Blog
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Thank you for being here.
I’ve put together some of my favorite blog posts for you below.
They’re a great way to learn more about how I think and work.
Why Am I Not Good Enough?
You might feel pressure to figure this all out on your own and to just “love yourself” into feeling better. However, it’s often times a fantasy that this is the kind of work we can do alone. It isn’t that therapists have magical answers, but more that we can be with you in the process and figure out the answers together.
The answer to the question Why Am I Not Good Enough truly is, “It Depends.”
Rebranding “Daddy Issues”
This phrase makes me cringe so much, and you might feel similarly. To say that someone has “daddy issues” is typically a fast way to metaphorically throw a punch to someone’s gut — and that someone is usually a woman. In my experience, this phrase is casually thrown around as an insult that’s used to discredit what a woman experiences in an intimate relationship. As in, when someone expresses a concern in a relationship, they can be met with. “They just have daddy issues that they’re projecting onto me.”
I want to focus on two of the many ways this can be harmful.
How do I know when I’m ready to date again?
There's this idea floating around on the internet that we have to be 'fully healed' and 'self-heal' before we dare to enter any type of relationship. Yes, it's a good idea to practice self-awareness and not carelessly project our pain onto new partners. But also, we are social creatures and we heal in and through relationships. So how do we know when we're ready enough to go back out there after a breakup or after trauma?
Why Am I A Therapist?
When I graduated from undergrad a decade ago I had no intention of ever going back to school. I had no idea what I wanted to do with my career, but I knew I was interested in human sexuality, trauma, and social justice. Fast forward to two Masters degrees later, I’m grateful for the experiences that gradually and organically revealed my passion for psychotherapy. I can’t imagine myself doing anything else. In honor of National Social Work Month, ten years since leaving undergrad, five years since grad school graduation, and nearly one whole year in private practice, here is a snapshot of how I’ve landed here.
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