A GAD can be treated well with cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), with medication, or with a combination of both. Through cognitive behavioral therapy you learn to adjust your (worrying) thoughts and how to worry less. Your therapist will check with you which situations evoke fear in you and the thoughts that accompany them. It is very important that you will (continue to) seek out the situations that provoke fear. You will feel the urge to avoid those situations. Avoidance is the natural response to fear, and can be useful in real danger (such as being attacked by a bear), but because avoidance maintains the fear, it is important in the case of an anxiety disorder to break the pattern of avoidance and thus to be exposed to the fear (= “exposure”). It is important that your practitioner guides this process well and is closely involved in it.