Self-Disclosure: (Some of) The Things We Wish Our Therapists Would Share

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I’m someone who loves to learn things the hard way. I’m that person who has to make the same mistake (usually more than once!) before I wise up. 

 
 

Stayed in relationships and jobs past their expiration date?

Check!

Tried to find comfort by binging on cake and/or Netflix?

Of course!

Other things I’m not quite ready to tell you this soon, but will share later?

You betcha.

 
 
 

In fact, I was so good at doing things the wrong way, that after learning way too many lessons, I decided to make a career out of it. Yes, I became a therapist so I could put all these lessons to good use. After all, isn’t it better that I make mistakes so you don’t have to?

See, before becoming a therapist, I lived a very different life.

One that didn’t serve me or anyone around me.

I grew up in a suburb outside of New York City in a family that valued high achievement. Like many, I was taught that success is an external thing you pursue. An esteemed job you can brag about is like the Holy Grail for many in my culture, and I bought into that concept hard. Eventually I learned what success and happiness really meant, but it wasn’t until I exhausted every other option. 

 

Continuing the theme of seeking happiness outside myself,  I began a love-hate relationship with medication at age 14. Anti-depressants, mood stabilizers, ADD meds, sleep aids. You name it, I took it. At that age, no one taught me the thinking and coping skills I probably should have known. 

I loved having a diagnosis; it was a label that could define me and explain the way I felt. While the label changed depending on when or whom you asked, it comforted me.  On some level, it made me feel understood, but it also made me feel stuck. I felt like I had no choices, and this was “just who I am.” Not surprisingly, things got worse. Beyond the constant medication changes and side effect balancing game, it confirmed my belief that true happiness was an external thing I had to “get.”

I felt flawed, broken, and alone.

 

Years, relationships, and many poor coping mechanisms later, I had a rather traumatic “Aha!” moment and realized I needed to make a change. 

At that moment, my health and happiness became my responsibility;

It wasn’t for a person, a pill, or a thing to fix. I wasn’t broken at all! It was the most empowering moment of my life. From then on, my life immediately changed.

Now, my vision of success isn’t an external thing you “pursue, ” but an internal state of connection and bliss. I cultivated this even more by earning two Masters Degrees, researching and specializing in trauma recovery, and sharing my story on major media platforms (pardon the humble brag, but I worked hard for that!)

Even my dog became a therapy dog, he comes to work with me every day!  

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Now, I’m not going to lie- it took work.

After all, I had to unlearn nearly two decades of learned beliefs and behaviors. The methodologies I employ are based on my clinical training and personal experiences. I’ll never ask a Client to try a tool, learn a skill, or complete an exercise that I have not tested out myself. 

Therapy is a partnership. And now that I’ve self-disclosed more than any still-faced, old-school therapist typically would, I leave the next step to you. If you’ve read all this and feel like we’d be a good fit, click here. I look forward to hearing from you.

 
Visuable Team