The Connection between Sleep, Anxiety, and Stress
Sleep is essential for managing anxiety and stress. Lack of sleep can worsen our mental health symptoms, while consistently getting enough restful sleep can help us feel more balanced and emotionally regulated.
By setting a consistent sleep schedule, creating a sleep-conducive environment, practicing relaxation techniques, limiting caffeine and alcohol consumption, and seeking therapy if needed, we can prioritize our sleep hygiene and promote better mental health.
How Does Therapy Help with Stress?
If you're reading this, chances are you are feeling stressed and anxious. You're not alone. Everyone at some point struggles with stress - it’s part of being human, but there are ways to manage and alleviate your stress and anxiety. One of the most effective ways to do so is through therapy.
How to Find the Right Therapist for You
So you’re finally ready to try therapy - congratulations! Therapy is one of the top ways you can invest in yourself and commit to growth and change in your life. But how do you go about actually finding a therapist? If you type in “therapists near me” into Google, you will get an overwhelming number of results that may end with you shutting your laptop closed.
Here are some tips and considerations to help you find a therapist who fits your needs and is best positioned to help you.
“Am I Codependent?”
I hear this question from clients fairly often, usually with a good dose of hesitancy. I suspect that is because “codependency” is a buzzword we throw around but don’t necessarily really understand. In this post, we’ll learn a bit more about the history of codependency and aim to clarify its defining characteristics.
Why You Should Try Group Therapy
Individual therapy can feel safer for many people, but there are also many benefits to group therapy. Have you ever considered trying group therapy? Let’s look at 8 reasons why it helps and can be a great complement to individual therapy.
Four Steps to Mindfulness: Living with Intention
Recently, my clients and I have been discussing choice. Many of my clients undermine their own capacity to choose. When they come to treatment, they often feel out of control, stuck in emotional reactivity and deeply ingrained patterns of behavior.
So, we begin to look at the difference between reacting and responding. Reacting is often like a knee-jerk reaction, just an automatic response. Often, our reactions are driven by emotions, habits, and automatic thoughts. They are impulsive.
Both/And: The Power of a Dialectic
A dialectic is the idea that two opposites can both be true at the same time. It does away with false, black-or-white dichotomies and moves us into shades of grey. So even though two things feel as though they are in conflict, a dialectical stance creates room for them both and recognizes they both are valid. This stance opens us to more possibilities and can help us get unstuck in our own thinking.
Do I Have a Drinking Problem?
“Is My Relationship with Alcohol Healthy? Is My Drinking Unhealthy? Am I an Alcoholic?”
Are you wondering if your relationship with alcohol is healthy? Have others expressed concerns? Or maybe you’re harboring your own concerns, even though you don’t really want to look at it too closely…
The Costs of People-Pleasing
A people-pleaser is someone who helps others, gives often, and is very attuned to the needs and emotions of others. That in itself doesn’t sound so bad. And I agree. Most people-pleasers I know, myself included, are often empathetic and considerate.
The label people-pleaser is applied when that helping becomes almost compulsive and is tied to someone’s ability to feel socially safe and wanted.
People-pleasers usually help to the point of burning themselves out and abandoning their own needs. Yes, they are attuned to others, but usually at the lack of paying attention to themselves.
Rosebud: What’s in a Name?
Change is so difficult and scary. So many of us avoid it at all costs, even to the point of hurting ourselves in the process. Willingness to change - or to bloom - is key in therapy. We become willing to take the risk to be vulnerable, to grow, to blossom. This incredible transformation is something I have the honor of seeing in my clients time and time again.
What are Boundaries?
A boundary is a line that marks a limit, such as who I am and who I am not, who I give my time to and who I do not, how I’m willing to be treated and how I am not.
Radical Acceptance: Part 2
Last week, I introduced the concept of Radical Acceptance and why it can be a useful practice. This week let’s talk about how to practice it, as well as some myths about radical acceptance that may make it hard for us to fully embrace it.
Radical Acceptance: Part 1
When faced with a painful situation, we can do one of four things:
We can attempt to solve the problem, or change the situation.
Uh-oh - that didn’t work? Well, our second option is to stay miserable. Maybe we even become bitter or resentful because we can’t stop thinking about how unfair this situation is! Maybe if I think about how crappy it is, it will magically change…
(Side note: Sometimes we need to sit in this place for a little while. It’s okay. But it usually isn’t very helpful to stay here too long!)
The third option is to change your perception of the situation. Maybe instead of focusing on how rude it was for that driver to cut you off, instead be grateful that you did not get in an accident and that you have quick reflexes!
Lastly, we can choose to radically accept the situation. Let’s talk more about this option.
New to Therapy? What to Expect in Your First Session
You’ve known for a while that you need some help; you’ve meticulously combed through therapists on Psychology Today; you’re ready to make a change in your life . . . But what the heck does a therapy session even look like?
How do I “ground” myself?
Do you ever catch yourself tensing up and fixating on thoughts of everything that could go wrong, or maybe just everything you have to do? Do you struggle to stay in the present moment? Do you ever feel overwhelmed by feelings of anxiety?
It may be helpful to try out some “grounding” skills.