Private CBT (cognitive behavioural therapy) in Milton Keynes
If you’re living with anxiety, depression, stress, or intrusive thoughts, cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) can help you regain balance, confidence, and control.
At The Saxon Clinic in Milton Keynes, part of Circle Health Group, we provide private CBT sessions with experienced psychologists and therapists who specialise in helping people manage their thoughts and emotions more effectively.
Our CBT service is evidence-based, practical, and focused on long-term wellbeing. Sessions are personalised to your individual challenges, offering a structured way to understand your thinking patterns and develop lasting coping strategies.
With fast access to appointments, flexible scheduling, and compassionate, confidential care, The Saxon Clinic provides the ideal environment to begin your journey toward positive change.
What is cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT)?
Cognitive behavioural therapy is a talking therapy designed to help people understand how their thoughts, emotions and behaviours influence each other. By recognising and challenging negative thought patterns, CBT empowers you to respond to life’s difficulties in a calmer, more constructive way.
Unlike traditional counselling, which often explores your past in depth, CBT is solution focused. It looks at your current problems and teaches you skills to manage them day to day.
CBT is widely used to treat conditions such as:
- Anxiety and panic attacks
- Depression and low mood
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
- Social anxiety
- Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
- Health anxiety
- Phobias
- Work-related stress
It’s also beneficial for people experiencing insomnia, eating difficulties, or chronic pain where emotional stress plays a role.
At The Saxon Clinic, all CBT is delivered by qualified professionals accredited by the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies (BABCP) or Health and Care Professions Council (HCPC), ensuring the highest standards of care.
What are the 5 stages of CBT?
While every therapy plan is personalised, most CBT programmes follow a clear structure with five key stages. These guide your progress and ensure your sessions are purposeful, measurable, and effective.
1. Assessment and goal setting
Your first sessions focus on understanding your symptoms, triggers, and how your difficulties impact daily life. Together with your therapist, you’ll agree on achievable goals - for example, reducing panic attacks, managing stress at work, or overcoming social anxiety.
This stage is about collaboration. You’ll build a therapeutic relationship based on trust, openness, and a shared understanding of what success looks like for you.
2. Identifying negative thought patterns
CBT helps you notice automatic thoughts – the inner voice that shapes how you interpret events. These might include 'I’m not good enough' or 'Something bad will happen.' Over time, these thoughts can reinforce anxiety or depression.
Through guided discussion and thought-tracking exercises, you’ll learn to identify these patterns, understand where they come from, and how they influence your emotions and behaviour.
3. Challenging unhelpful beliefs
Once you recognise negative thinking habits, your therapist will help you question and reframe them. You’ll explore the evidence behind your thoughts, testing whether they are realistic or distorted by emotion.
For instance, if you often think 'I always fail,' your therapist might help you identify times when you succeeded, gradually building more balanced and empowering beliefs.
4. Developing coping strategies
CBT is practical. You’ll learn techniques to manage stress, regulate emotions, and respond differently to triggers. These might include relaxation methods, problem-solving strategies, or graded exposure (gradually facing feared situations).
Your therapist may give you short exercises to practise between sessions, helping you apply these new skills to everyday situations. Over time, this practice strengthens your confidence and self-awareness.
5. Maintenance and relapse prevention
As therapy progresses, you’ll become increasingly independent in managing your thoughts and reactions. In the final stage, you’ll review your progress and create a plan to maintain the positive changes you’ve made.
You’ll leave CBT with a toolkit of strategies you can use long after therapy ends, enabling you to handle future challenges with resilience and clarity.