Therapy Lessons: 12 Key Takeaways

Twelve things I’ve learned from both sides of the therapy room:

  1. Silence causes more harm than honest conversation. 
  2. Courage isn’t the absence of fear, it’s moving forward while fear walks beside you. 
  3. You only need one person to set and hold a boundary: yourself. 
  4. Therapy isn’t about fixing, it’s about understanding and being seen by a steady and caring presence. 
  5. When in doubt, slow down. 
  6. The only person who can change you is you, though support never hurts. 
  7. The things you avoid are usually the things you most need to face. 
  8. Healing follows your own pace, and your nervous system is often your best guide. 
  9. Recovery isn’t linear. It loops and curves and circles back. 
  10. Self-compassion matters. Most “mistakes” were once honest attempts to protect yourself. 
  11. The fact that growth is painful doesn’t mean anything is wrong. Pain is often part of the process.
  12. Vulnerability is the doorway to connection, but only when it’s offered to trustworthy hands.

The Therapist Who Came Undone

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Man Walks Into a Room

I recently finished reading “Man Walks Into a Room” by Nicole Kraus, (243 pages, 2002). I should have taken a hint from the title; while the initial plot caught my eye and the first few chapters were engaging, I ultimately found the book aimless.

The story follows Samson Greene, who develops a tumor that causes him to lose his memory of the ages between 12 and 35. Unfortunately, the plot moves glacially, feeling more like a disjointed set of descriptions than a cohesive narrative. Just as the author begins to address the profound issues of Samson reconnecting with his wife, career, and friends, the story takes a bizarre turn into the Mojave Desert. The introduction of a mad scientist transferring memories shifts what could have been a promising meditation on memory into a poorly executed sci-fi plot.

Furthermore, the characters lack depth, and the writing is extremely uneven, ranging from intelligent insights to unskilled prose. This is easily the worst book I have read in years. Although the basic premise was intriguing, the lack of structure made for a frustrating experience. This was a firm reminder of why I should stick to my 50-page rule, and I regret continuing until the end.

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Quiet Kindness

  • I stayed at a cheap roadside motel after losing everything — job, apartment, relationship.
    The clerk handed me a key and said, “Room 7. No deposit tonight.” I asked why. He said, “You look like me ten years ago.”
    When I checked out a month later, I left enough cash to cover another stranger’s week.
  • When my dad passed, I couldn’t bring myself to clean his garage. It smelled like oil and dust — and him. Our new neighbor came over one weekend, said his kid’s bike chain broke, and asked if he could use some tools. I told him to excuse the mess. Explained the reason. A few hours later, I saw the garage door open again. He’d cleaned it, organized it, labeled everything. Said, “Didn’t want you to forget what this place was built for.”
    I cried. It was the first time I’d gone in there in months.
  • When I was 19 and making minimum wage, my debit card was declined at the grocery store. I just stood there, humiliated.
    The guy behind me said, “Hey, I think you dropped this,” and slipped a $20 onto the counter like it was mine.
    He never looked back. Didn’t need credit. Didn’t even smile. That’s what made it hit harder.
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Harnessing Gratitude

Want to expand your gratitude muscle? Reflecting on beneficial absences—the invisible good things in your life—is one way to do that.

Ask yourself:

  • What’s something you’ve taken for granted that could have easily gone wrong—but didn’t? 
  • When did you narrowly miss a very bad outcome?
  • Who showed you grace by withholding judgment and discipline when you deserved it?
  • Who honored your autonomy by not giving you unnecessary help and advice? 

In the end, gratitude isn’t just about what’s seen and said—it’s also about the criticisms swallowed, the advice people resisted giving, and the disasters we narrowly missed. –Berkley

Positively Purging-I welcome your feedbacks in the comments and your likes and passing the real life wisdom on to others as I embark on this new venture of “positively purging“, as I know each of these pieces represents something…

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Nature is Self-Care

“Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.”– Albert Einstein

Positively Purging-I welcome your feedbacks in the comments and your likes and passing the real life wisdom on to others as I embark on this new venture of “positively purging“, as I know each of these pieces represents something…

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