Mental Health Blog : Therapy Tips, Coping Tools & Insights
Table of Contents
(MOST RECENT TO OLDEST)
How to Build Belonging in a Disconnected World
How to Work With (Not Against) Your Inner Critic
Fort Worth Community Resources: Local Organizations Offering Safety, Advocacy, and Legal Help
Boundaries: They're More Than Just Saying No
How EMDR Can Help Make Distressing Memories Less Intrusive
The Loneliness of Being the First One to Break a Cycle
Why I Do This Work: A Therapist Reflects on Healing and Hope in Uncertain Times
Queer Resources in Fort Worth and Nationwide: Support for LGBTQIA+ and BIPOC Communities
Queer-Affirming Therapy: What It Is and Why It Matters
Mental Health Awareness Isn’t Just For May: How to Keep Caring for Yourself Year-Round
Can I Benefit From Trauma Therapy If I Don’t Remember Anything “Bad” Happening?
Your Privacy Matters: Why I Opt Out of Insurance Panels as a Private Pay Mental Health Therapist
How to Build Belonging in a Disconnected World
You may be wondering, are we really disconnected if we’re more connected than ever? I know, I know social media is great (in moderation). It keeps us connected to people close to home and across the world that we otherwise would never have met, yet so many of us still feel lonely. We’re connected, but not in connection. We scroll, engage, maybe put on a mask for others to perceive, but rarely feel seen, accepted, or valued for our whole selves. More often than not, we feel known only for the version of us that fits neatly on screen or is palatable to others.. So, how do we rebuild belonging and find the type of community that nourishes our souls instead of drains our battery?
1. Start with Self-Belonging
Ah, the cliche, “it starts with you”. I’m sorry, not sorry. It really does have to start with you. Seeing and accepting the parts of yourself that you don’t necessarily get along with like the anxious part, the part that wants too much, or the angry part is the first step. Once we stop hiding behind “easier” versions of ourselves and start offering those parts some compassion, we’ll feel more self-belonging.
2. Quality Over Quantity
A big friend group can be beautiful, but belonging doesn’t require a crowd. Start with one quality human to get real with versus a baker’s dozen. Choose humans where you can create deep relationships with where you can bring your full self including those parts of you that you’ve recently shared compassion with. That may mean starting slowly with intentionality and building up that relationship to make the foundation more solid rather than spilling your guts before you’ve even met their cat IRL.
3. Vulnerability is Not a Weakness
Vulnerability is an invitation to belonging. When we share our fears, likes, dislikes, concerns, mistakes, and desires, you give permission for others to do the same. It’s not oversharing, it’s inviting others into your truth. That’s how trust and then belonging actually form.
4. Values, Values, and More Values
We find depth-oriented relationships and real connection when we share values, not just interests. Whether it’s a book club, a Discord server, a spiritual circle, or a creative space, seek out environments that honor authenticity, likemindedness, and growth (or any other values that resonate with you). Surround yourself with people who want to evolve with you, not just hang out near you.
5. Reciprocity and Collectivism
Belonging is mutual and it’s not something that you have, but something that you build through action. That means showing up for others, listening, holding space, and offering care not because you have to, but because you’re invested in each other’s well-being. Although boundaries are beneficial, it can be taken too literally like a barrier (that’s not what we want). Connection requires participation. Sometimes that means showing up even when you’re tired and don’t feel like it, but trusting that they’ll do the same when it’s your turn to need support.
Belonging in our modern-day society is choosing preference and connection over performance. It’s choosing curiosity over judgement and compassion over convenience. You deserve that kind of belonging, first with yourself and then with others.
P.S. Stay tuned for my next blog post, where I’ll share some tangible ways to find community in everyday life.
Sam Villarreal, MS, LPC, LCDC
How to Work With (Not Against) Your Inner Critic
If you’re in therapy (or thinking about starting), you probably already know that one of the loudest internal voices we wrestle with is the inner critic.
It’s the part of you that says:
“You’re not trying hard enough.”
“You’ll just embarrass yourself if you speak up.”
“No one likes you”
Clients often tell me their inner critic feels relentless, like it’s either in the driver’s seat or yelling in their ear nonstop. That can be exhausting, and it makes sense you’d want to get rid of it altogether, but here’s the thing: the critic isn’t the enemy. Your inner critic is a part of you that, at some point, learned to protect you, even if its methods are harsh.
Step 1: Understand What the Critic Wants
The inner critic didn’t appear out of nowhere. It usually develops as a survival mechanism, helping you to avoid mistakes, rejection, and/or danger by becoming an untrained security guard: overbearing, anxious, and not very nuanced. In therapy, I often ask clients to pause and consider: “What is this part of you trying to do for you?” Instead of “How do I make this voice shut up?”.
For example:
The critic says, “Don’t speak up in this meeting.”
Underneath, it’s really saying, “I want to keep you safe from rejection or judgment.”
That reframe can take the sting out so instead of just hearing the attack, you begin to see the protection behind why this part does what it does..
Step 2: Separate the Critic from the Whole Self
A critical thought can feel like the truth, but it’s not your entire identity. It’s one part of you. Just one piece of the beautifully complex whole that makes you, you. You can acknowledge its commentary without agreeing with it.
I often suggest using language like, “A part of me believes I’m not good enough,” instead of, “I’m not good enough.” That small shift creates distance to help you see the critic as just one perspective at the table, not the only voice.
Step 3: Bring in Other Parts of You
In session, we might explore what other parts are available. Maybe the compassionate part. Maybe the wise, grounded part. Maybe even the playful part.
You can try asking yourself:
What would I say to a close friend if they had this thought?
What would the most loving part of me say to this?
How would I respond if a younger version of me felt this way?
This isn’t about silencing or dismissing the critic, it’s about having multiple perspectives at the table, like the parts of you that are supportive and compassionate. By widening the conversation, you reduce the inner critic from hogging the mic.
Step 4: Shift the Relationship, Not Just the Thought
A lot of clients are surprised when I tell them: the goal isn’t to erase the inner critic. The harder you try to silence the inner critic, the louder it often gets. Once you treat this part with respect, curiosity, and maybe even gratitude then it softens and there is more room to have a dialogue. Imagine these parts as inner people, we wouldn’t want to ignore a physical person, that usually is hurtful and counterproductive to building trust and knowing why they acted the way they did.
Instead, try acknowledging it:
“I hear you. You’re worried about me failing.”
“Thanks for trying to protect me, but I want to try this anyway.”
You’re not agreeing, you’re accepting and communicating with your inner critic; just like you would with a physical person when you want to further the relationship after a rupture. You’re letting the critic know you hear its concern, but you’re choosing to lead with a different part of yourself.
Step 5: Practice in Small Moments
Therapy is where we can practice together, but your everyday life is where the real change happens. Don’t wait until the next big job interview to experiment with this, we need to build trust with our inner parts in order to begin to change what they’ve been so used to doing. Start with something small and manageable as to not overwhelm you or your parts:
When you make a small mistake and feel inner criticism rise up.
When you hesitate to send a text, practice responding internally to this part of you.
When you’re learning something new, catch the commentary.
Every time you notice, pause, and respond differently, you’re building new neural pathways in your brain. This neurologically strengthens your ability to lead with compassion and understanding rather than fear since we often fear what we don’t understand. Over time, the critic can soften and become more of an inner coach where it offers opinions in a supportive way, but ultimately you feel more in charge.
Closing Thought
Your inner critic may always be there, but it doesn’t have to run the show. In therapy, we can work on transforming it from a relentless judger into a cautious advisor you listen to without obeying.
Healing doesn’t mean eliminating parts of yourself. It means learning to work with them in a way that honors both your need for safety and your capacity for growth. It's integrating and befriending all of the parts of ourselves because as Carl Rogers said “the curious paradox is that when I accept myself just as I am, then I can change”. If you struggle with understanding and befriending your inner critic, I’m here to help you get there using IFS/parts work therapy. Schedule a free 15-minute consultation today.
👉 Question for readers: When was the last time your inner critic spoke up, and how did you respond?