What I’ve learned from 10 years of therapy – and why it’s time to stop

What I’ve learned from 10 years of therapy – and why it’s time to stop

Embarking on a decade-long journey of therapy can be transformative, enlightening, and challenging. As we delve into the lessons gleaned from such an experience, we also explore the reasons and implications of choosing to step away from it.

Therapy was like finding a key for a door that had been locked my whole life

Here are the nine things it’s taught me

Ask yourself the right questions

What is choosing an unavailable man good for?

Check in with yourself (every now and then)

What’s happening for you right now?

You have to know when to stop

Therapy is a powerful means to an end, and it has armed me with the skills, in effect, to be my own therapist.

… but don’t blame your parents

Larkin was right, they fuck you up

Tears are useful

The release of talking, of being listened to, is an emotional experience

Self-acceptance is actually a thing

This phrase is bandied around so freely in self-help articles and on fridge magnets, it has almost lost its meaning.

Don’t be afraid of silence

Silences are often when the juiciest things come out. It takes courage to sit with it.

Proper change takes time

A therapist is part detective, part archaeologist, scratching at the surface, finding something of potential interest and digging a little deeper

The past holds clues

We survive (in the broadest sense) our childhoods by figuring out how to fit into our families, our roles, our small world; we learn about relationships from our parents. We then carry these ways of being into our adult lives where, in many cases, they are no longer useful, or relevant.

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