
A small whiteboard is kept behind the desk of a therapist I know in Karachi. There are two columns on it in faded marker. One is marked “yours.” Not you, but the other. She once told me that nearly every client over the past two years has at some point found themselves staring at that board, usually after bringing up the cost of cooking oil, which seems to increase every few weeks, the price of gasoline, or the electricity bill. “It’s not a fancy board,” she said. However, it is the only thing that constantly causes people to slow down.
In 2026, this is what economic anxiety looks like, and therapists worldwide are discreetly retraining. Not all of the clients who come in are in dire need of money. Many are parents, small business owners, and middle-class professionals. They are connected by a low-frequency dread that permeates everyday life. Global oil prices, the one factor affecting groceries, commutes, heating, freight, and nearly everything else, are increasingly the first source they cite. For a therapist, hearing this over and over again is uncommon, but here we are.
| Topic | Therapeutic responses to economic anxiety driven by global oil prices |
| Primary Modalities | Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Brainspotting, Accelerated Resolution Therapy, Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction |
| Common Client Symptoms | Persistent worry, insomnia, irritability, avoidance behaviors, digestive issues |
| Key Therapeutic Framework | Radical Acceptance and Circle of Control mapping |
| Reported Prevalence | Roughly 70% of U.S. adults cite money as a recurring stressor |
| Macro Trigger Discussed | Volatile global energy markets and downstream price effects |
| Typical Session Format | 45–60 minute weekly sessions; some hybrid with financial counseling |
| Recommended Mindfulness Tool | The 3-3-3 grounding rule |
| Population Most Affected | Working families, gig workers, fixed-income retirees |
| Professional Resource | Directories maintained by the American Psychological Association |
The first action that most clinicians take is surprisingly straightforward. They distinguish between the client’s control and their lack of control. For years, Bryant University clinical psychologist Joseph Trunzo has argued that concentrating on small, regular actions lessens helplessness in ways that big-picture analysis cannot. The advice seems almost antiquated: create a budget, decide what you can change, and quit attempting to forecast OPEC. However, the point is the simplicity. At least for an afternoon, mapping a manageable expense breaks the spell of catastrophic thinking, which thrives on scale.
The majority of this work is done by cognitive behavioral therapy, which recognizes the automatic negative thoughts that arise from a single news alert about Brent Crude. A customer thinks, “I won’t be able to pay rent if fuel prices increase again.” Instead of dismissing this, the therapist’s role is to compare it to real evidence, such as past months survived, adaptations already made, and resources not yet utilized. The work is slower than it seems. Fear makes people reluctant to be spoken to, and for good reason. Instead of sounding like a motivational speech from someone who has never looked at a utility bill, the reframe must feel genuine.
The body comes next. The most obvious change in the field has occurred here. Because economic anxiety manifests physically before cognitively, therapists are employing somatic modalities such as Brainspotting, Accelerated Resolution Therapy, and even basic breathing techniques. Geopolitics is irrelevant to the amygdala. It simply responds. These days, it’s common practice to begin sessions with grounding exercises like the 3-3-3 rule, which involves identifying three objects, three sounds, and three movements. After that exercise, it’s difficult to ignore how frequently clients audibly exhale, as if they hadn’t realized they’d been holding something in.
Next, and frequently, media boundaries are discussed. The majority of therapists now recommend hard windows, such as fifteen minutes in the morning and nothing after dinner, because endless scrolling through oil futures or recession forecasts raises cortisol. It is another matter entirely whether or not clients truly adhere to this. Clinicians believe that information addiction is more difficult to overcome than most drug addictions, in part because it passes for accountability. It feels like control to stay informed. Seldom is it.
A change in the way therapists conceptualize self-worth is what connects all of this. They consistently assure clients that financial difficulties are not a reflection of a person’s character. It’s a requirement. It may seem clear in writing, but it can take months for someone who hasn’t slept for three nights due to a spike in diesel prices to understand that difference. Although this is now made easier by resources like the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare and numerous national counseling directories, the work is still done one conversation at a time.
Therapy may be evolving into something more comprehensive than it was in the past, combining elements of clinical practice, economic literacy, and nervous system maintenance. It’s still unclear if that’s a sign that the world has grown too big for one person to handle or if it’s a healthy expansion. Most likely both.

