PRN

PRN

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

Life moves in seasons.
Some seasons feel cold and heavy.
Energy is low, motivation is off, and everything takes more effort than it should.
But that does not mean you are stuck there or that something is wrong.

Little by little, life gets easier.
You feel more like yourself again.
And before you realize it, summer has returned.

Originally on Instagram

Image

Your Anxiety Isn’t Protecting You

Your brain tells you the worrying is useful. It says if you stop worrying, something bad will happen. Like worry is a protective force field.

It's not. It's a smoke detector that goes off when someone makes toast. Your threat detection system has been cranked to maximum and it's interpreting everything as danger. The meeting tomorrow. The text she hasn't responded to. The weird feeling in your chest that's been there all day.

You've worried about 10,000 things in your life and your survival rate is 100%. That's not because the worrying saved you. It's because the things you worried about were almost never as bad as your brain predicted.

Anxiety is treatable. Not "manageable." Not "something you just live with." Treatable. The tools exist. You just have to use them.

Handle your shit. We can help.

Insight

When you’re dealing with depression and anxiety, the road ahead can feel like a maze. But here’s the thing: you don’t need to have everything figured out right now. Healing starts with taking that first small step, no matter how simple it seems. One step forward is a victory!

The next step:

1. Stay present – Don’t worry about the big picture. Just take it one step at a time. Focus on today, not tomorrow, and remember: it’s okay to take things slow.

2. Challenge the “what-if” thinking – It’s easy to spiral into worry about things that may never happen. If you catch yourself thinking about future scenarios, gently remind yourself, “That hasn’t happened yet, and I don’t need to deal with it right now.” Focus on what’s within your control in this moment.

3. Distract yourself in healthy ways – If you find yourself spiraling, give your mind something to focus on. Whether it’s reading a book, watching a favorite show, playing on your switch, or even hanging out with your friends, a simple distraction can break the cycle of overthinking and bring you back to the present.

4. Celebrate the present – No step is too small. Whether it’s taking a deep breath or reaching out for support, recognize that you’re making progress. Every small action you take in the moment is a victory.

Remember, worrying about things that haven’t even happened yet is exhausting, and let’s face it, it’s not fun. The future will unfold when it’s time for it, so focus on the present and take life one step at a time. You’ve got this!

#mindfulness #mentalhealthmatters

Originally on Instagram

Image

All fun vibes here at LIVEWELL 🌲✨🫶#mentalhealth #therapistthoughts #mentalhealthmatters #healingjourney #livewell

Originally on Instagram

Video

Your worth isn’t found in titles or roles.
It’s not about big ideas or recognition.
It’s in the quiet moments no one sees.
In how you treat people when there’s nothing to gain.

Kindness leaves the deepest mark.
Compassion speaks louder than recognition.
Integrity shines even in silence.
That’s where your true value lives

Originally on Instagram

Image

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

Image

Fear only feels massive until you actually say what it is.
Like, once you name it, it’s just… a thing.
Not the whole story, just a part of it.
Talking about it doesn’t make you weak, it just makes it smaller.

Originally on Instagram

Image

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

Image

Yeah, it sounds like bumper sticker bullshit.
But look at you… still here.
That thing you thought would break you didn't.
Neither did the last one. Or the one before that.

You've been carrying weight that would crush other people and you don't even notice it anymore because you're used to it.
So quit acting like this next thing is gonna be the one that takes you out. It won't.
You'll handle it like you've handled everything else.
Pick it up. Keep moving.

Originally on Instagram

Image

Nobody bounces back. That's not how any of this works.
You take a hit, you're on the ground for a while.
Maybe a long while. And then eventually, you get up.
Not because you feel ready or the pain is gone.
But because staying down just isn't something you're willing to do.

That's it. That's resilience. It's not pretty. It's not some inspirational highlight reel. It's just refusing to stay down.

The people you think are "strong" got wrecked too. They just kept showing up anyway.

You don't have to bounce. You just have to keep moving.

Originally on Instagram

Image

We live an age of instant gratification.
The results, the body, the relationship, the money… we want all of it. Yesterday.

But we all know what happens when people catch a break before they're ready for it.
They blow it. Win the lottery, broke in two years.
Get the girl, fumble the relationship because they never figured out how to actually show up for other people.
Land the dream job, burn out in six months because they skipped the part where they actually learned how to do the work.

The slow road isn't the consolation prize.
It's the one that actually gets you there… and lets you stay.
You're not behind. You're just not half-assing the process.
Don't let them drag you into mediocrity with them.
It's crowded down there… and a little sweaty.

Originally on Instagram

Image

You already know what you want to do, and you've known for a while.
You're out here asking everyone what they think, just hoping someone will either give you permission to do it or talk you out of it so you don't have to be the one to decide.
Stop doing that.

That thing you keep thinking about at 2am… the job, the conversation, the move, whatever it is… you already know the answer.
You're just scared, and that's fine, but being scared isn't a (good) reason to stay stuck.
You're never gonna just wake up one day feeling ready. That's not coming.
So you might as well go git'er done while you've still got some nerve.
Fuck it. Just go.

Originally on Instagram

Image

Anxiety can feel overwhelming and loud, but in moments of stress, your inner calm is always within reach. By choosing to focus on your breath and presence, you can quiet the noise of anxiety and create space for peace. The more you listen to your calm, the more powerful it becomes.

Tips for Embracing inner calm:

1. Pause and Breathe – Take deep breaths to interrupt anxious thoughts and ground yourself in the moment.

2. Acknowledge Your Feelings – Recognize anxiety without judgment, allowing yourself to feel without being consumed by it.

3. Focus on the Now – Ground yourself in the present by noticing your surroundings or sensations in your body.

4. Practice Mindfulness – Make mindfulness a habit so you can tap into your calm more easily during anxious moments.

By making space for calm, you allow it to overpower anxiety, helping you respond with clarity and strength.

Originally on Instagram

Image

You don’t need to explain them away, reframe them, or pretend they’re no big deal. You already know what they are.

And yeah, calling it what it is sucks and might mean making a hard choice. But pretending only drags things out.

Denial doesn’t protect you… it just delays the damage.

You can still care and still walk away. You can wish it had worked and still say, “This isn’t it.”

Some things aren’t misunderstood. They’re just bad. And you know that.

Stop giving second chances to people who already showed you who they really are.

The truth isn’t hiding.
You just stopped looking.

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

Originally on Instagram

Image

Medication Isn’t Forever

The number one fear we hear: "If I start medication, I'll be on it forever."

Maybe. Or maybe not. Depends on the condition.

For situational depression or anxiety triggered by a specific life event, medication is often temporary. Get through the crisis, build coping skills, taper off. Six months to a year is common.

For chronic conditions like recurrent depression, generalized anxiety, or ADHD, longer-term medication makes more sense. Just like blood pressure medication for someone with chronic hypertension. You take it because the condition is ongoing, not because you're addicted.

Either way, the decision to stop is always yours. You can taper off under medical supervision anytime. It's not a blood oath. It's a tool. Use it if it helps, adjust if it doesn't.

The question isn't "will I need this forever." The question is "do I need this right now, and is it making my life better." If the answer is yes, that's enough.

Insight

Not stuck. Not overthinking. Just living.

That’s what we do at LiveWell. We help you get back to it.

#mentalhealth #psychiatry #anxiety #LiveWell #VancouverWA #gethelp

Video

Before you send that text.
Before you say yes when you mean no (or no when you mean hell yes).

Before guilt, habit, or tired obligation lands you in a situation you’ll resent…

Give yourself one full breath to think.

What are you really feeling?
What’s the thing you’re not saying?

At least chew on your truth before you spit out something else that just… isn’t.

You don’t owe anyone the “right” answer.
You owe yourself an honest one.

#therapistthoughts #behonestwithyourself #mentalhealthawareness

Originally on Instagram

Image

You’ve been pushing all week. Meetings, deadlines, people needing you.
It’s your day off… but suddenly the pressure creeps in again.
“I should clean the house.” “I should catch up.” “I should be productive.”

Pause. Breathe.

You don’t need to be a superhero today.

Let today be soft.

Let it be the kind of day where rest is the priority.
Where taking care of you is the only thing on the list.

Here’s how you can let today be soft:

1. Sleep in… guilt-free. Your body is asking for rest. Listen.

2. Say no to pressure. You’re allowed to do less and still be enough.

3. Do one kind thing for yourself. A long shower. Your favorite show. A slow walk with no destination.

4. Choose comfort. Comfy clothes. Your favorite playlist. Warm food. Light a candle. Wrap yourself in a cozy blanket.

5. Be present, not productive. Your worth isn’t measured in checkboxes today.

This is your reminder:
You don’t have to earn your rest.
You don’t have to catch up to be valuable.
You’re allowed a day to just be.

Let it be soft.
Let it be slow.
Let it be yours.

#mentalhealthmatters #selfcare #selfcaretips #restisproductive #gentlereminder #emotionalwellbeing #dayoff #wellnessjourney

Originally on Instagram

Image

Grief Has No Timeline

There is no "should be over it by now."

Your dad died a year ago and you still pull up his number in your phone sometimes. Your buddy passed and you still expect to see him at the bar. The divorce was final months ago and it still hits you at random moments, like getting gut-punched by a memory.

That's normal. Grief doesn't have an expiration date, and the people who tell you to "move on" have either never lost anything important or they're doing the same thing you are and just hiding it better.

The problem isn't that you're still grieving. The problem is when grief goes underground and starts coming out as insomnia, anger, drinking, or a depression you can't name. That's unprocessed grief, and it's patient enough to wait but heavy enough to sink you.

If something's been off since the loss, it might be time to talk to someone.

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

Image

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

Image

The week-two trap

Most SSRI side effects peak at day 10. Most people quit at day 11. That’s why half the people who ‘tried Lexapro and it didn’t work’ never actually tried Lexapro.

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

Image

There’s this pressure that we have to process everything…every trigger, every thought, every feeling that shows up and throws your day off. Like if you don’t stop and analyze it all right now, you’re doing something wrong.

Yeah, we’re told to dig deep, journal it out, talk it through, heal in real time. But here’s the thing nobody says out loud…

You don’t have to feel every feeling all the way through.

You don’t have to make every emotion a project.

Because sometimes the most helpful thing is to…
Notice it, nod at it, then move on.

Not everything needs a breakthrough. Not everything needs a why. Why? Because it’s exhuasting

Because honestly, your brain can’t hold it all at once. It’s too much. Some feelings just need space to pass, not a full blown sit down with your inner child healing music in the background.

Distracting yourself isn’t always avoiding your problems.

Sometimes it’s self respect. Sometimes it’s knowing your limit. Sometimes it’s a survival skill that got you here.

You feel the thing, you get the hit of it, and then you go do something else. Wash the dishes. Go outside. Call someone who makes you laugh. Watch something dumb and comforting.

You don’t have to dig into the why every time something bothers you.

You don’t have to crack yourself open just because the feeling knocked.

Some stuff softens on its own. Some stuff makes more sense when you’re not staring straight at it.

And maybe the real shift
Is knowing that taking a break from your emotions isn’t running away from it.

It’s pacing yourself.
It’s letting your nervous system breathe.
It’s choosing peace when everything in you wants to spiral.

That’s not weakness. That’s wisdom.

Let it pass.
Go do something else.
Come back later, or don’t.

Either way, you’re allowed to take the scenic route through healing.

You’re allowed to feel just enough, and then live your life.

#mentalhealth #mentalhealthmatters #therapist #therapistthoughts #selfreflection #healingjourney

Originally on Instagram

Image

If you’re able to ponder this question, it’s not the end of the day. Keep pressing forward.

Originally on Instagram

Image

Depression Doesn’t Always Look Sad

Depression in men often doesn't look like sadness. It looks like being pissed off all the time for no clear reason.

Short fuse. Snapping at your kids. Road rage. Blowing up over the Wi-Fi being slow. Everyone walking on eggshells around you.

That's not an anger problem. That's a depleted brain that doesn't have enough resources to absorb the normal frustrations of daily life. Everything feels like too much because your emotional bandwidth is running on empty.

Most depression screening tools don't even ask about irritability. They ask about sadness and crying. So men get missed. Over and over and over.

If you've been angry for months and you don't know why, it might not be anger at all.

Insight

Fear feels huge when you keep it to yourself.
Once you say it out loud, it’s never as big as it felt in your head.
Naming it doesn’t make it disappear… but it does make it real.
And real things are easier to work with than monsters in your head.

Originally on Instagram

Image

Self-Care Is Not Avoidance

Real self-care makes your life harder in the short term and better in the long term. Fake self-care does the opposite.

Going to the gym when you don't feel like it is self-care. Canceling plans because you "need to recharge" for the third week in a row is avoidance wearing a self-care costume.

Having the hard conversation with your partner is self-care. Taking a bath to avoid thinking about the hard conversation is avoidance.

Setting a boundary with your mom is self-care. Cutting off everyone who makes you uncomfortable is isolation you've relabeled.

The test is simple. After the "self-care," are you closer to or further from the life you actually want. If your self-care routine is keeping you comfortable but stuck, it's not care. It's a coping mechanism that lets you feel good about dodging the work.

Actual self-care often looks like discipline, not relaxation. It looks like showing up when you'd rather hide. It looks like doing the thing that scares you because you know it matters. That's the version that changes your life.

Insight

Scroll all you want, nobody's judging. But if you open the app feeling fine and close it feeling shitty… that's a problem.
Some of this stuff has always been part of being human, the comparison and the wanting what other people have and wondering if everyone else is having more fun than you. That's not new. But it used to be background noise, the kind of thing that hit you when you drove through a nicer neighborhood than yours or saw somebody's car in the parking lot that cost more than your house, and then you'd feel it for a second and go back to your life. Now it's the whole soundtrack of your day.
And then those assholes in Silicon Valley figured out how to crank up the volume on insecurity, manufacture outrage, and give you a dopamine punch to the face every time you hit refresh. They're feeding you a constant stream of shit designed to keep you hooked instead of making your life better. So now you're checking your phone 200 times a day without even realizing it… like walking around with a crack pipe in your hand all day, just the socially acceptable version.
That's not you using social media. That's social media using you.
You're supposed to be in control. You pick it up, you put it down, you move on with your day. But if you can't sit still without reaching for it… or if you're absorbing other people's opinions and mistaking them for your own… or if spending time online makes you feel worse about life… something ain't right.
Technology's a tool, or at least it's supposed to be. So use it like one. The second social media starts running you, it's time to put it the fuck down.

Originally on Instagram

Image

Silence can feel controlled and powerful in the moment, but long term, it disconnects you from your partner, your friends, and even yourself.
Real strength is being able to say, “I’m overwhelmed,” instead of disappearing.

Originally on Instagram

Image