When “Just Push Through” Isn’t Cutting It Anymore
There’s a particular Midwest habit of endurance. We tolerate potholes, winter, and extended family opinions with roughly the same expression.
Anxiety tends to get folded into that same philosophy: keep going, don’t make it a thing.
But anxiety—unlike a bad February—doesn’t pass just because you ignore it.
At some point, it stops being background noise and starts acting like management.
1. Your Brain Won’t Turn Off (Even When Nothing Is Wrong)
You’re solving problems that don’t exist yet. Replaying conversations like you’re editing a documentary no one asked for.
If your nervous system is acting like every moment is urgent, that’s not personality—that’s anxiety doing overtime.
2. You’re Functioning… But It’s a Performance
You’re productive. Reliable. Possibly even impressive.
Also:
exhausted
mentally loud
one minor inconvenience away from unraveling
This is the quiet brand of anxiety that looks like competence and feels like survival.
3. Your Body Is Carrying the Tab
Anxiety doesn’t stay politely in your thoughts.
It shows up as:
tight chest
poor sleep
headaches
stomach issues
When your body keeps sounding the alarm, it’s worth asking what it’s trying to say.
4. Your World Is Getting Smaller
Avoidance is subtle at first. Then it becomes policy.
You skip things. Delay things. Decline things.
Eventually, your life starts to reorganize itself around what feels safe instead of what actually matters.
5. You’re Irritable, Not Just Anxious
Anxiety isn’t always nervous energy. Sometimes it’s:
snapping at people
low tolerance for anything
feeling constantly overstimulated
It’s what happens when your system is maxed out and still being asked for more.
6. Your Coping Tools Have Stopped Working
You’ve tried the breathing exercises. The journaling. The podcasts.
They helped—until they didn’t.
That’s usually the point where anxiety needs more than self-management. It needs structure, strategy, and someone who knows what they’re doing.
7. Anxiety is Affecting Your Life in Actual, Measurable Ways
Work is harder. Relationships feel strained. Decisions feel impossible.
This is the line where anxiety stops being internal and starts shaping your reality.
Why Professional Help Actually Helps
Because anxiety is both mental and physical—and treating it effectively usually requires both.
At Bright Spot Counseling in Farmington Hills, Michigan, therapy isn’t just talk-and-nod. It’s targeted, evidence-based, and built for people who are tired of spinning their wheels.
The practice was founded by Ginger Houghton, LMSW, CAADC, a licensed clinical social worker and Certified Advanced Addiction and Drug Counselor with extensive experience treating anxiety, insomnia, trauma, and high-functioning overcontrol. She holds a Master’s in Social Work from Eastern Michigan University and previously served as Director of Behavioral Health at Jewish Family Service of Metropolitan Detroit.
Her approach pulls from therapies that actually move the needle, including:
- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
- Radically Open Dialectical Behavior Therapy (RO-DBT)
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I)
- Mind-body and nervous system-based interventions
Translation: not just talking about your anxiety—actually changing how it operates.
A Michigan-Specific Reality Check for Anxiety Help
Between long winters, limited sunlight, and a culture that rewards pushing through discomfort, anxiety can quietly escalate here.
Telehealth options across Michigan have made getting support more accessible than ever—but many people still wait longer than they need to.
You don’t get extra credit for struggling alone.
Call to Action
If any of this feels a little too familiar, consider that your sign.
Bright Spot Counseling offers both in-person sessions in Farmington Hills and telehealth across Michigan. Whether your anxiety is loud and obvious or polished and high-functioning, there’s a way to work with it that doesn’t involve white-knuckling your way through life.
Reach out to schedule a consultation. It’s not a dramatic life overhaul—it’s a conversation. And it might be the one that changes how all of this feels.
FAQ: Anxiety & Getting Help in Michigan
Stress tends to be tied to specific situations. Anxiety lingers, generalizes, and doesn’t clock out when the situation ends.
In Michigan, look for licensed professionals like LMSWs, LPCs, or psychologists. Additional certifications—like CAADC for substance use or specialized training in CBT or trauma—indicate deeper expertise.
LMSW: Licensed Master Social Worker
CAADC: Certified Advanced Alcohol and Drug Counselor
Together, they reflect advanced clinical training in both mental health and substance use treatment.
Yes. High-functioning anxiety is still anxiety—and often more exhausting because it’s invisible.
Some relief can happen quickly, but meaningful change builds over time with the right approach and consistency.
Final Thought
Anxiety is persuasive. It will argue that this is normal, manageable, temporary.
It rarely is.
And you’re allowed to get help before it gets worse—not after.



