PRN

PRN

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

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

Sometimes life is just… fine. And that's not a problem to solve.

Not everything needs to be optimized. Not every moment needs to be productive. Sometimes you can just sit there, drink your coffee, and not have a single thing wrong.

Wild concept, I know.

But some people get uncomfortable when things are calm. Like they're waiting for the other shoe to drop. Or they feel lazy if they're not stressed about something.

Chill. Take a nap in the sunshine. Have a boring Saturday. Let things just be good for a minute without picking at it.

If you're doing fine right now, stop treating that like a problem. Feeling peaceful isn't an issue unless you make it one.

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

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

Stop waiting to feel healed before you start living.

Healing happens while you're doing the boring maintenance work…
therapy appointments, taking your meds, showing up even when it's hard.
It's not a finish line you cross, it's what you do every day whether you feel like it or not.

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

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

Image

Nice is easy.
Nice is smiling and nodding.
Nice is telling people what they want to hear so you don’t have to deal with their bullshit.
Nice keeps the peace. Nice is comfortable.

Kind is harder.
Kind is telling your friend their relationship is toxic even though you know they don’t want to hear it.
Kind is being honest when lying would be easier.
Kind sometimes looks like an asshole from the outside.

Nice protects you. Kind protects them.
The nicest people you know might not actually give a fuck about you.
They just don’t want the drama.
The kindest people you know might be the ones that just piss you off… but they’re also the ones who actually have your back.

Stop chasing nice. Start being kind.

Originally on Instagram

Image

In almost every scary movie, the monster stops being scary once you finally see it.
That’s how fear works.
It feels huge when it’s hiding.
But once you give it a name: anxiety, guilt, grief, change… it gets smaller. It’s anticlimactic. A lot less exciting.

So… Turn on the light.
Check the closet, under the bed, or out the window.
Half the time, there’s nothing even there.

And if there is, at least you’ll know what you’re dealing with.

(But just to be clear… if you do turn on the light and find someone actually in your closet… call the police, not us.)

Originally on Instagram

Image

Nobody figures themselves out by playing it safe.
The job that didn’t work out.
The relationship that fell apart.
The moment you hit a wall and had no idea what came next.
That stuff changed you.
And who you became after it? That’s the real you.

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

Yeah… that includes admitting coffee isn’t a meal and 3AM overthinking doesn’t count as therapy.

The truth is, being honest with yourself feels awkward at first but kind of freeing later.
You don’t have to fake being okay all the time.
Nobody actually is. Just be real, breathe, and start from there.

Originally on Instagram

Image

You’re not doing this for anyone else. If you’re out here looking for validation, you’re wasting your time. No one’s really paying attention. And if they are? Honestly, who cares?

Keep calm and carry on. Yeah, I know, classic millennial move, but it’s still legit. You’re doing this for you, not anyone else.Forget about what others think…they’ve got their own mess to deal with.

And if you’re worried about what anyone thinks, remember this. The people who are truly meant to be in your life won’t care about your hustle, they’ll respect it. So just focus on what makes you feel right, what makes you grow, and leave the rest behind. Because at the end of the day, you’re the only one in charge of your journey.

And if anyone’s got something to say about it? Tell them to keep calm and carry on too. 🙌🏻

MOREEEEE:

1. You’re the only one who’s gotta live with your choices, so make ‘em count.

2. Everyone’s too busy with their own crap to notice what you’re doing…so do it for you, always.

3. Keep your head in your own lane, and let the rest fall off. You’re not here for anyone else’s applause.

4. Let them talk. You keep moving. Simple as that.

5. You’ve got one life, so don’t waste it trying to impress people who wouldn’t do the same for you.

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

Originally on Instagram

Image

Your emotions lie to you.
When you're furious, everything feels like a five-alarm emergency that requires an immediate response.
When everything's going your way, you'll promise the world because you feel invincible. When you're drowning in sadness, burning it all down seems like the only way out.
Then you wake up the next day and realize you torched a relationship, committed to shit you can't deliver, or made a massive decision based on temporary feelings.
Stop doing that.
Your emotions are information, not instructions. Feel them, sure.
But don't let them drive the car. Wait until you can think straight, then make the call.
You'll save yourself a hell of a lot of cleanup.

Originally on Instagram

Image

Somewhere along the way, “abundance mindset” turned into full blown delusion.

Don’t get me wrong…there’s nothing wrong with hope. Or optimism. Or belief.
Those things matter.

But telling people to ignore reality and just “feel aligned” until the universe drops a bag of cash?

That’s wishful thinking… and it’s bullshit.

Here’s the actual truth (brace yourself):

You can’t swap structure for intention.
You can’t build something that lasts just by saying nice things to yourself in the mirror.

And you definitely can’t call yourself a CEO just because you have IG grid full of motivational quotes.

Money’s not magic.
Abundance isn’t air.
You don’t manifest success…you build it.

Yeah, the mindset matters. Sure, stay inspired. Keep the vision alive. But also… do the damn work.

You don’t need another affirmation.
You need a plan.

Your problem isn’t that the universe is “testing” you …..it’s that you’re not following through.

#therapist #therapistthoughts #mentalhealth #mentalhealthmatters #selfreflection

Originally on Instagram

Image

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

Image

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

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

Stay curious about the people around you. It's how you find out who they really are, instead of the version you cooked up in your head.

You might be surprised at how easily doors open when you lead with curiosity… but you'll find that they close just as easily if you roll with criticism instead. We've all been on both sides of this, and nobody likes it… but for some reason we keep doing it anyway.

Stop doing that. Next time you're curious about something: ask. Find out who's really in front of you. They might surprise you. Good or bad, at least you're not left wondering.

Originally on Instagram

Image

Most people aren’t lazy. They’re just depleted.

Energy gets drained through over-commitment, people-pleasing, and chasing outcomes that don’t matter.
Real discipline is about containment: protecting focus, time, and effort.
Strength shows up when you stop bleeding energy in the wrong places.

Originally on Instagram

Image

Comparison creates false urgency.
But, maturity brings discernment.
Maturity is knowing what deserves your time and what doesn’t.
Progress slows when it becomes intentional, but it also becomes sustainable. Calm focus beats frantic movement every time.

Originally on Instagram

Image

Functional Alcoholism

"I'm not an alcoholic, I've never missed a day of work."

Cool. Neither had most of the people who eventually did.

Functional alcoholism is the most successful way to slowly take everything apart. It works precisely because it doesn't look like the stereotype. No DUI. No intervention. No dramatic rock bottom. Just a gradual erosion of your sleep, your anxiety, your relationships, and your liver, so slow that you rationalize every step.

Here's the test. Go 30 days without drinking, starting right now, without it being a big deal. Not because someone dared you. Just because you decided to.

If the honest answer is "probably not" or "I don't want to find out," that tells you something. The "functional" part of functional alcoholism is a timer, not a permanent state.

Insight

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

Forcing yourself to go (or stay) somewhere you don't belong is going to make you constantly feel like something is wrong, or you're out of place. That's because it is. And you are. 
 
Not everything, everyone, or everywhere is meant for you. 
That's fine. You can't be everyone's cup of tea, and they don't have to be yours either. 
Put it down. Walk away… and go find something that IS meant for you. Find a tea you actually like drinking. 
 
Life's too damn short to sit around drinking dirty water.

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

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

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

Image

Over-explaining usually comes from a good place.
You want to be understood, you want things to feel fair.
But the more you try to convince someone who has already decided not to understand you, the more drained you become.
Not everything requires a long explanation.
Sometimes a clear decision and a boundary say everything that needs to be said.

Originally on Instagram

Image

Don’t waste your breath having real conversations with people who have already decided not to listen. It leaves you drained, frustrated, and unheard.

Sometimes walking away says more than arguing ever could… it forces the other person to sit with their own words and realize the weight of shutting you out.

Originally on Instagram

Image

Men deserve care that actually gets them.
LiveWell offers expert psychiatry for men, focused on mental health, confidence, and real results. 💪
 
Insurance accepted.

Originally on Instagram

Image