CBT for OCD — Glasgow
The Talking Rooms offers effective, structured and compassionate therapy. You do not need to push through fear.
You’ll learn how OCD impacts your life and how to regain control at a pace that suits you.
ONLINE SESSIONS
IN-PERSON SESSIONS
PHONE SESSIONS
What is Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder?
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is often misunderstood, even by the people experiencing it. You may tell yourself that you’re just being careful, overanalysing every aspect of an event to make sure it goes right and to quell feelings of anxiety. However, the impulse to “make sure” keeps returning, the comfort doesn’t last, and the thoughts don’t go away.
In the UK, 1 in 50 people experience OCD at some point. Many people live with symptoms for years before they recognise what is happening or seek psychological treatment.
People with OCD may become obsessed with things that are very important to them, like their values, relationships, safety or responsibilities. OCD often attaches itself to certain beliefs about responsibility or risk. This is why obsessive thoughts can seem real and personal, even when you know they are not likely to happen.
Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) helps you understand why compulsive acts and intrusive thoughts happen and what really helps stop them. Instead of concentrating on eliminating uncertainty or preventing suffering, this approach examines how your mind responds to uncertainty and teaches you how to act differently so that OCD doesn’t control your decisions.

What We Help With
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) alters how your brain processes concepts such as perceived threats, responsibility and uncertainty. It relates to how your mind responds to intrusive thoughts and how they can create psychological distress.
Sometimes intrusive thoughts can feel frightening, especially when they do not reflect who you are. They can appear out of nowhere, sometimes as an image, a voice, a question: “What if?” Almost suggestive rather than a question. It’s like having an alarm in your mind that simply won’t switch off.
If this is happening to you, please know that intrusive thoughts do not define you. They are a sign that your mind is stuck in a threat response. And with the right support, that response and the associated anxiety can begin to soften.
These are the symptoms that you might notice:

Repetitive Checking

Compulsive Cleaning

Mental Rituals

Fear of Uncertainty

Avoidance

Seeking Reassurance

Fear of Harm

Intrusive Thoughts

Emotional Distress
These OCD symptoms are not things you like or do regularly. These are responses to anxiety that are linked to compulsive behaviours.
Real Stories. Real Support.
Tracey made me feel so at ease. She has a very calming voice and after even my first session I was feeling that little bit better. By the last session, I was pretty gutted because I had started to look forward to the hour and picking apart my thoughts and feelings from the past week. This is the sign of a very good counsellor. Thank you ☺️
Ace
Google Review
Welcome to The Talking Rooms
Since 2019, The Talking Rooms has helped more than 5,000 individuals via talking therapy, making them feel heard, understood and supported throughout hard times.
When you’re struggling with intrusive thoughts, it might be hard to reach out. We need to make that initial step feel secure, courteous and important.
What sets The Talking Rooms apart:
- Quick access, with appointments generally available within five days
- A range of CBT and person-centred, trained therapists and psychologists
- You may choose between in-person and online methods that work for you
- A kind, non-judgmental attitude from the start
Start cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) for OCD now with a free 15-minute consultation. This is a start towards feeling more like yourself again.
The Benefits of CBT for OCD
CBT is recommended in UK guidance for treating OCD because it is recognised as an evidence-based treatment, as it focuses on long-term change, not short-term relief. At The Talking Rooms, we aim to reduce the authority OCD has over your choices.
One of the biggest advantages of CBT for OCD is that it helps you step out of the challenge of waiting to feel certain before acting. Over time, this can change how you approach everyday decisions, responsibilities, and relationships.
People who go through cognitive behavioural therapy often describe benefits such as:
- More flexibility in daily routines, making it more manageable to cope when plans change
- OCD becomes less time-consuming, as fewer decisions are delayed or revisited repeatedly
- A clearer sense of personal values, with decisions guided more by what matters to them than by fear of “getting it wrong”
- Improved resilience during stressful moments, including work pressure or life changes
- More confident in managing future flare-ups, using learned strategies rather than starting from scratch each time
NICE recommends CBT as a first-line treatment for OCD, helping you gain overall functioning and support overall well-being. This often means feeling more able to participate fully in work, relationships and personal goals, even when distressing thoughts are present.
Getting to Know Exposure and Response Prevention
Exposure and response prevention (ERP) is an important method within CBT therapy. Exposure is the process of slowly confronting negative thoughts, situations or feelings that make you anxious. Response prevention means learning not to do things that make you feel better for a short time but make your OCD worse.
You could practice putting off checking behaviour or leaving some things unresolved. This uses gradual exposure and follows clear steps that are meant to make you feel safe and able to do them.
Over time, this plays an important role in reducing anxiety without relying on reassurance or avoidance. We are here to help you learn ways to manage OCD in a more manageable way, allowing you to practise self-care. Your nervous system learns over time that distress goes away on its own, which is a big part of lowering anxiety and building confidence.
Crisis Service
Please note we operate Monday to Friday 9 am-5 pm, and we are not classified as a crisis service. If you feel that your life or someone else’s life is in crisis, then please contact one of these leading crisis organisations. In an immediate emergency, call Samaritans on 116 123 or reach out to the Crisis Text Line. Text SHOUT to 85258. This SMS is free and available 24/7.





What the Process Looks Like
Starting The Conversation
Your journey begins with a free 15-minute phone consultation. This gives you time to talk through what’s bringing you to therapy and helps us make sure you’re matched with the right therapist. We will then have an initial assessment, which allows space to explore your mental health more fully. This includes how OCD shows up for you, what you’ve already tried, and what you’d like to support as you move forward.
Shaping a Plan Together
From there, your therapist works with you to agree on a clear, personalised treatment plan. This sets a realistic focus for therapy and keeps the work grounded and purposeful. We also offer counselling and psychotherapy for people who want to combine different therapeutic approaches. You can use free NHS-backed Self-Help Guides covering anxiety, low mood, and stress.
Ongoing CBT Support
You’ll then attend regular one-to-one CBT sessions, either online or in person. Most adults attend between six and twenty sessions, depending on progress and individual goals. Throughout therapy, progress is reviewed and the approach adjusted where needed. This helps you build coping strategies that continue to support you beyond sessions.
Is It OCD or Anxiety?
Since OCD and anxiety are so closely related, it is common to assume that what you are experiencing is anxiety alone.
While they can feel similar on the surface, they tend to work differently underneath.
Key Differences Between Anxiety and OCD
A key difference is what happens after you try to feel better. With anxiety, reassurance or safety usually brings lasting relief.
With OCD, relief is often brief, and doubts return, sometimes more strongly than before.
| Anxiety Tends to Look Like | OCD Tends to Look Like |
| Concerns relate to real-life stress or situations | Thoughts feel intrusive, unwanted, or out of character |
| Worries feel possible to let go of | Obsessive thinking feels unfinished or hard to dismiss |
| Reassurance feels genuinely calming | Reassurance feels necessary, but never enough |
| Discomfort fades with time or distraction | Discomfort builds unless something is done to neutralise it |
| General trust in memory and judgement | Ongoing doubt about memory, responsibility, or certainty |
If you recognise yourself more in the right-hand column, it may suggest obsessive-compulsive disorder rather than just anxiety. Many people experience elements of both, which is why getting clarity can feel so important.
Clinical guidance recognises that reassurance-based approaches often help anxiety but tend to keep OCD going. Effective treatment for OCD focuses on changing how you respond to distress and uncertainty, rather than trying to remove them completely. Understanding this difference can be a turning point and help you access the right kind of support.
How Therapy Sessions Work at The Talking Rooms
People don’t judge or analyse you in therapy. It’s about figuring out what you’ve been through and picking up skills that will help you in everyday life. Most of our therapists are highly trained and work to clear ethical and professional standards, and are accredited to governing bodies such as BABCP, BACP or COSCA.
Your first CBT session is about getting to know you and understanding what is bringing you to therapy. We’ll talk through how obsessive-compulsive disorder shows up in your daily life, what you’ve already tried, and what you would like to change. You’ll have space to ask questions, and together we’ll begin to shape a clear, realistic focus for therapy.
Frequently Asked Questions
It’s normal to want to know how therapy will fit into your life before you start.
These answers are mostly about practical questions that people have about CBT treatment for OCD.
For most people, CBT is mostly about Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP). Instead of trying to make the anxiety go away, this technique helps you recognise when obsessive compulsive disorder is present and practise responding in a different way.
Yes. You can use CBT therapy for OCD by itself or with medication. Some people use therapy to learn new skills along with medication, while others prefer not to use medication at all. You can discuss this during your consultation, so you know your options.
Our therapists don’t give medical advice or change your medication. You should always talk to your GP or prescribing clinician about any decisions you make about medication.
We take privacy very seriously. Our therapists are trained and adhere to ethical guidelines between patients; all information spoken about in treatment is kept confidential.
You don’t have to do this by yourself. Our therapists can help you move forward with support and clarity.
READY TO TAKE THE FIRST STEP?
Where Can You Find Us?
Work Zone 56, 37 Rosyth Rd, Glasgow G5 0YD
14 Stroud Rd, East Kilbride, Glasgow G75 0YA
What Clients Say About Our Counselling and CBT Services
Many clients say that they get a sense of relief after their first conversation. For some, it is the first opportunity to speak openly about what has been building up for a long time.
