Couples therapy can be an effective way to improve your relationship, but finding a therapist who is LGBTQ affirming is crucial for couples in the LGBTQ community.
Risks and Benefits of Couples Therapy
Couples therapy is a type of counseling that aims to help couples improve their relationship. This type of therapy can be beneficial in a number of ways. First and foremost, couples therapy provides a safe and supportive environment for couples to discuss their issues. This can be especially helpful for couples who struggle with communication. By working with a therapist, couples can learn to communicate more effectively and express their thoughts and feelings in a constructive way.
The Benefits of Trauma Therapy on Couples
As a Gottman method couples therapist, I have seen firsthand the impact that trauma can have on a relationship. Trauma, whether it be from childhood experiences or more recent events, can leave lasting scars that can affect how we relate to our partners and ourselves. However, I have also witnessed the incredible benefits that trauma therapy can have on relationships. In this blog post, I will explore the ways in which trauma therapy can help couples heal and grow together.
How Play Can Help with ADHD
Career Complacency: What To Do When you Don't Know What To Do With Your Life
Do you ever get jealous of those people who have it all figured out?
Like they knew from a very young age that they wanted to be a veterinarian or a teacher and they just pursued it and ended up with a job they love?
Meanwhile, you might feel a little lost and not sure what your passion is. And work is fine, but you wish you cared more about it.
Is it normal to have no idea what you want to do with your life?
Um, yes, it is.
But actually you probably have some idea. It probably just got clouded by all the pressures you’re facing, some bad past experiences with jobs, and maybe an outdated image of what you thought you wanted but never re-evaluated.
How to Deal With Extreme Family Dependency
You can’t choose your family. It’s fair even to say that you can’t choose what qualities and characteristics you inherit from your family. Things like mental health disorders and codependency patterns can be passed along from generation to generation without skipping a beat. Extreme family dependency entails thinking, behaviors, and feelings. On the outside, it can appear to be a close family relationship, but at its core, the very opposite is true…it’s a toxic pattern that leads to other issues.
Have hope, though. There are ways to overcome it and change dynamics to something more positive. It isn’t easy, but it is possible. Here are a few starting points.
Spotting Codependency in Friendships
Next to family, and sometimes in place of family relationships, friendships can be the most important relationships in your life—the foundation for the good and the bad, the ups and the downs.
Independence and mutual respect are necessary for a friendship or any relationship. Many people are aware of codependent romantic relationships, but it is also possible with friendships. When boundaries become non-existent, and friends begin to blend into one another, it can be the telltale of a codependent friendship.
5 Signs You Sold Your Soul to Your Job… & How to Get it Back
Jobs typically give you set hours. Once your shift ends, so should the work you do. However, some assignments can feel inescapable when you answer emails or are called in on your days off. Before you know it, your life before you got this job could disappear.
You would not be the first person who has felt they sold their soul for their job. You may be someone who has to work a dissatisfying job to support yourself or your family. Maybe you want to devote yourself to a job you love. The problem is that it can feel like you are never off work. Before you know it, you dedicate your time and energy solely to your job instead of your own needs.
When Gender Socialization Collides with Gender Identity
There is a lot of weight placed on gender that is so subtly done it’s not always on the radar as problematic. In our social media era, you’ve likely seen or heard about someone’s gender reveal party. Is it a boy? Or is it a girl? The problem lies in how skewed this viewpoint truly can be. It can unknowingly create discomfort and cause underlying issues in a person’s future.
Why Isn’t Grief Clear-Cut?
Addressing the Mental Health Stigma for Professionals
The year is 2022. Society is becoming more focused on the importance of mental health, but much work still needs to be done. This stigma surrounding mental illness remains present and may even carry more weight for healthcare professionals themselves.
According to the World Health Organization, as many as two-thirds of people who experience mental health difficulties do not seek the appropriate treatment. This number is probably higher for professionals due in part to the fact that stigmas still exist and can cause people to feel ashamed.
Given that anyone struggling with mental health issues is already carrying a daily burden having to grapple with stigmas is additional, unnecessary pain.
In order for anyone, including professionals, to be able to assist others, something needs to be done to address this problem.
Am I Just Stressed Out, or is it Something More?
Life is stressful. Stress comes in many forms and can sink its teeth into just about anyone. The important thing to remember is that stress is temporary. The symptoms of stress should be fleeting. If you feel longer-lasting effects, you may be dealing with something more significant than just stress alone.
What is Betrayal Trauma?
Your clique. The squad. Your ride or die. Your person. The inner circle of your life. Whether this group consists of family, friends, or some combination of the two, everyone has somebody that they trust closely. When someone within your circle breaks your trust or acts out in a way that hurts you, it can result in betrayal trauma. The level of this trauma depends on how significant the circumstances are. It is also influenced by how necessary a role a person plays in your life.
5 Ways to Improve Communication with Your Neurodivergent Partner
Neurodivergent or neurodiverse people have their own unique way of navigating the neurotypical world. It’s no better or worse than the average person, but it is different.
Communication is the framework for any type of relationship, but it can be challenging with someone who is neurodiverse. Here are some ways to manage this with your partner.
Why Do I Feel Anxious For No Reason?
If you notice you keep telling yourself what you “should be doing” to manage your mental health, take an honest inventory of what you’re actually doing. Many times, people say they are “working on it” but can’t name one or two things they are actually doing. This is like taking a day off but spending it worried about work: It’s not really rest!
Try a few of the things on this list, or come up with your own. There isn’t a right or wrong way, it’s just the way that works for you. But if you’re running out of ideas, talking to a trained mental health professional can help.
Navigating Anxiety After the Overturning of Roe v. Wade
Why the Overturning of Roe v. Wade Causes Anxiety
Any kind of jolting political update can result in shock, fear, anger, and uncertainty. Our lives are full and nuanced. At some point, we take certain political and social realities for granted. Roe v. Wade dates back to 1973. There are people that have been born since then and have lived their entire lives with this ruling as a part of their reality. Meanwhile, the people that knew the realities of life before 1973 are more advanced in age. Sure, there have been attempts to alter or overturn it, but most people didn’t see it as something that requires constant attention.
Upon hearing the news of the Supreme Court decision, what once felt certain suddenly became chaos. Uncertainty breeds anxiety. ‘What will happen next…How does this affect me and my loved ones…Are we in danger of other drastic changes?’
It’s normal to feel stressed about such scenarios. However, if the stress morphs into a free-floating sense of general anxiety, you could be dealing with a diagnosable disorder. Let’s explore some self-help steps you can take right away to alleviate those stress levels.
5 Signs You Have a Trauma Bond
It just doesn’t seem right for the words trauma and bond to be linked. To bond with someone is a good thing, right? Quite often, it is. In fact, it can be one of the best things we have ever experienced. So, to be clear, “trauma bonding” is not about connecting and healing with someone over shared traumas. A trauma bond is something that happens to someone trapped in an abusive relationship.
This is not rare. About 40 percent of women and 10 percent of men report being victimized by intimate partner violence. The keyword there is “report.” Many more examples are kept quiet due to shame or guilt. Let’s take a closer look.
Facing the Challenges of Being Queer & POC
In a world that is quick to discriminate, there are many challenges faced by minority groups. Those challenges are magnified when you belong to two or more of those groups. Queer people of color can face racist and queer-phobic slurs that can take a toll physically and mentally.
In the 21st Century, our world is becoming more inclusive and inviting to minority groups. As our understanding of gender and sexuality expands, more people are able to express their full selves. But this doesn’t mean the work is done. Queer POC face some of the harshest realities in our world today. If more people knew what queer POC went through, we could encourage more conversations about this demographic’s experiences. With a clear understanding of these experiences, those who are queer and POC can suffer fewer mental health challenges.
Here are the challenges that those who are POC and queer face.
How Discrimination Affects LGBTQ+ Healthcare
Everyone needs healthcare. Everyone gets sick and is vulnerable to illnesses or diseases, and everyone needs regular check-ups. Regardless of gender or sexual orientation, healthcare is essential for us all.
Discrimination in healthcare settings can endanger the lives of the LGBTQ+ community who don’t have access to or are denied adequate healthcare. The Affordable Care Act prevented healthcare providers and insurance companies from refusing someone healthcare based on discrimination. But, policymakers continue to add changes to this.
You never want to be in a situation where your relationship while being HIV+ is an excuse for your doctor to refuse you HIV medication. Trans men and women should not have their mental health issues ignored or routine medical care denied due to personal biases of providers. If things do not change regarding healthcare within the LGBTQ+ community, large portions of our communities will continue to be too exhausted, afraid, or at risk to seek treatment, or worse; entirely denied care.
Here is how discrimination affects the LGBTQ+ communities.
5 Reasons People Report Being Happier After Divorce
File this under: Who’s going to tell them?
The romanticizing of life-long marriages has actually had a detrimental effect on relationships.
We have started to see a backlash against longevity as the ultimate factor of successful relationships and marriages. Marriage itself is of course a nuanced, complex arrangement - but you wouldn’t know that if you looked at social and other media around this multi billion dollar industry.
Of course, long term monogamous relationships are a beautiful thing! (TBH if I wasn’t a therapist, I would be a wedding and event planner. Seriously, I love weddings.)
But focusing on longevity ignores all the other factors that go into a successful relationship.
Things like evolving with your partner, or allowing space for them to change, the impact of financial stress, raising children, isolation from friends and family, and many other experiences are often ignored in the phrase “til death do you part.”
Sometimes, the kindest thing you can do is agree to end a relationship or a marriage amicably.
This is true for people of all genders. However, because of patriarchal cultural norms and the institutional barriers for women, we are often most disadvantaged when it comes to considering ending a marriage.
Of course, anyone who has been through a divorce will often say they stayed longer than they should have. There is pressure on everyone from social, legal, financial, and even religious aspects.
And while media often shows men finding relief after “escaping the bear trap” of a bad marriage, and casts women in a desperate, “washed-up” light, research continues to show that women often report being happier after divorce.
A 2013 survey conducted by London’s Kingston University said the majority of women were happier than they had ever been after divorcing. Another survey by Carphone Warehouse said 35% of women were less stressed after divorce compared to 17% of men.
Here are five reasons why women in particular report being happier after divorce.