Ben Eckstein, LCSW

Owner/Director

Ben is the owner and director of Bull City Anxiety & OCD Treatment Center. He’s a Massachusetts native and moved to North Carolina in 2014, initially starting a small private practice in Durham. Ben was trained at McLean Hospital’s OCD Institute and has now been treating OCD and Anxiety Disorders for over a decade. He serves as vice president on the Board of Directors for OCD North Carolina and offers training, workshops, and speaking engagements in additional to his clinical work. Ben’s first book, Worrying is Optional: Break the Cycle of Anxiety and Rumination that Keeps You Stuck was published in 2023. Ben is a father of four and, when not doing therapy or herding small children, he can be found enjoying the outdoors and tracking down the best Carolina barbecue.

Education: University of Vermont, B.A.; New York University, MSW

Post-Graduate Certifications:

Behavioral Therapy Training Institute (BTTI), International OCD Foundation

Certificate in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Boston University

Supportive Parenting for Anxious Childhood Emotions (SPACE), Yale Child Study Center

Professional Training Institute, TLC Foundation for BFRBs

Perinatal Mental Health Certification (PMH-C), Postpartum Support International

Licensure: North Carolina, Massachusetts, New York

Articles:

Infusing ERP with Self-Compassion, ADAA

What It Really Means to Have Intrusive Thoughts, TIME Magazine

Untangling Eating Disorders and OCD, Veritas Collaborative

The Link Between OCD and Depression, PsychCentral

How Much Do OCD Subtypes Matter?, Psychology Today

Willpower is Overrated, Psychology Today

Are Coping Skills Really Helping You?, Psychology Today

Logic Won’t Help Your Anxiety, Made of Millions

Six Ways to Cope with Claustrophobia, Insider

Podcasts:

The OCD Stories, “Rumination” (Ep. 411)

Mentally Flexible, “Worrying is Optional”

The OCD Whisperer, How to Avoid Common ERP Pitfalls (Ep. 109)

The OCD Family Podcast, “OCD in Adult Children”

You’re Not Alone, “A Deep Dive Into OCD and Treatment Approaches”

All the Hard Things, “Dads Struggle Too: Postpartum OCD in Fathers/Partners”