leadership stress

Therapy in 2026: Pressure Beneath the Surface

Therapy is often where the private experience of modern life becomes visible. And right now, the patterns are striking.

Nationally, therapists report that the most common concerns bringing clients in are anxiety or stress (34%), followed by depression (15%) and trauma (9%). But underneath those categories are more specific, very current themes - ones that reflect the moment we’re living in.

Four in particular are showing up again and again with some of the professionals that reach out to me: AI anxiety, leadership pressure, identity questions, and relationship strain.

These aren’t separate issues. They’re deeply interconnected.

AI Anxiety: “Where Do I Fit If Everything Changes?”

For many high-functioning adults, AI isn’t just a technological shift - it’s an existential one.

Clients are asking:

  • “Will my role still matter in a year?”

  • “Am I already behind?”

  • “How do I stay relevant when the rules keep changing?”

This isn’t just about job security. It’s about identity. When your sense of value has been tied to your expertise, efficiency, or intellect, the rapid rise of AI can feel destabilizing.

The result is a specific kind of anxiety: future-focused, hard to ground, and often accompanied by urgency—figure it out now or risk falling behind.

Leadership Pressure: The Weight of Responsibility

Leaders are coming into therapy not because they’re failing - but because they’re carrying a lot. This can be at work, at home or at both.

They’re navigating:

  • Ambiguity without clear answers

  • Responsibility for other people’s livelihoods

  • The expectation to stay composed, decisive, and optimistic

All while managing their own uncertainty.

There’s often a quiet question beneath the surface:
“Who supports me when I’m the one everyone relies on?”

Leadership can be isolating. And without space to process, that pressure accumulates - showing up as irritability, decision fatigue, or a constant low-grade stress that never fully turns off.

Identity Questions: “Is This Still Me?”

Another theme emerging in therapy is a reevaluation of identity.

People are asking:

  • “Do I actually want the life I’ve built?”

  • “What matters to me now?”

  • “Who am I outside of my roles?”

These questions often surface during transitions - career shifts, parenthood, burnout, or even success that doesn’t feel the way it was expected to.

What used to feel clear now feels uncertain. And that uncertainty can be disorienting, especially for people who are used to having direction.

Relationship Strain: The Ripple Effect

When internal pressure builds, it rarely stays contained.

Clients are reporting increased strain in relationships:

  • Communication breakdowns

  • Less patience and more reactivity

  • Feeling disconnected despite being physically present

In many cases, it’s not the relationship itself that’s the root issue - it’s the cumulative stress each person is carrying.

Two overwhelmed people trying to stay connected without the tools or space to reset often leads to friction.

Beneath It All: Anxiety, Depression, and Trauma

While these presenting issues feel modern, they often map onto familiar clinical foundations:

  • Anxiety (34%) shows up in AI fears, performance pressure, and uncertainty about the future

  • Depression (15%) can emerge when people feel stuck, unfulfilled, or disconnected from meaning

  • Trauma (9%) - whether acute or chronic - can influence how individuals respond to stress, change, and relationships

The context may be new, but the nervous system is not. It still responds to overload, ambiguity, and perceived threat in very human ways.

A More Useful Frame

It’s easy to interpret these struggles as personal shortcomings:

  • “I should be handling this better.”

  • “Other people aren’t as affected.”

  • “I just need to push through.”

But what if these experiences are actually signals?

Signals that:

  • The pace of change is outstripping our capacity to process

  • The expectations placed on individuals are unsustainably high

  • The structures we rely on for identity and stability are shifting

In that context, anxiety, doubt, and even disconnection make sense.

Where the Work Begins

Therapy, at its best, isn’t just about symptom reduction - it’s about clarity.

Clarity around:

  • What’s actually within your control

  • Which pressures are internal vs. external

  • How your patterns are helping - or limiting - you

And from that clarity, more intentional choices become possible.

Not perfect ones. Not easy ones. But aligned ones.

You’re Not Alone in This

If you’re navigating AI anxiety, leadership pressure, identity questions, or relationship strain - it’s not random. You’re responding to a moment that’s asking a lot of people, all at once.

And while the specifics may vary, the underlying experience is widely shared.

The goal isn’t to eliminate uncertainty or pressure entirely.
It’s to build the capacity to move through it - without losing yourself in the process.