
How ERP Works for OCD and Why It Is Considered the Gold Standard
May 19, 2026By Elian Beattie, LCMHC – Owner, Insights Group: Individual Therapy & Family Support on the NH Seacoast
Taking the step to invest in your mental health is a significant milestone. If you have decided to begin therapy, you might feel a mixture of relief, hope, and understandable nervousness. It is incredibly common to wonder exactly what will happen when you sit down with a therapist for the first time.
If you are considering Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), you are choosing an approach that is collaborative, structured, and deeply rooted in clinical research. At Insights Group, we prioritize demystifying the therapeutic process. Knowing what to expect in your first CBT session can ease your anxiety and help you feel empowered as you begin this journey toward lasting change. Whether you are coming in person to our office in the Seacoast of NH or participating via telehealth, there is a similar structure to a first therapy session.
What Is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)?
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is an evidence based, goal oriented form of psychological treatment. Developed on the idea that our thoughts (cognitions), feelings, and behaviors are interconnected, CBT focuses on how the way we interpret situations influences how we feel and act.
Unlike traditional psychoanalysis, which may spend years exploring your early childhood, CBT is primarily focused on the “here and now.” It is designed to help you identify unhelpful or distorted thinking patterns and modify unhelpful behaviors. By addressing the way you think and act, you can effectively influence your emotional response.
Research consistently demonstrates that CBT is exceptionally effective for a wide range of challenges, making it a foundational framework for anxiety therapy, depression therapy, eating disorder therapy, and specialized treatments like OCD therapy. It is worth mentioning that the type of CBT therapy effective for OCD is called Exposure and Response Prevention, or ERP for short. You can read more about that here: How ERP Works for OCD and Why It Is Considered the Gold Standard
What to Expect in Your First CBT Session
Your first CBT session is fundamentally an intake and assessment appointment. It is less about immediately diving into deep therapeutic interventions and more about building a foundation. Think of this initial meeting as an informational roadmap session where you and your therapist get to know each other, establish comfort, and outline what you hope to accomplish. Setting the stage for a clear direction for therapy is important to helping you achieve your goals.
For many individuals, starting CBT can feel intimidating because of a fear of the unknown. Knowing that the first session has a clear structure can help lower your baseline stress. Your therapist’s primary goal is to understand your current struggles in a safe, non judgmental environment and determine how to tailor the CBT treatment to your unique lifestyle and needs.
What Happens During a First CBT Session?
While every therapist has their own personal style, a standard initial cognitive behavioral therapy appointment follows a predictable, structured flow:
- Housekeeping and Logistics: You will briefly review practice policies, confidentiality and informed consent. This is a great opportunity for you to ask questions about your therapist, Insights Group, or the process of CBT therapy.
- The Clinical Intake: Your clinician will guide you through a comprehensive overview of your mental health history, relationships, lifestyle, and current symptoms.
- Discussion of Presenting Problems: You will discuss what specifically brought you into therapy at this point in your life.
- Collaborative Goal Setting: You will begin defining what success looks like for you in measurable, realistic terms.
- Feedback and Next Steps: Your therapist will share their initial clinical impressions and propose a collaborative treatment plan, giving you the space to ask questions.
What Questions Will a Therapist Ask?
To get a complete picture of your well being, your clinician will ask targeted questions during the intake process. These questions are not meant to make you feel interrogated; rather, they help the therapist understand the context of your life.
Expect questions such as:
- What specific symptoms are you experiencing, and how long have they been occurring?
- How are these challenges currently impacting your daily life, work, and relationships?
- Have you participated in mental health treatment or counseling in the past? What was helpful or unhelpful about that experience?
- What does a typical day look like for you, and what are your primary sources of stress and support?
- What are your goals for therapy? If treatment is successful, what will be different in your daily life?
Will You Have to Share Everything Right Away?
One of the most common worries people face when starting CBT is the fear that they will be forced to disclose their deepest vulnerabilities or past traumas in the first hour. The short answer is: absolutely not.
Therapy moves at a pace that respects your boundaries. While your therapist needs an accurate baseline of your symptoms to help you, you are entirely in control of what you share. It takes time to build therapeutic trust. If a specific topic feels too heavy or overwhelming to speak about during your first CBT session, it is completely acceptable to say, “I am not ready to talk about that just yet.” A skilled therapist will validate that choice and help you build safety before unpacking difficult experiences.
How Are CBT Goals Set Early in Treatment?
A defining hallmark of cognitive behavioral therapy is its collaborative nature. You are the expert on your life, and your clinician is the expert on psychological tools. Together, you function as a team.
During the first session or two, your therapist will help you translate vague desires into concrete, achievable objectives. For example, if you seek CBT for anxiety and state, “I just want to stop worrying,” your therapist will help you refine that into an actionable goal, such as: “Identify three cognitive distortions during the week and practice tolerating uncertainty without seeking external reassurance and validation.” Setting specific goals early ensures that both you and your therapist can track your progress objectively over time.
How to Prepare for Your First CBT Session
You do not need to do any heavy lifting to prepare for your initial appointment, but taking a few practical steps can help you feel grounded and maximize your time:
- Complete Your Paperwork Early: Filling out intake forms and clinical questionnaires before your appointment allows your therapist to review your history beforehand, saving valuable session time.
- Jot Down a Few Notes: If you worry that your mind will go blank, write down a brief list of your primary symptoms, when they tend to spike, and any specific questions you have for the therapist.
- Reflect on Your Goals: Spend a few minutes thinking about what you want your life to look like in three to six months. What would you be doing if anxiety, depression, or stress weren’t holding you back?
How to Know Whether CBT Is the Right Fit for You
CBT is a highly effective framework, but it relies heavily on your active participation. It is often an excellent fit for individuals who prefer a practical, structured, and educational approach to therapy. If you like having clear objectives, learning concrete skills, and understanding the “why” behind your emotional patterns, CBT will likely resonate with you.
Because CBT requires practicing new skills between appointments, it is best suited for those who are ready to engage in homework assignments outside of the therapy office. If you prefer a completely unstructured session where you simply vent without focusing on behavioral changes or skill building, other modalities might be more aligned with your preferences.
When to Seek Help From Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
It is a common misconception that you need to be in a severe crisis to benefit from therapy. In reality, addressing symptoms early often prevents them from compounding into more disruptive challenges.
You should consider seeking CBT treatment if:
- Intrusive thoughts, chronic worry, or low mood consistently interfere with your performance at work or school.
- You find yourself avoiding specific places, social situations, or activities due to anxiety or fear.
- Your relationships are experiencing strain because of emotional reactivity or behavioral withdrawal.
- You feel stuck in repetitive, unhelpful cycles of behavior or thinking that you cannot seem to break on your own.
At Insights Group, our multidisciplinary team of therapists is dedicated to providing high quality, evidence based care across the Seacoast of NH. We walk alongside you through every stage of the therapeutic process, ensuring you feel supported, heard, and equipped with the practical tools necessary to change your relationship with your thoughts.
Ready to Take Control of Your Mental Health?
If you are ready to take control of your mental health and experience the benefits of structured, evidence based care, we are here to guide you. Contact us for a consultation today to match with a clinician on our team and take the first step toward lasting relief.
FAQs About Your First CBT Session
Your first session is primarily an intake evaluation. Your therapist will gather a comprehensive history of your symptoms, answer your questions about the practice, and collaborate with you to outline your primary goals for treatment.
Focus on being as honest as possible about what is currently feeling difficult in your life. You can describe your physical symptoms, the thoughts that disrupt your day, and how these challenges impact your routine. Remember, you do not have to share anything you are not yet comfortable discussing.
It is natural to feel a bit anxious or vulnerable when discussing your mental health with someone new. However, your therapist is trained to establish a warm, welcoming, and paced environment to help minimize your discomfort.
Usually, homework in the very first session is highly accessible. It might simply involve tracking your mood, noticing when certain anxious thoughts arise, or completing an initial reading assignment. Heavy skill practice generally begins after the treatment plan is fully established.
The best way to prepare is to complete your intake paperwork in advance, write down a brief list of your current symptoms or goals, and enter the session with an open mind and a willingness to collaborate.
Because CBT is structured and active, many individuals begin to notice a shift in their perspective and symptom management within 8 to 12 weekly sessions. However, the exact timeline depends on the complexity of your goals and your consistency with practicing skills outside of session.




