PRN

PRN

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

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.

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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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Fear grows in silence.
But once you name it, it loses some of its power.
You don’t have to fight it … just face it.

Originally on Instagram

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The Motivation Lie

You don't have a motivation problem. You have an activation problem. And there's a difference.

Motivation means you don't care. Activation means you care a lot but your brain won't let you start. You've been staring at the thing you need to do for three hours. You've thought about it 50 times. You've reorganized your desk, checked your phone, made a snack, and looked at it again. Still haven't started.

That's not laziness. That's executive dysfunction. Your ignition switch is broken, not your engine.

Stop treating it like a willpower issue and start treating it like the neurological issue it is. There are actual, evidence-based treatments that fix this. You've just been told to "try harder" your whole life instead of being told what's actually going on.

Future you is either going to thank you or call you a dick. Go get evaluated.

Insight

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

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A lot of what we call “high standards” is actually a need to control everything so we don’t feel uncomfortable.
Perfection sounds admirable on the surface.
It’s disciplined, driven, put-together. But underneath, it’s often anxiety.
It’s trying to eliminate uncertainty, mistakes, or judgment by tightening your grip on everything: your work, your relationships, even yourself.

The problem is, real life doesn’t jive with that.
People are imperfect.
Outcomes are unpredictable.
And when everything has to be “just right,” you end up rigid, stressed, and constantly disappointed.

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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.

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Two hours into the appointment is usually when the actual reason they came in comes out.

Sticky Note

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

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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

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

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Social Anxiety Isn’t Shyness

Shyness is a preference. Social anxiety is a prison that looks like a choice.

The shy person chooses quiet. The socially anxious person craves connection but is physically prevented from pursuing it by a nervous system that interprets every social situation as a threat.

You rehearse phone calls before making them. You've driven to the gym and left without going in. You replay conversations for hours wondering if you said something stupid. You turned down the promotion because it involved presenting to people.

This is the third most common mental health condition in the country. It responds really well to treatment. SSRIs, CBT, sometimes beta-blockers for specific situations like public speaking.

You've been white-knuckling through this for years. It hasn't gotten better on its own. It won't. Because it's a treatable condition, not a personality flaw.

Insight

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

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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.

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No one can help you, or meet your needs, if they don’t even know what they are.
If you don’t speak up, most of the time nothing changes.
You don’t have to be pushy to make sure you’re being heard… you just have to be honest.
Saying something won’t always mean that they'll hear you, but staying silent guarantees they won't.

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Anxiety is the only condition where the patient is convinced the symptom is the diagnosis.

Quote

Saying no when every other parent is saying yes is uncomfortable, especially when you know your kid just wants to fit in.
It can make you feel like the strict one, the overprotective one, or the parent everyone rolls their eyes at.
But choosing safety over popularity is an act of leadership, not fear.
Long after the group chat moves on to the next plan, your child remembers who kept them safe and who they could trust when things got hard.

Originally on Instagram

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You know the type.
Reminds the teacher there was homework.
Says shit like “holding space” and “unpacking my trauma.”
Says “per my last email” unironically.
Always has their hand up.
Always has something to add.
Always making shit harder for everyone else while thinking they’re being helpful.

Nobody likes that person. Not in school. Not at work. Not in life.

There’s a difference between being engaged and being annoying.
Between being thoughtful and being performative. Between actually contributing and just wanting people to see you contribute.

If you’ve got something worth saying, say it.
If you’ve got skills that can actually help, use them. That’s not front row bitch energy.
That’s just being useful.
The difference is why you’re doing it.
Are you adding value or just adding noise? Are you helping or auditioning?

Say less. Do more. And if you’re not sure which one you are… you’re probably the Becky.

Sit down. Read the room. Nobody asked.

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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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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

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

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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.

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Some of the hardest lessons are also the most freeing.
You can’t rewrite what already happened.
You can’t soften the truth to make it easier to live with.
And you can’t change someone who doesn’t want to change for themselves.
What you can change is where you place your energy, your priorities, and how honestly you show up from here forward.

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You can't be authentic and make everyone happy. Unfortunately (for them), you've got to pick one. You don't need to keep twisting yourself into what (you think) other people think you should be.

Set boundaries around what you care about, not what you think you're supposed to care about. Say yes when you want to, and don't forget that no is a complete sentence.

Some people won't like it. That's fine. You don't owe anyone a performance.

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Sometimes the hardest part of healing isn’t the original hurt.
It’s realizing the person who caused it may never have the awareness, humility, or emotional capacity to take responsibility for it.
Waiting for an apology that may never come can keep you stuck in someone else’s limitations.
Real peace often comes from accepting that closure doesn’t always arrive from others.
It’s something you must give yourself.

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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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You don’t have to give your time to people who don’t respect your peace. Your time, energy, and mental well-being are too valuable to spend on relationships that leave you feeling drained, anxious, or unappreciated. It’s easy to fall into the trap of thinking you need to be there for everyone, but sometimes the best thing you can do for yourself is recognize when it’s time to step back.

We all need to set boundaries, and that’s not selfish. It’s a sign of self-respect. When you protect your peace, you’re prioritizing your emotional health, and that’s something we all need to be better at.

Your Peace is Self-Respect:

1. Check in with how you feel: Pay attention to how people make you feel after spending time with them. If you’re left feeling exhausted or unsettled, it’s worth considering if this is someone who truly deserves your time.

2. Start setting boundaries: Saying “no” can feel uncomfortable at first, but it’s one of the healthiest things you can do. Protecting your peace isn’t a negative it’s a way of taking care of yourself. You don’t have to explain yourself to anyone.

3. It’s okay to let go: Not all relationships are meant to last forever. Some people come into our lives for a reason or season, and it’s okay to outgrow them. Letting go doesn’t make you a bad person; it makes you someone who knows their worth.

4. Be mindful of where you invest your energy: You can’t pour from an empty cup. Spend your time with people who make you feel good, who support your growth, and who bring positivity into your life. Protect your energy it’s precious.

5. Remember you deserve peace: You are worthy of calm, of joy, and of relationships that nourish you. Setting boundaries and protecting your peace isn’t just a choice it’s a necessity for your mental and emotional well-being.

You have the right to protect your peace and prioritize your mental health. Don’t feel guilty about stepping away from situations or people that don’t bring you the respect or peace you deserve. Choosing your well-being is one of the most loving things you can do for yourself.

#mentalhealthmatters #emotionalwellness #selfrespect #healingjourney #mindfulliving #therapytalk #selfhealing

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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

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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

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