Posted on Leave a comment

Optum Medicaid: Charlton Hall, MMFT, PhD is Now Accepting Optum!

Optum Medicaid

Charlton Hall, MMFT, PhD, is now accepting Optum Medicaid in Washington State.

That means if you have Optum Medicaid, you can access therapy at Mindful Ecotherapy Center, PLLC, without scrambling to figure out how to afford it. Mental health care should not be a luxury service for people with high-deductible plans and a credit card they’re willing to suffer over.

Access matters. And now, if you’re covered by Optum Medicaid, you have another solid option for thoughtful, evidence-based care.

But insurance coverage is only half the story. What actually happens in therapy?

What Therapy Is Like with Charlton Hall

Optum Medicaid
Charlton Hall, MMFT, PhD

Therapy with Charlton is active, collaborative, and grounded in research-backed approaches.

Charlton integrates:

The goal is simple: help you build skills, increase clarity, and move toward a life that feels more aligned with who you actually are.

If you are using Optum Medicaid, you are getting structured, high-quality care.

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

ACT focuses on psychological flexibility. In practical terms, that means learning how to:

  • Make room for painful thoughts and emotions
  • Stop fighting your internal experience
  • Clarify your values
  • Take meaningful action even when anxiety or trauma shows up

Many people spend years trying to eliminate anxiety, erase trauma responses, or silence intrusive thoughts. ACT takes a different approach. Instead of getting stuck in an endless internal battle, you learn how to change your relationship to those thoughts and feelings.

You build a life that is bigger than your symptoms.

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)

If emotions feel overwhelming or relationships feel chaotic, DBT offers structure and tools.

DBT focuses on four core areas:

  • Mindfulness
  • Distress tolerance
  • Emotion regulation
  • Interpersonal effectiveness

You learn how to tolerate difficult emotions without self-destructive behavior. You learn how to set boundaries. You learn how to navigate conflict without imploding or exploding.

In therapy, these skills are practiced, not just discussed. Sessions often include concrete strategies you can apply immediately in real-world situations.

Whether you’re coming in through Optum Medicaid for anxiety, trauma, relationship stress, or mood instability, these skills are powerful and practical.

Mindfulness-Based Ecotherapy

Mindfulness-Based Ecotherapy integrates traditional psychotherapy with nature-based and embodied practices. Humans are not designed to live entirely indoors under fluorescent lighting and constant digital stimulation, even if modern life seems committed to that experiment.

Sessions may include:

  • Outdoor walk-and-talk therapy
  • Grounding exercises in natural environments
  • Sensory awareness practices
  • Nature-based metaphors for growth and resilience

For trauma survivors, reconnecting with the body and the natural world can support nervous system regulation in ways that purely cognitive approaches sometimes cannot.

Therapy is not just about thinking differently. It is also about experiencing safety differently.

Gender-Affirming Care

Charlton specializes in gender-affirming therapy. If you are transgender, nonbinary, gender-expansive, or questioning, therapy is not a space where your identity is debated or pathologized.

Instead, it is a space where:

  • Your identity is respected
  • Your lived experience is validated
  • Your goals are centered

Gender-diverse clients often face chronic stress related to discrimination, family conflict, medical systems, and social pressure. Therapy becomes a place of stability and affirmation rather than another place of scrutiny.

If you have Optum Medicaid and are looking for affirming care in Washington State, this coverage now makes that support more accessible.

Trauma-Informed and Solution-Focused

Trauma-informed care means prioritizing safety, collaboration, and empowerment. Trauma is understood as a nervous system response to overwhelming experiences, not a personal flaw.

At the same time, therapy does not have to be an endless excavation of the past. Solution-Focused Therapy brings attention to strengths and momentum. It asks:

  • When is the problem less intense?
  • What is already working?
  • What would progress look like in small, concrete steps?

You are not defined by your worst experiences. Therapy helps you build forward movement, even if that movement starts small.

What Clients Experience with Charlton Hall, MMFT, PhD

Clients often describe therapy with Charlton as:

  • Grounded and structured
  • Direct but compassionate
  • Skills-based and practical
  • Thoughtful and affirming

Sessions may include mindfulness practices, values clarification, behavioral experiments, and reflection on real-life situations. You will likely leave with something tangible to work on between sessions.

This is not therapy as a passive conversation. It is therapy as engaged growth through experiential exercises.

Expanding Access Through Optum Medicaid

The addition of Optum Medicaid means more individuals and families in Washington State can access consistent mental health care without the barrier of private-pay fees.

Early support prevents crises. Ongoing support builds resilience. Coverage through Optum Medicaid opens the door to therapy that is evidence-based, affirming, and oriented toward real-life change.

If you are covered by Optum Medicaid and seeking therapy that integrates ACT, DBT, Mindfulness-Based Ecotherapy, gender-affirming care, trauma-informed practice, and solution-focused work, Charlton Hall, MMFT, PhD, is now accepting new clients through Mindful Ecotherapy Center, PLLC.

You do not have to wait until everything falls apart.

You can begin with where you are.

And from there, you build something stronger.


Posted on

High-Functioning Anxiety: 7 Powerful Coping Strategies That Actually Help

high-functioning anxiety

High-functioning anxiety is one of the most misunderstood mental health experiences today. On the outside, people with high-functioning anxiety often appear successful, motivated, and “put together.” They meet deadlines, arrive early, achieve their goals, and consistently become the dependable ones others rely on. On the inside, however, the story is very different. There is often a constant undercurrent of worry, self-criticism, overthinking, and nervous energy that never truly shuts off.

At the Mindful Ecotherapy Center, Charlton Hall, MMFT, PhD, works with many individuals who outwardly appear to be thriving yet inwardly feel exhausted. High-functioning anxiety can quietly erode well-being, relationships, and joy, especially when it goes unrecognized or is dismissed as “just stress.” Mindfulness-based ecotherapy offers a grounded, compassionate approach to coping with high-functioning anxiety by addressing both the nervous system and the deeper patterns that keep anxiety running the show.

Below are seven practical, evidence-informed coping strategies for high-functioning anxiety, rooted in mindfulness-based ecotherapy and commonly integrated with Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), and solution-focused approaches.

1. Name High-Functioning Anxiety Without Judgment

One of the most powerful first steps is simply recognizing high-functioning anxiety for what it is. Many people minimize their anxiety because they are still “functioning.” Mindfulness invites noticing internal experiences without labeling them as failures. Instead of “Something is wrong with me,” the practice becomes, “I’m noticing anxiety showing up right now.” This subtle shift reduces shame and creates space for intentional responses rather than automatic ones.

2. Regulate the Nervous System Through Nature-Based Grounding

Mindfulness-based ecotherapy emphasizes the calming effect of intentional connection with the natural world. Even brief, regular exposure to nature can help regulate the nervous system. Walking outdoors, noticing the sensation of wind or sunlight, or grounding attention in natural sounds can interrupt the chronic hyperarousal common in high-functioning anxiety. Nature provides a steady, nonjudgmental presence that contrasts with the constant internal pressure many anxious high-achievers experience.

3. Practice Mindful Awareness of Productivity Traps

High-functioning anxiety often disguises itself as productivity. Constant busyness can feel necessary, even virtuous, while actually reinforcing anxiety. Mindfulness helps individuals notice when productivity becomes avoidance. By gently observing urges to overwork or overprepare, clients learn to pause and ask whether an action is values-driven or anxiety-driven. This awareness is essential for creating sustainable balance.

4. Externalize the Inner Critic

A relentless inner critic is a hallmark of high-functioning anxiety. Mindfulness-based ecotherapy encourages clients to observe critical thoughts rather than fusing with them. Visualizing the inner critic as a separate voice, rather than an absolute authority, can reduce its grip. This practice aligns with ACT principles, helping people choose actions based on values rather than fear-based narratives.

5. Use Values as an Anchor, Not Anxiety

Many people with high-functioning anxiety confuse fear with motivation. While anxiety can push achievement, it rarely leads to fulfillment. Clarifying personal values provides a healthier compass. Mindfulness-based ecotherapy supports values exploration through reflective practices, journaling, and nature-based metaphors. When actions align with values rather than anxiety, individuals often report greater satisfaction and less emotional exhaustion.

6. Build Tolerance for Stillness

Stillness can feel deeply uncomfortable for those with high-functioning anxiety. Silence and rest may allow anxious thoughts to surface more clearly. Mindfulness practice gradually builds tolerance for stillness, teaching the nervous system that pausing is not dangerous. Simple practices such as mindful breathing outdoors or brief body scans can help retrain the system to associate rest with safety rather than threat.

7. Replace Control With Compassionate Flexibility

High-functioning anxiety thrives on control. Mindfulness-based ecotherapy helps people with high-functioning anxiety to loosen rigid expectations by cultivating compassionate flexibility. This does not mean lowering standards or abandoning responsibility. Instead, it involves responding to challenges with curiosity and self-compassion rather than harsh self-judgment. Over time, this approach reduces burnout and supports emotional resilience.

Moving Forward With Support

High-functioning anxiety does not need to be eliminated to live a meaningful life. The goal is not to get rid of anxiety entirely, but to change your relationship with it. Mindfulness-based ecotherapy offers practical tools for reconnecting with the body, the natural world, and personal values in ways that support long-term well-being.

At the Mindful Ecotherapy Center, Charlton Hall, MMFT, PhD, provides teletherapy that integrates mindfulness-based ecotherapy with evidence-based approaches to help you navigate high-functioning anxiety with clarity, balance, and self-compassion.


Share Your Thoughts on High-Functioning Anxiety!

What do you think? Have you experienced high-functioning anxiety? Share your thoughts in the comments below! And don’t forget to subscribe to our newsletter!