| About
Therapy
If you are hurting inside, or your life just
doesn’t seem to be working, talking with friends or
family members can sometimes help you feel a little better
for a little while. But even the most well-meaning friend
can’t provide therapy. Therapy is a treatment process
that uses specialized techniques of caring that have been
designed to offer effective, long-lasting help for people
suffering from a wide range of difficulties, such as emotional
distress, anxiety, marital strife, fears, a significant loss,
or a clinical disorder. Therapy can also help fulfill aspirations
for personal growth or self-improvement.
One of the biggest misconceptions about therapy
is that seeing a therapist is a sign of weakness. In fact,
quite the opposite is true. Recognizing the need for help
and seeking professional therapy is a sign of both strength
and your determination to live a productive and meaningful
life! Working together, you and your therapist will identify
your goals—what you want to have happen—and agree
on how you’ll know when you are making progress. Therapy
has one clear and definite purpose: that something of positive
value and constructive usefulness will come out of it for
you.
Therapy has often been called the “talking
cure,” since the exchange of words between the client
and therapist can appear to be the most obvious form of communication
that is going on. In reality, therapy can offer a much richer
experience than the simple exchange of words and advice. The
thoughts and feelings you share and the professional techniques
the therapist uses are not nearly as important as the relationship
you build together. Because the relationship with the therapist
is so essential to the effectiveness of the process, it is
very important that you find someone with whom you feel a
comfortable connection, a therapist who makes you feel safe.
As therapy progresses and your
trust in the therapist’s non-judgmental acceptance of
your thoughts and feelings is established, you will actually
use the relationship as an opportunity to reshape significant
emotional experiences and work through problems in your life.
In therapy, you intentionally make yourself vulnerable to
another human being and you may talk about some things that
are very painful for you. However, it is the very process
of trusting that it’s safe to release your feelings—the
good and the bad--and knowing that the therapeutic relationship
permits you to safely explore deeply felt sources of conflict
and dissatisfaction that will finally allow you to make lasting,
positive changes in your life.
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