Seymour is a town where people look out for each other. Working families, tight neighborhoods, a community that knows what it means to deal with real life — not the curated version of it. And a lot of people in that kind of community learn to push through. To handle things. To not make a big deal out of what's going on inside. But anxiety doesn't care how good you are at pushing through. It just keeps building. The sleep that starts slipping. The constant background tension that you've gotten so used to you can't remember what it felt like before. The moments of panic that come out of nowhere and leave you shaken. If any of that sounds like your life right now, Sindhia Shyras, APRN is worth a call. She's a board-certified Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner with nine years of experience treating anxiety, and she sees Seymour residents through telehealth from anywhere in Connecticut and in-person at our New Britain office.
You'd think that being tired would make sleep easier. But with anxiety, it often works the opposite way. The body is exhausted and the mind won't stop. You lie down and the thinking starts — the replaying, the planning, the imagining of scenarios that probably won't happen but feel very possible at 1am. Or you fall asleep and then wake at 3am, completely alert, unable to get back down. That disrupted sleep then makes the anxiety worse the next day, which makes the sleep worse the next night. It's a cycle that people can go years inside of, assuming it's just who they are. But it's a treatable symptom — often one of the first things that improves once anxiety is properly addressed.
Sometimes anxiety has a clear starting point — a job loss, a health scare, a new baby, a relationship ending, a move. Seymour is a town where those kinds of real-life pressures hit people hard, and the anxiety that gets activated during a difficult period doesn't always settle back down when the situation improves. Your nervous system learned a new set point. The threat response got calibrated high and stayed there. That's not a character flaw. It's a biological response that got stuck — and that's exactly what psychiatric care is designed to help reset.
About an hour with Sindhia — a genuine conversation, not a rushed form-fill. She covers your current symptoms in detail: how anxiety shows up for you specifically, what your sleep looks like, whether depression is in the picture, what's been going on in your life, what you've already tried. By the end you have a diagnosis, a treatment plan, and follow-up visits already scheduled. She accepts Aetna, Cigna, Husky Health, Medicaid, United Healthcare, Anthem, ConnectiCare, and self-pay. Telehealth is available statewide — or come in to New Britain. Either way works.
Serving Seymour, CT and all of Connecticut via telehealth.
Call 860-515-8689 or book online below.
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