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As needed. Shorter thoughts, things that didn't need a whole article. Sticky notes, quotes, images, videos, the rest.

Most men were taught to measure themselves by outcomes: the promotion, the approval, the win. But growth rarely looks impressive in real time.

The real work is learning how to stay steady when effort doesn’t get applause, when discipline goes unnoticed, and when results take longer than expected.
Strength isn’t proving yourself to the masses, rather it’s about staying aligned to your values and adjusting without losing momentum.

Originally on Instagram

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Feeling lost doesn’t mean you’re off track it means you’re about to break free from everything that no longer serves you. It’s your soul’s way of saying,
“Enough of the old story. It’s time for something real.”

Break free from the BS:

1. Own it: Being lost is a sign you’re outgrowing the
old you. Celebrate it.

2. Take small steps: No need to have the whole journey figured out just take one real step at a time.

3. Dig deeper: Ask, “What do I really want?” The answers might surprise you, and they’ll be the ones that change everything.

4. Trust the mess: Yes that also includes you being a hot mess. The magic is in the mess. You’re transforming embrace it.

5. Surround yourself with fire: Spend time with people who push you to be your true self, not the version you’ve outgrown.

Still feeling lost? It’s not a roadblock; again it’s a sign that you’re just about to step into something amazing. It means you’re ready to shed the old layers and show up as the real, unapologetic you. Embrace the chaos, take it slow, and trust that growth often hides in the hot mess. The answers you’re looking for might just be waiting in the places you’ve been avoiding. Give yourself permission to evolve, and make sure you’re surrounded by people or furry companion who truly see and love you. This is your time to shine.

#metalhealthmatters #selfgrowthjourney #selfdiscovery #authenticself #embracechange #therapistthoughts

Originally on Instagram

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These words were pictured in a small picture frame that hung in the hallway of my childhood best friend.
I remember them to this day.
The most important principles and guiding lights in life aren't found in a complex, fancy-worded thesis from Cornell.
They are simple and genuine.
All one has to do is try to follow them.

Originally on Instagram

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The person in the mirror is the ultimate cause of all of your current pain. We all allowed ourselves to have the experiences we did.

We allowed ourselves to be talked down to, treated like less than we were, or gave our “triggers” the power to make us fumble when we should have run.

Originally on Instagram

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Reactions are reflections.
They don’t make you good or bad.
They just show where you are.
Be gentle with yourself when you notice them.

Every reaction is an opportunity to learn.
Awareness itself is already progress.
With kindness toward yourself, growth naturally follows.

Originally on Instagram

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You’re not stuck. You’re scared. Scared to ditch what’s familiar even if it’s slowly messing you up. That’s not weakness. That’s your brain doing its awkward best to keep you “safe.” It hangs on to what it knows, even if it’s poison.

You think once you notice the behavior, you’ll just snap your fingers and stop doing it. But nah. Your brain’s been rehearsing this stuff for years. It doesn’t let go just because you had one self aware shower thought.

And sure, you might get hyped and try to fix it all in one go. Clean slate. New rules. You’re reborn. Until you wake up tired, fall into the same habits, and now you’re frustrated and disappointed.

What actually works is much smaller than you want it to be. Stuff that feels almost pointless at first. But it adds up.

Hold up and slow down…and

1. Say the damn truth out loud
What’s actually not working? What crap are you pretending is fine? Call it out. We both know the truth.

2. Stop waiting to feel ready
So just do something small. Yea, I know I sound like a broken record…but trust me start small and easy.

3. Talk it out
Find someone who won’t just nod and feed your nonsense, but will hit you with the real talk. A friend, your journal, a therapist…whatever gets it done.

4. Remind yourself
Fear isn’t a stop sign. You start by keeping a promise to yourself that no one else sees. Five minutes of stillness. A walk where you don’t scroll. Brushing your teeth without rushing. Not deep, just intentional.

From there, you build. One quiet thing at a time. Let your anxiety learn that not everything has to be urgent or dramatic.

You’re not broken. You’re just sick of surviving on autopilot.

#therapistthoughts #selfreflection #therapist #therapistthoughts #healingjourney #mentalhealth #mentalhealthawareness

Originally on Instagram

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Panic Attacks Won’t Kill You

A panic attack feels like dying. Your heart races. You can't breathe. Your vision tunnels. Every cell in your body is screaming that something catastrophic is happening right now.

It's not. Your fight-or-flight system just went off at full blast with no actual threat present. Your brain hit the emergency button and your body responded: adrenaline dump, blood pressure spike, rapid breathing, the works. All the things your body does when a bear is chasing you. Except there's no bear. You're at Target buying paper towels.

Panic attacks peak in about 10 minutes and they always end. You've survived every single one you've ever had. A 100% survival rate.

The best thing you can do during one is nothing heroic. Don't fight it. Just notice it: "This is a panic attack. I've had them before. They end. This one will too."

Treatment for panic disorder works really well. You don't have to live like this.

Insight

I know you love showing up for others.
But remember, you matter too.

When your cup is empty, it’s hard to keep going.
It’s okay to rest, to pause, to breathe.
Taking care of yourself isn’t selfish, it’s love.
The more you refill, the lighter you’ll feel.

So please, don’t forget to pour into yourself first.

Originally on Instagram

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Not everyone is going to understand you,
see things from your point of view,
or approve of your choices…
and that's ok.

Freedom comes after you let go of the need to be universally accepted
and give yourself permission to be disliked.
When you stop performing, you start living.

Originally on Instagram

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Boundaries (despite the name) aren't meant to separate us from others.
They're there to make sure everyone is comfortable, and getting what the need.
They're not about shutting people out…
They're there to make sure you're ok with what you're allowing in.

That's not selfishness…
It's self-respect.
Boundaries don't break connections,
They make healthy ones stronger.

Originally on Instagram

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Think about how metal is made.
You put it through intense heat and pressure, and what comes out the other side isn't broken.
It's purer. Stronger. More valuable than before.

Your hardest moments work the same way.
They don't get to be your identity.
But they do get to be the thing that shaped you into someone sharper, wiser, and more compassionate.
That's not weakness. That's refinement.

Originally on Instagram

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If your life feels like a mess, start with the space around you. External order creates internal clarity.

You can't think clearly when your environment is chaos… but you can start small. Make your bed, do the dishes, clear one counter. It's not about being perfect, it's about creating some space to breathe. You have to find your footing before you can deal with everything else.

Originally on Instagram

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It’s easy to think that resilience means bouncing back to who we were before hardship, but in reality, that’s not where growth happens. It’s hard to let go of what was, and sometimes it feels like jumping back to “normal” is the way to go. But true resilience is about finding the courage to move forward, even when the path ahead isn’t clear. It’s about trusting that the next step, however small, will take you closer to where you need to be, even if it’s a new version of yourself.

The Art of Resilience:

1. Accept the discomfort – It’s natural to want to go back to what’s familiar, but acknowledge that growth happens when you choose to move forward, even when it’s hard.

2. Focus on one step at a time – You don’t need to have it all figured out. Just take the next small step, and trust that it’s enough.

3. Be kind to yourself – Remember, it’s okay to feel unsure. Be compassionate with your journey-forward movement is still progress.

4. Find support when needed – You don’t have to do this alone. Surround yourself with people who encourage you to move forward, not back.

Sometimes moving forward feels scarier than going back, but it’s the only way to discover the strength you didn’t know you had. Keep going-you’ve got this.

#resilience #moveforward #healingjourney #mentalhealth #mentalhealthmatters #selfgrowth #therapist

Originally on Instagram

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Everyone wants to be present. Mindful. In the moment. Cool.
But you can't be here now when half your brain is still stuck in 2007, replaying that conversation, that breakup, that thing your dad said, that decision you made.
You're not distracted. You're haunted.
The stuff you haven't dealt with doesn't just disappear because you're trying to focus on your breath. It sits in the background running up your anxiety tab until you finally turn around and face it.
Go back. Look at it. Name it. Process it. Then being present stops being a thing you have to force and just becomes where you actually are.

Originally on Instagram

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You’re Not Broken

Coming to a psychiatrist doesn't mean you're broken. It means something in your brain isn't working the way it should, and you're smart enough to address it instead of pretending it'll fix itself.

You go to a mechanic when your car makes a weird noise. You go to a dentist when your tooth hurts. You see a psychiatrist when your brain is giving you trouble. It's the same thing. Maintenance on a complex system.

The guys who come to LiveWell aren't the weak ones. They're the ones who got tired of white-knuckling through life and decided to do something about it. That takes more guts than pretending everything's fine for another decade.

Your brain is an organ. Sometimes organs need help. That's not weakness. That's biology.

Insight

It’s not about forgiving yourself.
It’s about recognizing your own strength.
Mistakes don’t define us, they refine us.
They’re not obstacles, they’re as important as every other step on our journey.

Give yourself credit for how far you've come, and trust that you’ve got what it takes to face what’s next.
You've proven it time and time again.
You've got this.

Originally on Instagram

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ADHD Medication Isn’t Cheating

You wouldn't tell a diabetic their insulin is cheating. You wouldn't tell someone with bad eyesight that their glasses are a crutch. But for some reason, when someone with ADHD takes medication that corrects a dopamine deficit in their brain, suddenly it's "taking the easy way out."

ADHD medication doesn't give you abilities you don't have. It removes the barrier between you and the abilities you've always had. The focus was always there. The motivation was always there. The medication just lets you access them instead of watching them sit behind a wall your brain built.

People call medication a shortcut. A shortcut to being able to do the things everyone else can do without trying. That's not a shortcut. That's a level playing field.

You don't judge anyone else for needing them. You gonna begrudge a diabetic his insulin too?

Insight

It rarely happens in just one moment.
It’s the patterns, reactions, tone, and consistency over time.
We tend to focus on someone’s potential instead of their behaviors because it feels better to hold onto hope.
But real change is shown, not promised.
Paying attention to what is actually happening, not what we wish was happening, can save us a lot of confusion and hurt.

Originally on Instagram

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Confidence doesn’t appear before you begin.
It grows each time you show up, even when you’re unsure.
The first step is often the hardest, but it’s also the most important.
You don’t need to have it all figured out to start.
What matters is your willingness to try.

With every small effort, you’re building trust in yourself.
That’s how confidence is born, through action, not waiting.
So keep showing up.
Your courage is already enough.

Originally on Instagram

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Yeah, shitty days happen, and honestly, they’re normal.
It’s not about avoiding them, it’s about how you get back up. That’s what matters.

We’re human. We screw up.
So instead of tearing yourself apart, try this:
Pause. Acknowledge it. Don’t run from it. Sit with that shit for a minute. Then ask yourself, What did I learn? What would I do differently next time?

Moving forward? Yeah, it’s hard as hell. No one’s saying it’s easy.

A few things to get your messy ass up:

Get out of your own head. Talk to someone, a friend, a therapist, or write it out.

Walk it off. Sometimes you just need to take a short stroll. And come back to the present.

Set a small goal. Not the whole damn mountain, just the next step.

Be kind to yourself. Not in some cheesy way, just give yourself a break. You’re trying, and that matters.

That first step might be daunting, but I promise it’s worth a shot…plus it feels great after venting.

Just remember you don’t need to have it all figured out, you just need to keep moving.

#therapistthoughts #mentalhealth

Originally on Instagram

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Pay attention to the story you’re telling yourself.

Everyone’s life is a story.
But most of the time? We’re not seeing life as it actually is.

We’re seeing it through the context of the story that has been playing in the background.

Stuff like:

“I always screw this up.”
“No one ever picks me.”
“I’ll never get it right.”

That voice narrating in the background? That’s you…and it’s deciding what happens next.

It’s not just commentary.
It’s a direction.
It tells you what to expect. What to fear. What to go after… and what to avoid.

And honestly? It’s running the whole show way more than you probably realize.

But here’s the good news,

Awareness creates choice.

If your narrator’s stuck on the same loop, the one where you always lose, or get left out, or fall short…well then maybe it’s time to write a new script.

Because if you woke up today, your story’s not over.
But the version you’ve been repeating?
Yeah, maybe that one is.

No one’s coming to rewrite it for you.
You either own your story, or your story owns you.

#therapist #therapistthoughts #mentalhealth #mentalhealthquotes #selfreflection #healingjourney

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Critical thinking means you're breaking down information, weighing evidence, making informed decisions. It's a skill.
Thinking critically means you're just shitting on everything. It's a personality flaw you're calling intelligence.
We see a lot of people who think being negative makes them smart. It doesn't.
It makes you exhausting to be around.
There's a difference between asking good questions and being the person who finds problems in every solution.
One moves you forward. The other keeps you stuck while you congratulate yourself for "seeing through the bullshit."
Figure out which one you're doing.

Originally on Instagram

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You’re not faking it.
You’re evolving.

It feels weird when the way you see yourself hasn’t caught up to what you’re actually doing.
But that disconnect is just a part of the process.

If you’re dragging yesterday’s identity into today’s growth, then it’s no wonder if it won’t fit.

Imposter syndrome isn’t proof you don’t belong.
It’s just the old version of you struggling to picture the present.

You don’t have to feel small to feel safe.
You just have to catch up to the version of you that’s already here.

And that doubt you’re feeling?
It’ll wear off.
That’s just jetlag.

Originally on Instagram

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Men and Therapy

The reason most men won't go to therapy isn't because they don't believe it works. It's because the version of therapy they've been shown doesn't appeal to them.

Sitting on a couch. Talking about feelings. Crying. Hugging. "Tell me how that makes you feel."

That's one style of therapy. It's not the only one. It's not even the best one for most men.

What works for guys is usually practical, structured, and focused on solving a specific problem. Concrete tools. Clear timelines. Measurable outcomes. Treat it like a problem-solving session, not an emotional excavation, and suddenly the guy who "doesn't do therapy" is showing up every two weeks and doing the work.

The modality matters. If one approach didn't work, that doesn't mean therapy doesn't work. It means you haven't found the right fit yet.

Insight

Healing isn’t a brand to be marketed.
And trauma is never just material for a post.
You are so much more than your hardest moments.
Your growth doesn’t need to be performed.

It’s enough that you’re moving forward, step by step.
You don’t have to share everything to be valid.
Some things are meant to stay tender and private.
And that’s where true healing finds its strength.

Originally on Instagram

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Healing isn’t a destination; it’s a journey. When we experience pain, anxiety, or trauma, we often wish for it to disappear. But true healing comes from learning to live with it, to accept it, and to grow through it. It’s about discovering your resilience, one step at a time.

Healing steps:

1. Embrace Your Emotions: It’s okay to feel what you’re feeling. Don’t push your emotions aside… acknowledge them and let them be part of your
process.

2. Be Patient with Yourself: Healing takes time.
Don’t rush your journey; honor your pace and trust that progress happens in small steps.

3. Find Strength in the Struggle: Challenges don’t define your limits-they reveal your inner strength.
Embrace the lessons that come from facing your fears and discomforts.

4. Seek Support: You don’t have to walk this path alone. Reach out for help when needed, whether that’s a therapist, friends, or support groups.

5. Practice Self-Compassion: Be as kind to yourself as you would be to a friend going through a tough time. You deserve the same love and
understanding.

Healing isn’t about perfection-it’s about progress.
Trust that each day, you’re moving closer to a stronger, more peaceful version of yourself.

#healingquotes #healingjourney #mentalhealth #mentalhealthawareness #therapist #therapistthoughts #selfreflection

Originally on Instagram

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Some people are just trying to start shit. Don't give them what they want.
We all know the feeling. Someone says something dumb, posts something inflammatory, sends that text that's clearly designed to get a reaction. And your whole body wants to engage. Defend yourself. Prove your point. Win.

Here's the thing though: you don't have to.

Most arguments aren't about getting to the truth. They're about being right. And the person trying to drag you into it isn't looking for a resolution. They want a fight. You showing up is exactly what they're after.

Walking away isn't weakness. It's realizing your time and energy are worth more than whatever petty bullshit someone's trying to pull you into. Let them yell at a wall. It can't walk away. You can, though… and you should. Fuck em.

Choose your hills to die on. Not every battle is yours.

Originally on Instagram

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Stop Googling Your Symptoms

Every time you Google a symptom and feel relieved when it says "probably benign," you've just reinforced the pattern. Your brain learned that checking equals relief. So it's going to make you check again. And again. And again.

Health anxiety feeds on reassurance. The Googling, the ER visits, the checking your heart rate, the pressing on things to see if they hurt. Each check provides about 20 minutes of relief and then the doubt creeps back in. "But what if they missed something."

The fix is counterintuitive: stop checking. Notice the symptom. Resist the urge to Google. Sit with that shit, and show yourself that nothing bad is going to happen just because you stopped working yourself up. Well… nothing other than you'll start to simmer down.

It's uncomfortable as hell. It also works really, really well.

That's basically what treatment for health anxiety looks like. Deliberately not doing the thing your brain is screaming at you to do, and discovering you're fine anyway.

Insight

Couples Therapy Early

The average couple waits six years of being unhappy before going to therapy. Six years.

You wouldn't wait six years to see a dentist with a toothache. But people treat their most important relationship like it should be able to heal itself through sheer stubbornness.

Couples therapy isn't the last resort before divorce. It's the smart move when the first cracks appear. When you're having the same fight for the third time. When the disconnection is starting to feel normal. When you're more like roommates than partners.

The couples who do best are the ones who come early, when there's still goodwill and the problems are small enough to fix. The couples who come late can sometimes be saved. But there's a lot more scar tissue to work through.

You maintain your car. You maintain your body. Maintain your relationship.

Insight

Two words. One lesson.

Not everyone's gonna like you.
Not everyone's gonna get it.
Some people are gonna talk shit no matter what you do.
They'll twist your words, assume the worst, and make you the villain in their story… because they need anyone other than themselves to be the bad guy.

You can't control that… it's like "fetch." It's never gonna happen.
So stop trying.

You're a square peg.
Stop trying to fit into round holes.
Stop explaining yourself to people who already decided they weren't gonna listen.
Stop losing sleep over opinions from people you wouldn't take advice from anyway.

You're not gonna win everyone over.
But that shouldn't really be your goal in the first place. The goal is to be someone you actually respect when you look in the mirror.
Some people will love that version of you. Some won't.

But for the ones who don't? Fuck 'em.
Not angry. Not bitter. Just done. Moving on.
You've got better shit to do.

Originally on Instagram

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