Mental Health Blog : Therapy Tips, Coping Tools, and Resources in Fort Worth, TX
Table of Contents
(MOST RECENT TO OLDEST)
What Happens in a First Therapy Session? (What to Expect)
8 Ways Perfectionism Functions as a Form of Self-Protection
Are You Anxious or Were You Just Never Allowed to Rest?
5 Things Self-Love is Not (According to a Trauma Therapist)
Therapy vs. Self-Help: Knowing When You Need More Support
Using the Winter Solstice as a Trauma-Informed Reset
Holiday Boundaries for People Who Were Never Allowed to Have Them
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
8 Ways Perfectionism Functions as a Form of Self-Protection
Perfectionism is a double-edged sword. It can make you feel celebrated for things, accomplishments, or tasks that are perceived as perfect or near-perfect, but the journey getting there is grueling. For a lot of people, perfectionism means achieving so you can be protected from scolding, from feeling “less than”, and from failure or what failure can represent. Mistakes might even feel risky or dangerous, criticism feels like despair, and “good enough” feels like failing. If you resonate with any of this, then perfectionism might be your way of self-protection that you learned early on in life. Here are some ways that perfectionism might protect you.
It keeps you from being criticized.
“If I do this perfectly, no one can say anything”
It prevents rejection.
“If I can achieve what everyone else achieved, then I’ll be one of them”
It creates a sense of control.
When life feels chaotic, controlling the outcome can provide a sense of stability.
It protects you from feeling shame.
Shame tells you “I am wrong” so by doing things perfectly, it can shield you from being “defective”
It distracts you from vulnerability.
Staying busy and operating at a high level can prevent you from slowing down and actually feeling all the scary feelings.
It keeps you from feeling like you’re a burden.
If your needs were minimized by others, you might have learned to be low-maintenance and high-achieving so as to not inconvenience others. This might have led the family to not expect that you might need something from them because you exceeded their expectations.
It preserves facets of your identity.
Are you “the smart one” or ‘the strong one”? Perfectionism can curate that label and without it, you might feel unsure of who you are.
It helps you avoid disappointment.
Again, “if it’s perfect and the execution is flawless then I won’t have to feel disappointment from others.”
You may feel annoyed or even dislike that you strive for perfection, but it likely developed to protect a younger you. Healing can happen where this perfectionistic part of you can trust the current you to create your own success without all the self-pressure. You might be thinking “well how can I be successful without my perfectionistic side?” There can still be success without shaming yourself about it and hopefully it’ll eventually feel like relief instead of feeling fear.
Sam Villarreal, MS, LPC, LCDC
Are You Anxious or Were You Just Never Allowed to Rest?
Some people have social anxiety, generalized anxiety, health anxiety, you name it, but also sometimes that anxiety comes from the feeling of not being allowed to rest. This happens when your nervous system identifies that rest is unsafe, stillness is too loud, slowing down means being out of control, your needs are an inconvenience, and being productive means feeling protected. So when there is an opportunity to rest, your body does not feel at peace.
What This Actually Looks Like:
Instead of being anxious for an upcoming event or because there’s been recent conflict in a relationship, the anxiety feels ominous, vague, and foreboding. This can look like:
Cleaning when you feel overwhelmed (instead of sitting in the overwhelm)
Feeling more anxious when you don’t have things to do instead of feeling as anxious or at all when your schedule is full
Having multiple stimulation at once because it quiets the noise in your head (watching tv and being on your phone, taking a walk and texting, listening to a podcast and journaling)
Feeling guilty if you’re not feeling useful enough or are around someone who is actively doing something and you might not be
Frequently thinking “I don’t know how to relax”
All this means that your body and nervous system equates inactivity, slowness, and/or resting as danger.
Where This Comes From
Not to say that this is an exhaustive list, but the most common origins of this are:
Emotional Neglect (Caregivers being preoccupied with their own stuff whether it be depression, overwhelm, or dysregulation. It led to unpredictability so you had to stay alert in order to be one step ahead to protect yourself from vulnerabilities, which meant never being able to relax or learning how to relax.)
Parentification (Ex. Growing up in a single parent household, growing up as an eldest sibling, growing up with complex situations where your caregiver needed help as if you were the 2nd parent, which led to becoming useful in order to stay connected with your parent)
Generational Messaging (Ex. “Rest later”, “Don’t waste the opportunity”, “You can sleep when you’re dead”, “We didn’t make sacrifices just for you to be comfortable”)
Conditional Love (Affirmation, validation, connection, affection and love came after you accomplished something and was withheld or dimmed all the other times)
Chaos (If the house felt unsafe but predictable, stillness meant something is wrong)
The Cycle Continues
Since productivity feels so safe, it can become the default setting, which can look like never-ending internal conflict, self-doubt, and consistent feelings of anxiety. The cycle can look like this:
Feel internal tension, icky feelings
Do something productive to accomplish something and distract from internal tension
Find temporary relief
Reinforces the identity of “I’m valuable because I do” (human doing instead of human being
Feel burnt out because you’ve exceeded your capacity to do
Feel shame because you feel like something is wrong with you (there isn’t anything wrong with you, it’s a learned process than can be unlearned and healed)
Do it all over again
Why Rest Feels So Threatening
Rest is like shining a big ol’ light on everything that you’ve been avoiding and putting in the dark corner of your mind. Rest removes distraction, the semblance of control, the act of performance, and the all-powerful external validation plus don’t forget instant gratification and relief. When rest is present and actively being taken, some monsters might come out of the closet such as unprocessed grief, loneliness, existential fear, uncomfortable body sensations, the feeling of being exposed and vulnerable.
Practical Action Steps to End the Cycle
Don’t even think about shaming yourself because shame will just put you back into the cycle. Instead of shame, try validating yourself with compassion like “your body learned that usefulness keeps you safe and it makes all the sense in the world why stillness feels activating”. Healing isn’t about dropping all of your high-performance traits, but coexisting in the space of both things can exist like achieving and feeling safe without having to earn it. Here are some small steps to start practicing:
Set a timer to observe how you react and identify what you feel (both emotionally and bodily) with intentional stillness. Try starting with 3 minutes and going lower if 3 minutes feels like you’re drowning. The goal is not to drown, but to be a bit uncomfortable.
Rest with less stimulation than you normally would, but still with some stimulation. Sitting on the couch with an audiobook and that’s it. Laying down with a weighted blanket and white noise.
Schedule “unproductive” time on your calendar and label it whatever you want such as “recovery training” or “me time”. Words matter so find what resonates with you.
Notice what your body does in the first 90 seconds of slowing down(catalog thoughts, images that pop up, feelings that occur, where sensations happen)
The intention is to start slow at the edges of what feels tolerable and uncomfortable in order to increase your window of tolerance to relax. Don’t go and have a full rest day because that’ll just lead you going back into the cycle like a turtle without its shell, it’s too exposing all at once. If you want guided help in a therapeutic space, I’m happy to do that with you.
Sam Villarreal, MS, LPC, LCDC