Those thoughts don't make you dangerous. They make you scared.
Therapists in Fort Worth, Texas
"I keep having thoughts I'm terrified to say out loud. I'd never act on them."
Up to 3β5% of new mothers experience postpartum OCD β intrusive thoughts that feel unbearable to carry.



+9 moreNo commitment. We'll confirm your coverage before your first session.
Virtual therapy for Fort Worth families
Fort Worth is not Dallas. People here are specific about that. The city has its own economy, its own identity, and its own version of the Texas postpartum experience that gets flattened when it gets lumped into DFW the way most national health resources lump it. The growth in Near Southside, Keller, Southlake, Mansfield, and Burleson has brought a wave of young families and professionals who moved here for the housing costs and the schools, and who are far from their own families without necessarily having set out to be. Fort Worth has strong roots in faith communities, Western culture, and the kind of toughness that doesn't put private struggles into public conversation. That cultural layer makes it genuinely harder to say you're struggling, and harder to ask for help. PMH-C certified perinatal mental health specialists are scarce in Fort Worth proper. Most practices funnel to the Dallas side of the Metroplex, which means an additional commute on I-30 or 820 that isn't nothing when you have a newborn. Phoenix Health therapists hold PMH-C certification and typically see Fort Worth-area clients within one week of intake, by secure video from wherever you have a quiet fifteen minutes. No Trinity River traffic. No I-30. We accept most major insurance plans, including Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna, and United Healthcare, and verify your benefits before your first session.
Fort Worth neighborhoods: Near Southside Β· Sundance Square Β· Keller Β· Southlake Β· Mansfield Β· Burleson
You might benefit from therapy ifβ¦
- βYou're having intrusive thoughts or images about the baby being harmed, and you're horrified by them
- βYou're doing repeated checking, washing, praying, or mental reviewing to make sure nothing bad happens
- βYou're avoiding being alone with the baby, holding the baby near stairs or water, or other situations because of what your mind might do
- βYou've looked up your thoughts online and felt worse afterward
- βYou've been afraid to tell anyone, including your partner or your doctor, because you're worried they'll take the baby away
- βThe thoughts feel completely out of step with who you are, and that's part of what makes them so scary

Dr. Emily Guarnotta
Psychologist & Founder
From our founder
If you're reading this section, you're probably the safest mother on your block, because nobody worries about hurting their baby like a parent with OCD does. The thoughts horrify you precisely because they go against everything you are. I tell every client with perinatal OCD the same thing: the right treatment exists, it works, and you are not what your mind shouts at you.
What therapy looks like
Our Perinatal OCD & Intrusive Thoughts specialists in Fort Worth, Texas
Most Phoenix Health therapists hold PMH-C certification β the gold standard in perinatal mental health.
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Tiara Okoruwa
PhD, LCSW
Tiara is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker in Texas specializing in perinatal mental health, supporting expecting and new parents through anxiety, grief, and the transition to parenthood using a trauma-informed, integrative approach.
Licensed in TX

Amanda Flowers
LPC, PMH-C
Amanda is a Licensed Professional Counselor in Texas and a Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor in Montana specializing in perinatal mental health, supporting clients through pregnancy, postpartum, and infertility using a collaborative, trauma-informed, and mind-body approach.
Licensed in TX, MT

Ashlyn Parides
PHD, PMH-C
Dr. Ashlyn is a licensed psychologist and certified perinatal mental health provider (PMH-C) in Texas, licensed to practice in over 40 states through PsyPact.
PsyPact provider β 40+ states
Real clients. Real relief.
What our clients say about their experience.
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β"I had intrusive thoughts that terrified me. I was too ashamed to tell anyone, even my partner. My therapist explained postpartum OCD and helped me understand I wasn't dangerous. The intrusive thoughts are 90% gone now. I wish I'd reached out sooner."β
β mom of 2
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βI couldn't leave the house without checking the stove five times. Couldn't hand my daughter to anyone without a spiral of what-ifs. I thought I was going crazy. My therapist helped me understand what OCD actually is: not just being tidy, but a loop my brain got stuck in, and gave me tools to break the cycle. I'm not ruled by it anymore.β
β mom of 2
βββββ
βI kept having thoughts of accidentally hurting my baby during bath time. I was convinced that meant I was dangerous, and I almost didn't tell anyone. My therapist explained that intrusive thoughts are the opposite of what you want. They show up because you love him and your mind is trying to protect him. That reframe saved me.β
β mom of 1
βββββ
βFor four months I wouldn't bathe my son alone because of what my brain kept showing me. I thought I was going crazy. My therapist named it on the first call. ERP was harder than I expected and also the thing that gave me my life back. The thoughts still pop up sometimes. They just don't run me anymore.β
β Catherine, mom of one
Expert care.
Covered in Texas.
- βAetna (incl. CVS Health, First Health, & Meritain)
- βBCBS (incl. Anthem, Blue Cross, Blue Shield, & state plans)
- βCigna / Evernorth
- βUnited Healthcare (UHC) / Optum (incl. UBH, UMR, Surest, Oscar, & Oxford)
Most clients pay less than $20 per session.
Accepted Insurance Networks





Ready to start Perinatal OCD & Intrusive Thoughts therapy? Hereβs how it works.
The whole process takes about 5 minutes. We handle insurance β you just show up.
- 1
Book your free call
A quick 15-minute chat to hear what you're going through, answer your questions, and make sure we're a great fit for your needs. No cost, no commitment.
- 2
Get matched
We'll pair you with the right specialist for your specific situation. We'll also check your insurance, so you know your exact cost per session before moving forward.
- 3
Start your first session
Meet your therapist from the comfort of home. No commute, no waiting rooms, no judgment. Most clients notice a real difference within just 2 to 3 sessions.
No commitment Β· Most insurance accepted Β· Available this week
Common questions
- Intrusive thoughts are unwanted, disturbing thoughts that appear without warning β often violent or sexual in nature. In postpartum OCD, these typically involve harm coming to the baby. The key distinction: people with postpartum OCD are horrified by these thoughts and would never act on them. The thoughts are ego-dystonic (unwanted) β the opposite of intent.
- No. Research is consistent: parents who have intrusive thoughts about harming their baby are not at risk of acting on them. The presence of the thoughts, and the distress they cause, is a sign of anxiety β not danger. Effective treatment is available.
- No. People with perinatal OCD are not at increased risk of harming their baby. The thoughts are ego-dystonic, which means they go against your values, and the distress you feel about them is itself evidence that you would not act on them. This is one of the most well-established facts in the research on perinatal OCD, and any therapist trained in this area will tell you the same.
- In OCD, you know the thoughts don't match who you are. They feel intrusive and unwanted, and you're distressed by them. In postpartum psychosis, a person loses contact with reality, often experiences hallucinations or delusions, and may not recognize the thoughts as separate from reality. Postpartum psychosis is a medical emergency. Perinatal OCD is treatable outpatient therapy. They are not on a spectrum.
- No. A trained therapist will recognize intrusive thoughts as a symptom of OCD, not as intent to harm. Reporting requirements exist for actual harm or credible plans to harm, not for OCD content. Naming the thoughts is part of how you start to take their power away, and your therapist is the safest place to do that.
- Reassurance feels good for about five minutes, and then the doubt comes back, often stronger. That's a feature of OCD. Repeated reassurance, checking, and researching are compulsions that keep the loop going. Effective treatment involves learning to sit with uncertainty instead of trying to resolve it, which is the opposite of what your instincts will tell you to do, and it works.
- ERP is gradual and collaborative. Your therapist will never push you into something you're not ready for. The work is paced, and you start with smaller pieces and build trust as you go. Most people are surprised by how much relief comes from the early steps, before they've done anything that felt extreme.
From the Phoenix Health resource center
Articles and guides about perinatal ocd & intrusive thoughts
Trusted by leading voices in parenting and mental health
OBs, doulas, and pediatricians refer their patients to us because we specialize in maternal mental health.
These thoughts
are treatable.
And you're not alone.
Perinatal OCD responds well to specialized therapy. Most people see meaningful change in 12 to 20 weeks.
No commitment Β· Covered by insurance Β· Available this week
Learning resources
πRead our Perinatal OCD & Intrusive Thoughts guides βOften goes alongside





