Our Blogs
By THE CREATIVE TEAM
It’s Time to RESET: Answering, “What do I get out of therapy?”
For the past few months, I’ve been unpacking the acronym RESET to help you see if you or a loved one should see a therapist. In each blog, I’ve talked about what restlessness, over sensitivity, emptiness, and tiredness feel like and how therapy can help relieve those types of suffering. All too often, someone will tell me, “But Dr. Rachel, I’m not suffering enough to need therapy.”
Hey, you’re suffering. That’s enough. You shouldn’t push through your pain, but instead RESET with a therapist so you can find REST.
It’s Time to RESET: How Therapy Helps Over-Sensitivity
Welcome to the it’s time to RESET blog series, where I unpack the RESET acronym and talk about when it’s time for you or someone you love to see a therapist. For this blog, I will dive into what it feels like to be over sensitive and show how therapy can help. If you missed the opening blog and you’re interested in what RESET means, check out my previous blogs, (It’s time to RESET: Answering, “How do I know I need therapy?”) and (It’s time to RESET: How therapy helps restlessness).
3 Ways to Increase Self Respect
So many of the clients I work with want to feel more confident and worthwhile, but they don’t know where to start. Sometimes, we feel like we could love ourselves instantly if we just did the right thing. In reality, we have to take time to build up our relationship with ourselves by learning what we need and earning our own respect. To help you build your relationship with yourself and feel worthwhile, here are three things you can fold into your routine to help increase your self-respect.
Five Ways to Manage Your Stress
Stress affects us on a deeper level than we often recognize. We feel it in our bodies, tightening our muscles and draining our energy. It comes out in our relationships with us accidentally snapping at loved ones and even hurts our relationship with ourselves.
The key to managing stress is making life changes that help us have a better mindset. So here are five practical, ‘wow, I can actually do these things’ kinds of steps you can take to feel less stressed.