If you live in New York and are looking for help with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD), you are in the right place. Anxiety conditions affect roughly 1 in 6 adults across the United States, and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is one of the most common reasons people first reach out to us.
LAR Coaching works with New York residents every week — sessions are scheduled in Eastern Time (ET) so they fit comfortably around your day. What follows is the same article we share with every new client — written for New York residents who want to understand what recovery actually looks like.
About anxiety recovery in New York
New York is home to 8.3 million in the five boroughs, 20 million in the metro area. Healthcare for residents seeking support runs through private insurance, Medicaid, Medicare, and a network of NYC Health + Hospitals public facilities. The city is connected by the MTA subway, Metro-North, LIRR, NJ Transit and the PATH, which shapes how easily local residents can attend in-person appointments — and why so many people in New York now choose remote recovery sessions by Zoom, Phone or FaceTime instead.
Common drivers of anxiety in New York include the always-on culture of finance, media and law, the cost of living, and the cumulative toll of dense urban commuting. As home to NYU, Columbia, CUNY, Wall Street, every major media network and a workforce that disproportionately reports anxiety symptoms in CDC surveys, the city has a substantial population of professionals, students, parents, and shift-workers whose anxiety symptoms are most often shaped by these specific local conditions rather than by anything wrong with the individual.
If you are in immediate distress, contact 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, NYC Well 1-888-NYC-WELL (1-888-692-9355). For permanent recovery, LAR Coaches work with New York residents remotely — no waiting list, no GP referral required, no travel to a clinic.
OCD is exhausting. The intrusive thoughts arrive without warning. The compulsions provide brief, hollow relief and then have to be done again. Time disappears into rituals. Relationships strain. The condition is widely misunderstood — both by the people who have it and the people who try to help.
The most common treatment offered for OCD is Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP). Many people find ERP helpful. Many others find it gruelling, partially effective, or actively traumatising. There is another way.
What OCD actually is
OCD is an anxiety disorder. The intrusive thoughts are not the cause of the condition — they are a symptom of an over-active threat-response system attaching itself to whatever the mind happens to find most disturbing. The compulsions are an attempt to neutralise the anxiety the thoughts produce. Relief comes — briefly — and then the system fires again and the cycle restarts.
This is the core insight that changes everything: the obsessions are not the problem; the underlying anxiety is. When the anxiety resolves, the intrusive thoughts lose their emotional charge and the compulsions become unnecessary.
Why the Linden Method works for OCD without exposure
The Linden Method does not ask you to repeatedly confront your most distressing thoughts or images. It does not ask you to suppress your compulsions through willpower. Instead, it addresses the physiological state that gives OCD its energy. As the threat-response system returns to baseline, two things happen in sequence: the intrusive thoughts become less frequent and less distressing; and the compulsions, having lost their function, fade.
This is the standard pattern across more than 650,000 LAR recoveries.
For people OCD has dominated for years
Many of our clients have lived with OCD for decades and have tried everything. They expect — quite reasonably — to be sceptical when we say recovery is possible without ERP. We welcome the scepticism. The first Recovery Call is a conversation, not a sales pitch. You will leave it with a clearer understanding of what OCD is, what it is not, and what is actually possible.
Practical steps to start
The honest invitation
OCD is recoverable. Genuinely, fully, permanently recoverable — and without the most distressing aspects of standard exposure-based protocols. Book your free 30-minute Recovery Call today. We never look back, only looking forward.
Recovery for New York residents
You do not have to live with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD). Book a free 30-minute Recovery Call with one of our Coaches — sessions are available in Eastern Time (ET), delivered via Zoom, Phone or FaceTime, wherever in New York you happen to be.
We never look back, only looking forward.