The new year is supposed to feel hopeful. Energizing. Motivating. So why does it so often feel heavy, overwhelming, or quietly anxiety-provoking instead?
If you’re starting the year with a tight chest, racing thoughts, or a sense that you’re already behind, you’re not broken—and you’re not alone. New Year anxiety is real, common, and deeply understandable.
Here’s what’s really happening beneath the surface.
1. The Pressure to “Start Over” Is Intense
The cultural message of the new year is loud and clear: This is your chance to fix everything.
Be healthier. Be more productive. Be happier. Become a better version of yourself.
While this idea is often framed as inspiring, it can easily turn into pressure—especially for people who are already managing anxiety, depression, burnout, or major life stressors.
Why it causes anxiety: Starting over implies that who you are right now isn’t enough. That belief can trigger fear of failure, perfectionism, and shame before you’ve even begun.
2. Reflection Can Turn Into Self-Criticism
The new year invites reflection—on what you accomplished, what you didn’t, and where you feel behind compared to others.
For many people, reflection doesn’t stay neutral. It becomes harsh self-evaluation.
Thoughts like:
“I wasted last year.”
“I should be further along.”
“Everyone else seems to be doing better than me.”
Why it causes anxiety: When reflection turns into rumination, your brain stays stuck in threat mode, replaying perceived failures instead of processing growth.
3. Uncertainty Is Heightened in January
A new year means an unknown year ahead—and the human brain doesn’t love uncertainty.
Even positive uncertainty (new opportunities, new goals) can feel destabilizing, especially if your life already feels unpredictable.
Why it causes anxiety: Anxiety thrives in the unknown. The new year magnifies questions like What’s going to happen? Will I be okay? What if things don’t improve?
4. Resolutions Can Trigger All-or-Nothing Thinking
New Year’s resolutions often come with rigid expectations: daily habits, big transformations, strict rules.
For people prone to anxiety or perfectionism, this can quickly spiral into all-or-nothing thinking:
If I can’t do it perfectly, why try?
If I fail once, I’ve failed completely.
Why it causes anxiety: Rigid goals leave no room for being human. The fear of failing can feel worse than not trying at all.
5. Emotional Letdown After the Holidays Is Real
After weeks of anticipation, socializing, or forced cheer, January can feel quiet, empty, or anticlimactic.
This emotional drop—sometimes called a post-holiday letdown—can intensify anxiety, loneliness, and low mood.
Why it causes anxiety: Your nervous system is adjusting after prolonged stimulation and stress. That transition can feel unsettling, even if nothing is “wrong.”
6. Comparison Is Everywhere Right Now
Social media fills up with goal lists, gym selfies, planners, and “new year glow-ups.” Even if you know it’s curated, your nervous system still absorbs the comparison.
Why it causes anxiety: Comparison creates a false sense of urgency—that everyone else is moving forward while you’re standing still.
What Actually Helps With New Year Anxiety
Instead of trying to force optimism or motivation, mental health often improves when we respond with gentleness.
Here are a few grounding shifts that can help:
Replace resolutions with intentions. Focus on how you want to feel, not what you need to fix.
Shrink the timeline. You don’t need a plan for the whole year—this week is enough.
Practice self-compassion over self-discipline. Growth happens faster when you feel safe.
Normalize your feelings. Anxiety at the start of the year doesn’t mean you’re doing it wrong—it means you’re human.
You’re Not Behind—You’re Here
The new year doesn’t require you to reinvent yourself, heal everything, or feel hopeful on demand.
It’s okay to enter this year tired. It’s okay to move slowly. It’s okay if hope comes later.
New Year anxiety isn’t a failure—it’s a signal. A reminder that you care, that you’re trying, and that you’re navigating uncertainty the best you can.
And that is already enough to begin.
If you need help with anxiety, we’re here to offer unconditional support and guidance. You don’t have to struggle alone. Reach out today to book a session with one of our caring, trained professionals. You can book online or by calling 902-812-1717.
Insurance Reimbursement
In order for us to set realistic treatment goals and priorities, it is important to evaluate what resources you have available to pay for your treatment. If you have a supplemental health insurance policy, it may provide some coverage for mental health treatment. However, you, not your insurance company, are responsible for the full payment of fees. It is very important that you understand what services are covered under your mental health benefits.
If you have any questions about whether a service will be covered, you should contact your insurance company before the service is provided. This phone number is usually located on your insurance card. We will provide you with whatever information we can and will call the company on your behalf to clear up any confusion, if necessary. We can also submit for reimbursement on your behalf with some insurance providers. This can be discussed at your initial appointment.
Helpful Questions to Ask your Health Insurance Provider:
Do I have outpatient mental health benefits?
What type of professional is covered under my plan? (Psychologist verse Registered Counselling Therapist)
What is my maximum coverage amount per year for counselling services before it renews?
Are counselling services grouped with other paramedical services (e.g., physiotherapy, chiropractic, message, etc.)
What is the coverage amount per therapy/treatment session?
Do I have a copay each visit?
How many sessions per calendar year does my plan cover?
When does my coverage renew?
Am I required to have a referral from a physician for counselling coverage?
Who in my family is covered for counselling and what amounts?
If I want to work on a relationship (e.g., marriage counselling or family therapy), will my insurance cover these services?
Payment Terms
Grow Well Individual & Family Counselling requires payment at the time of your office visit. Depending on your insurance policy benefits, this payment could be for a co-payment, coinsurance, deductible, or for the entire services rendered at that visit. For your convenience, we accept cash, Interac eTransfer, Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Visa Debit, Debit Mastercard, Apple Pay, and Google Pay. We do not accept personal checks. To help keep costs low, we greatly appreciate when payments can be made using cash or eTransfer whenever possible.
Full Fees Schedule
Rates Effective November 1, 2024
Session
Type
Time
Price
Initial Telehealth “Meet-and-Greet”
Phone or Video
15 mins
FREE
Individual Counselling Session
50 mins
$175
Individual 90-Minute Session
80 mins
$225
Family and Couples Session
50 mins
$200
Family and Couples 90-Minute Session
80 mins
$250
Family and Couples 2-Hour Session
105 mins
$300
Counselling Sessions with Intern (all types)
50 mins
$50
Group Rate (per person)
50 mins
$40
Telehealth Session
Video
Same fees as individual, couples, and family sessions
Document Production
Print, Email, Fax
$25
Report Writing
1 Hour
$175
Court Appearance
per hour
$250
Cancellation Fees
Appointments cancelled the day before the scheduled appointment will incur a $50 charge.
Same day cancellations or no-show are subject to the full session fee.