs exp
I work with clients on addictions, LGBT, intimacy-related issues, and depression.
Addictions · LGBT · Intimacy-related issues · Depression · +9 more
Read profileMissouri · 35 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, trauma and abuse, parenting issues, self esteem, and coping with life changes.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Parenting · Self esteem · +13 more
Read profileColorado · 27 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, trauma and abuse, grief, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Trauma and abuse · Grief · +16 more
Read profileTexas · 10 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, family conflicts, depression, and coping with life changes.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Family · Depression · +14 more
Read profileArizona · 20 yrs exp
If you choose to work with me, I believe you will find meaning and help in the experience.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · Grief · Self esteem · +14 more
Read profileColorado · 11 yrs exp
My therapeutic practice is deeply committed to understanding each individual's journey.
Stress, Anxiety · LGBT · Trauma and abuse · Anger · +15 more
Read profileMichigan · 21 yrs exp
I believe in treating everyone with respect, sensitivity, and compassion.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Family · Bipolar · +14 more
Read profileTexas · 22 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, trauma and abuse, depression, and ADHD.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Trauma and abuse · Depression · +16 more
Read profileNew Jersey · 8 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, trauma and abuse, bipolar disorder, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Trauma and abuse · Bipolar · +14 more
Read profileTennessee · 35 yrs exp
I am certain that with time and working together, I can help you as well.
Stress, Anxiety · Grief · Self esteem · Depression · +8 more
Read profileOregon · 10 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, grief, self esteem, depression, and coping with life changes.
Stress, Anxiety · Grief · Self esteem · Depression · +10 more
Read profileUtah · 17 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, trauma and abuse, anger management, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Anger · Depression · +13 more
Read profilePennsylvania · 20 yrs exp
I believe in treating anyone with respect, sensitivity and compassion.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · LGBT · Self esteem · +12 more
Read profileFlorida · 25 yrs exp
I work with clients on relationship issues, trauma and abuse, intimacy-related issues, anger management, and depression.
Relationship · Trauma and abuse · Intimacy-related issues · Anger · +16 more
Read profilePennsylvania · 25 yrs exp
My therapeutic style centers on building trust, fostering self-love, and supporting personal growth.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · LGBT · Grief · +16 more
Read profileFlorida · 15 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, family conflicts, intimacy-related issues, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Family · Intimacy-related issues · +15 more
Read profileFlorida · 25 yrs exp
Jean Kraljev is a Licensed Professional Counselor practising in Florida, currently accepting new clients.
Addictions · Bipolar · Depression · Coping with life changes · +7 more
Read profileMichigan · 13 yrs exp
You can expect me to listen and empower you to promote healing and change without judgement.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · Trauma and abuse · Depression · +16 more
Read profileObsessive-compulsive disorder often shows up as repetitive thoughts, images, or urges that feel intrusive, paired with behaviors or rituals aimed at reducing distress. Those rituals can provide short-term relief but often strengthen the cycle of obsession and compulsion over time. If you are living with OCD, you may recognize how efforts to control or eliminate distressing thoughts can paradoxically make them more persistent and powerful.
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy approaches OCD differently than therapies that focus primarily on disputing or changing thought content. ACT is part of the third wave of cognitive behavioral therapies and centers on increasing psychological flexibility - the ability to be present, accept internal experience when necessary, and take value-driven action even when uncomfortable feelings or urges are present. Rather than arguing with your thoughts, ACT helps you change your relationship to them so they have less control over your actions. For many people with OCD, that shift in perspective can reduce the grip of rituals and avoidance and make room for purposeful living.
ACT identifies psychological flexibility as the central outcome that supports meaningful change. With OCD, rigidity often shows up as a pattern of fusion with thoughts - you may treat intrusive thoughts as literal commands or signals of danger - and avoidance or compulsive actions intended to neutralize that perceived threat. ACT works to loosen fusion so that thoughts are seen as passing mental events rather than directives you must obey. As psychological flexibility grows, you gain more freedom to choose actions that align with your values even when uncomfortable internal experiences are present.
Cognitive defusion teaches you to step back from obsessive thoughts so they lose intensity and control. Instead of trying to suppress a thought, you learn experiential techniques that change how the thought feels - for example, noticing the thought's words, repeating it in a silly voice, or labeling it as "just a thought." Acceptance asks you to allow anxious feelings and urges without engaging in rituals to remove them. Over time the urge to compulsively act often decreases when it is no longer reinforced by immediate rituals.
Present-moment awareness helps you notice obsessive loops as they arise and choose how to respond rather than reacting automatically. Self-as-context offers a stable vantage point from which you can observe thoughts and feelings without being swept away. Values clarification identifies what matters most to you - relationships, work, creativity, or health - and committed action supports steps toward those goals even when anxiety or urges appear. Together, these processes create a practical counter to the OCD cycle by reducing avoidance and increasing purposeful action.
Early ACT sessions for OCD typically focus on assessment, education, and building a shared understanding of how your obsessions and compulsions operate. Your therapist will likely invite you to map your typical OCD cycles and identify what you do to try to manage distress. You will begin learning basic ACT metaphors and experiential exercises that illustrate defusion and acceptance so the approach feels concrete rather than abstract.
As therapy progresses, you will practice mindfulness and defusion exercises during sessions and as between-session work. Exercises might include simple noticing practices, behavioral experiments where you intentionally allow a thought or urge to be present without following the compulsion, and willingness practices that invite discomfort as a natural part of change. Values work is woven into this phase so that the choices you experiment with are meaningful rather than arbitrary.
Later sessions concentrate on consolidating skills and translating them into real-world changes. You and your therapist will refine strategies for responding to high-stress moments and build plans for maintaining gains. Typical course length varies depending on severity and individual needs - some people find measurable relief in several months, while others continue work over a longer period to deepen psychological flexibility and expand valued living. ACT emphasizes skill generalization so the work you do in therapy can be applied across situations.
If you find that efforts to challenge or suppress thoughts often make them feel worse, ACT may be a strong fit because it offers an alternative pathway that changes how you relate to those thoughts rather than trying to change their content. People who are motivated to pursue valued goals even in the presence of anxiety, and who appreciate experiential practice over purely cognitive debate, often feel particularly aligned with ACT. The approach can be helpful whether your rituals are overt behaviors or mental rituals such as rumination and checking.
ACT shares some heritage with traditional cognitive behavioral approaches but differs in emphasis. While classic CBT may focus on identifying and disputing cognitive distortions, ACT shifts focus to changing your relationship to thoughts through defusion and acceptance. Exposure-based methods, including exposure and response prevention, target avoidance and compulsive responses directly. ACT and exposure work can complement one another because both reduce avoidance - ACT supplies a values-based scaffold and defusion skills that can make exposure work more tolerable and meaningful. Some therapists integrate elements of both approaches when appropriate to the client's needs and preferences.
Therapy decisions are personal. If you are unsure whether ACT is the right path, consider an initial consultation with an ACT-trained clinician to explore whether the model resonates with you and your goals.
When evaluating therapists, look for clinicians who have specific training in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and experience working with OCD. Membership or training recognized by professional ACT organizations can indicate ongoing commitment to fidelity and learning. Licensure in your region is important for legal and ethical practice, and many ACT therapists pursue workshops, supervised practica, or advanced training focused on applying ACT to anxiety and obsessive-compulsive presentations.
A brief consultation call can tell you a lot about fit. You might ask how the clinician typically structures ACT work for OCD, what their experience is with defusion and willingness exercises, and how they measure progress. Notice whether they explain the approach in language you find clear, and whether they invite questions about values and everyday priorities. Good fit often comes down to whether you feel heard and whether the therapist's way of describing ACT matches how you like to learn and work.
ACT translates well to online formats because many experiential exercises involve guided attention, metaphors, and live practice that work effectively over video. If you plan to use teletherapy, ask how the therapist structures between-session practice and whether they provide written or recorded materials to support exercises. Accessibility to a therapist who is well-trained in ACT can make it easier to practice regularly and apply skills in daily life, regardless of whether you meet in person or online.
Choosing an ACT therapist is a practical step toward building psychological flexibility and reclaiming space to live according to your values. If ACT resonates, use the therapist listings above to compare profiles, read about clinicians' approaches to OCD, and book a consult to see who feels like the right match for your work.
Alabama
53 therapists
Alaska
5 therapists
Arizona
49 therapists
Arkansas
15 therapists
California
249 therapists
Colorado
72 therapists
Connecticut
17 therapists
Delaware
12 therapists
Florida
319 therapists
Georgia
120 therapists
Hawaii
10 therapists
Idaho
30 therapists
Illinois
122 therapists
Indiana
51 therapists
Iowa
14 therapists
Kansas
32 therapists
Kentucky
27 therapists
Louisiana
58 therapists
Maine
16 therapists
Maryland
28 therapists
Massachusetts
26 therapists
Michigan
120 therapists
Minnesota
42 therapists
Mississippi
25 therapists
Missouri
95 therapists
Montana
18 therapists
Nebraska
16 therapists
Nevada
16 therapists
New Hampshire
9 therapists
New Jersey
54 therapists
New Mexico
15 therapists
New York
117 therapists
North Carolina
135 therapists
North Dakota
7 therapists
Ohio
62 therapists
Oklahoma
52 therapists
Oregon
38 therapists
Pennsylvania
95 therapists
Rhode Island
9 therapists
South Carolina
79 therapists
South Dakota
3 therapists
Tennessee
42 therapists
Texas
275 therapists
Utah
37 therapists
Vermont
4 therapists
Virginia
41 therapists
Washington
51 therapists
West Virginia
11 therapists
Wisconsin
51 therapists
Wyoming
12 therapists