
There is a coffee maker in the waiting area of a small private practice in Queens, but it is no longer in use. A few weeks ago, the therapist who oversees the facility, who is in her late forties and has been in the chair for twenty years, casually brought up how people talk about the weather. According to her, clients used to hang around before sessions. They sit down now, staring at the door and their phones. She didn’t notice the room’s tightness a year ago. Around the time gas hit $4, it arrived.
There is now one or more names for that tightness. Acute financial stress, which is more akin to trauma than normal worry, has been described by therapists in the US and the UK. excessive attention to bills. Steer clear of the mailbox. The sound of a phone ringing from an unknown number causes one to flinch. Clinically speaking, it resembles PTSD dressed up in a household budget. Additionally, it is appearing in rooms that were primarily focused on relationships and burnout two years ago.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Period of observation | Early to mid-2026 |
| Brent crude peak (intraday) | ~$126/barrel (June contract, late April) |
| Pre-war Brent baseline | ~$70/barrel |
| Trigger event | Strait of Hormuz closure following US–Israel strikes on Iran |
| Reported US adult anxiety/depression symptoms (post-pandemic baseline) | ~41% (CDC, 2021) |
| Estimated lifetime PTSD prevalence (US) | ~6.8% (NCS-R) |
| Common clinical presentations | Acute Financial Stress, insomnia, energy poverty, somatic pain |
| The estimated global cost of mental ill-health by 2030 | ~$6 trillion (WHO) |
| Notable clinical shift | Surge in tele-health, somatic, and trauma-informed work |
| Demographic most strained | Lower- and middle-income households, single earners |
Finding the trigger is not difficult. Since the start of the war with Iran, oil prices have surged; in late April, Brent briefly reached $126 per barrel before falling back into the low hundreds. The actual physical cargoes have been trading even higher, which is the kind of detail that energy reporters love but most people never see. The headline number doesn’t quite capture it. The pump is what people see. The receipt is what they perceive. And everything that follows is what therapists are hearing.
A specific type of insomnia has been emerging. Not the racing-thoughts kind from a demanding workday, but the 3 a.m. math kind, where clients are calculating utility bills, grocery costs, and car payments in the dark once more. A clinician in London called it “spreadsheet dreaming.” One of her patients, a working hybrid mother who was a single mother, no longer drove to her sister’s house on weekends. The cost of fuel, divided by guilt and frequency. According to the therapist, she wasn’t clinically depressed. She was simply taking off the things that had supported her, methodically and slowly.
The term “energy poverty” was once found in policy papers. The session notes are now displaying it. Clinicians are beginning to identify the fear of not being able to heat an apartment or keep the lights on as a distinct presentation rather than a symptom of something else because it has been linked in the literature to higher rates of depression. If the oil eases, this might disappear. Even if Brent settles at seventy again tomorrow, there’s a chance that something has changed that won’t be easily reversed.
Reluctantly, a few therapists have acknowledged that their own practices are evolving as well. More patients are requesting to transition to telehealth, primarily to reduce commuting expenses. Some have completely shut down their physical offices. A more subdued discussion is taking place among practitioners regarding whether the somatic, body-based, trauma-informed work that has been gaining popularity for years is now the ideal tool or if it is too slow for individuals whose nervous systems are being worked on daily by several signs at a gas station.
Then there are the corpses. Clinical psychologists frequently assert that financial stress does not always manifest as such. It manifests as migraines. like ulcers, or back pain that cannot be explained by a scan. According to a Manchester therapist, she is seeing more referrals for chronic pain than she has ever seen in her professional life. She sounded unsure of the reason. She sounded like someone who had noticed a pattern and was waiting, a little uneasy, to find out what it meant.
Sitting through all of this, there’s a sense that the oil shock has done something that the pandemic didn’t quite do: it has made the price of living seem hostile. No one is catastrophizing. The math is accurate. The majority of what therapists appear to be doing is assisting clients in maintaining that without disintegrating. No one in the field seems prepared to publicly respond to the question of whether that is sufficient in a year that might or might not result in a de-escalation in the Gulf.

