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

Ambien Walrus #5

Ambien Walrus comic strip
Comic

That weird dread you can't shake has a name. You just haven't found it yet.

"I feel… off" doesn't give you much to work with.
"I'm anxious because I'm avoiding a hard conversation with my wife" does.

Call it what it is or it's gonna keep running you. That's not dramatic… that's just how it works.

Your brain can't fix what it can't see. So it just spins.
But the second you get specific, something clicks.
The thing stops being this big scary unknown and just becomes… a thing.
Still there. But now you can deal with it.

Sad… about what exactly. Pissed… at who. Anxious… about what.

Name it.

Originally on Instagram

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In moments of stress or depression, we often get lost in worries. Taking a pause to breathe and simply be in the moment helps calm the mind and reset our emotions, allowing us to gain clarity and balance.

Tips to be present:

1. Breathe deeply for a few seconds to ground yourself.

2. Engage your senses by noticing what’s around you.

3. Take short breaks from distractions to reconnect with yourself.

4. Focus on one thing at a time to bring your attention back to the now.

Being present isn’t about ignoring your struggles, it’s about creating space to face them with clarity and calm.

#bepresent #mindfulmoments #selfcarematters #breatheandrelax

Originally on Instagram

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You're not broken, you're still building.
Every step you take, and every move you make, is another brick in the new foundation you're laying.

Growth doesn't always look pretty, but even when it's ugly it's still progress.
Give yourself some grace while you're figuring stuff out.
You're not behind, you're becoming
And you're just getting started.

Originally on Instagram

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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

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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

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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Stop vying for the attention of strangers
And focus on the ones you love,
And that love you.
That’s where happiness lives… that’s it.

Originally on Instagram

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The First Appointment Isn’t Scary

Here's what actually happens at your first appointment.

You fill out paperwork. You sit in a normal office. A medical professional asks you questions about how you've been feeling. You answer honestly. They listen. They might suggest a diagnosis. They'll explain your options. You decide what you want to do.

That's it. Nobody's judging you. Nobody's going to lock you up. Nobody's going to make you lie on a couch and talk about your mother.

You've been putting this off because the unknown feels scarier than the thing you're already dealing with. But the thing you're dealing with isn't getting better on its own. It's been not getting better on its own for a while now.

The hardest part is booking the appointment. Everything after that is easier than you think.

Insight

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

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Letting go of old patterns? Awkward. Saying goodbye to people you’ve outgrown? Uncomfortable. Trying to create something real without second guessing yourself every five minutes? Straight up terrifying.

But here’s the thing…it’s all part of it. Growth isn’t tidy, and it sure as hell isn’t graceful.

You’ll feel like a mess. You’ll question everything. You might cry in the shower or talk to your ceiling. That’s normal. Keep going anyway.

Lift up slowly:

1. Start small. You don’t need to reinvent your whole life by Tuesday. Change one thing.

2. Be honest with yourself, even if it’s weird or ugly. That’s the good stuff!

3. Get used to the stretch. If it feels uncomfortable, you’re probably doing it right.

4. Laugh when you can. Especially at yourself. It reminds you you’re not a robot.

5. Don’t wait to feel ready…spoiler: you won’t.

Real growth feels weird because you’ve never been here before. But trust it…that stretch is where the magic starts to crack through. If it didn’t test you, it wouldn’t change you.

#therapistthoughts #healingquotes #mentalhealth #selfreflection #therapist #mentalhealthquotes

Originally on Instagram

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Sometimes shit just falls apart all at once… and somewhere in the middle of it you start thinking that this might be the one that actually takes you out.

It’s hard to know the difference between whether something is wrecking you or reshaping you when you’re still in the middle of it… because both of them feel like getting your ass kicked.

Then one day you look up and realize that the thing that you thought might end you, just… didn’t. But it did level you up while you weren’t looking.

Video

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

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Don’t trust everything you see online.

There’s a whole culture built on illusion…people acting confident like that proves something. Posting about “abundance” while quietly dodging accountability. Polishing their aesthetic while avoiding actual outcomes. And yep, it’s a trap a lot us fall into.

And the product?

Vibes.
Hot takes.
A highlight reel, a curated persona, and probably a ring light or two.

But that’s not growth.
That’s not healing.
That’s not success.

That’s performance.

If it’s all performance, it’s not progress. You can’t filter your way into a better life. You can’t pose your way into peace. Looking successful isn’t the same as becoming someone solid.

Real success? It’s not loud.

It’s not something that needs a spotlight or a caption to matter. It’s built on habits, not hashtags. It shows up in how you live, not just how you post.

So if the only thing holding your identity together is the performance of progress…

You’re not evolving.

You’re just spinning in circles with slightly better lighting and maybe a trending audio track.

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

Originally on Instagram

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Ambien Walrus #2

Ambien Walrus comic strip
Comic

Kids remember how you responded when they were scared, embarrassed, or unsure.
That moment teaches them whether it is safe to come back to you again.
A calm response says, “You’re not in trouble for being honest.”
Overreacting sends the message that hiding is safer than telling the truth.

Originally on Instagram

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Living well is an ongoing practice, not a pursuit of perfection. It’s a journey of growth, where the goal isn’t to be flawless, but to engage consistently with your well-being. Healing and personal development are not linear, and setbacks are natural. Embracing imperfection is key… each step, no matter how small or challenging, contributes to your overall healing process. The practice of living well involves patience, self-compassion, and the understanding that progress is often not perfect, but it is meaningful.

Originally on Instagram

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Honest communication isn’t about sounding nice.
It’s about being clear, saying the thing, and meaning it.
You can whisper the truth or shout it, but either way, people don’t trust politeness.
They trust honesty, directness, saying what matters and saying it without disclaimers.

Originally on Instagram

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Your Partner Isn’t Your Therapist

She can love you and still not be equipped to treat your depression. Those are different jobs.

Expecting your partner to be your sole emotional support is unfair to her and ineffective for you. She's carrying the relationship, the household, her own stuff, and now she's also supposed to be your therapist, your cheerleader, and your coping mechanism. That's not a partnership. That's a one-person support team running on fumes.

Get a therapist. Get on medication if you need it. Build a support network that isn't just one person. Your relationship will actually improve when you stop using it as your only mental health resource.

She's your partner, not your treatment plan. Love her enough to get help from someone whose literal job it is.

Insight

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

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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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Kids do not need perfect parents or perfectly controlled environments.
They’re going to be exposed to things that scare them, confuse them, or feel too big for their age.
What actually causes harm is not the event itself, but being left alone with it.

When a child knows they can come to you without fear of punishment or dismissal, their nervous system settles and the experience becomes something they can process instead of something they carry.
Connection is what turns a hard moment into a survivable one, and often into a strengthening one.

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

They’re the ones willing to call you on your shit…. and that’s not the same as being mean.
Maybe they just care enough to be honest, and the world needs more people that care.

So… care. Be the one that cares enough to say it.
The thing we’re all thinking… but no one wants to say.

We all know someone who’s “too nice.”
Never pushes back.
Never says what they actually think.
Just smiles, and nods, while everything piles up.
They’re not kind. They’re lacking spine. They’re not even nice… they’re just a doormat (albeit a nice one).

If that’s you, tell yourself whatever helps you sleep at night.
Throw a tooth under your pillow while you’re at it… maybe you’ll wake up to $5.

This doesn’t mean that anyone wants to be around a dick that’s hard 24/7.
Don’t walk around making everyone uncomfortable.
But if the situation calls for it… get stiff and give it to them.

When the truth is hard, don’t go soft.

Originally on Instagram

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You don’t have to reply.
You don’t have to explain.
You don’t even have to acknowledge it.

People will bait you with drama, but all dressed up like it’s a “conversation.” They’ll poke until they get a reaction, because sometimes the easiest way for them to feel like they’re in control is when they see others struggling. It’s sad. It’s weak. It’s stupid.

They want company in their chaos.
… but that doesn’t mean you owe it to them.

RSVP: no thanks.

If it’s not worth your energy, don’t give it your time.

Let them argue with the wall.
At least the wall won’t walk away mid-sentence.

Silence doesn’t have to mean you lost.
It can also mean you left.

#selfreflection #mentalhealth #mentalhealthawareness #therapist #therapistthoughts

Originally on Instagram

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We were given two ears and one mouth for a reason.
Listening is just as powerful as speaking.

But so often, we rush to fill the silence.
Silence isn’t empty, it carries meaning.
There’s wisdom in what’s not being said.

Slow down, lean in, and truly listen.
You’ll hear more than words, you’ll hear understanding.

Originally on Instagram

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Trust can’t be built on filtered words.
It grows in honesty, even when it feels imperfect.
The truth doesn’t always sound polished and that’s okay.
What matters most is being real, not rehearsed.

When you show up authentically, you invite others to do the same.
That’s where true connection begins.
Trust is built in the unedited moments, in the courage to be yourself.
So let the filters go, you’re already enough as you are.

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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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

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Seasonal Depression Is Real

Every October like clockwork. You start canceling plans. By November, getting out of bed feels like dragging yourself through wet concrete. December through February is a haze of oversleeping, overeating, and doing the minimum. March rolls around and you come back to life.

That's not "the winter blues." That's Seasonal Affective Disorder, and living in the Pacific Northwest makes you a prime target because we get approximately 17 minutes of sunshine between October and April.

The mechanism: less sunlight disrupts serotonin production and your circadian rhythm. Your brain literally has less of what it needs to maintain normal mood. This isn't weakness. It's photobiology.

Light therapy works. SSRIs work, especially started proactively before the season hits. Morning outdoor exercise attacks both mechanisms at once.

If you've noticed the pattern, start planning now. The worst time to start treating seasonal depression is when you're already too depressed to do anything about it.

Insight