Mental Health Blog : Therapy Tips, Coping Tools & Insights
Table of Contents
(MOST RECENT TO OLDEST)
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

The Loneliness of Being the First One to Break a Cycle
This is for the brave ones who do what no one else in their family dared to do. The ones who stop the cycle, who go to therapy first, who say “no” instead of staying silent, who choose healing over suffering. And no one throws them a party for it.
No one tells you that healing can feel lonelier than suffering in familiarity, at least for a little while until you find your footing. That choosing clarity might mean losing connection, at least at first. That doing what might be best for you, might look like betrayal to others. When you’re first to break a pattern, grief can show up in unexpected ways. There is grief for the closeness you once had with people you now see more clearly. Grief when others interpret your growth as judgement. Grief for the versions of yourself that you’re learning to let go of. Grief of losing connection, while gaining clarity for yourself and future generations.
The labor of being a cycle breaker isn’t just yours, there’s an invisible labor of many. You’re not only healing yourself and your own wounds, you’re metabolizing and working through generations of patterns, ruptures, beliefs, and wounds that were never meant to be yours, but landed on your shoulders anyway. On top of that, that labor also comes with emotional fatigue. The exhaustion of always being the one who is emotionally aware, reflects, initiates, listens, explains, communicates, and grows. The one who is “doing the work” for your family, for yourself, and for your lineage that never got the chance. It makes sense that you feel alone sometimes. It’s no wonder, you might feel guilty for seeing things differently. You might also wonder if you’re too sensitive, too “extra”, if you’re the problem, if ignorance was bliss. I’ve been there and I’ve made it to the other side.
Here’s what I can tell you. Healing is not linear. It’s messy and chaotic and layered and emotional and also so worth it. Healing is learning to name what you need and want even when no one asked. Healing is feeling joy and grief all at the same time. Healing is learning to parent yourself for what you feel that you missed and accepting what you were given from your guardians. Healing is regulating your nervous system because no one can regulate that for you, but they can definitely help to co-regulate with you. Healing is holding to your boundaries, respecting yourself, and noticing that others will respect you in the process. Healing is not about being perfect, it’s not about pleasing others, it’s about being authentic to what is right for you in the moment that you are in. And no, the loneliness you feel does not mean that you’re doing it wrong, it just means that you’re the first person in your family to do this and you’re leading the way for others after you. You don’t need validation from your family to see that what you’re doing is impactful and monumental. You got this. There are people who understand. You are not alone, even if it feels like it.
If this feels familiar, if you’re tired, angry, hopeful, and heartbroken all at once, therapy can be a place where you don’t have to explain why it’s all so heavy. You just get to put it down and we can sift through the heaviness together. I offer therapy that honors both your story and your survival, whether you’re navigating what it means to differentiate while honoring collectivistic values or trying to hold onto your roots within an individualistic culture, I’m here to support you.
Sam Villarreal
Licensed Chemical Dependency Counselor and Licensed Professional Counselor Associate supervised by Melinda Porter, LPC-S

Why I Do This Work: A Therapist Reflects on Healing and Hope in Uncertain Times
Therapy is one of those sacred places to me where there are moments that are deeply intimate, not just between therapist and client, but between a client and themselves where they’ve never said something out loud before, something they’ve never acknowledged to themselves before and sometimes it’s wrapped in a whisper, or a laugh, or maybe shame. When it lands though, the room shifts and time stops just for a second, it feels deeply sacred to witness. I feel privileged to bear witness to those moments and I did not become a therapist for that reason, but that is the moment I am here for.
I became a therapist because I know what it’s like to carry invisible weight, to be the one who holds everything together, to grow up navigating multiple worlds, culturally, generationally, emotionally, and never feeling like you fully belong to any of them. Lately, that invisible weight has felt heavier for so many of us and not just because of our own personal history, but because of what is happening all around us on a systemic level.
We are living in a time where fear feels palpable, where basic human rights feel up for debate, where families are separated, identities are politicized, and safety feels tentative, especially for those of us who are Black, Brown, immigrant, LGBTQIA+, disabled, or first-generation. Here in Fort Worth, many are navigating a deep fear of not being protected, of being targeted, of losing their autonomy, of being silenced, or erased.
This climate is not separate from our mental health, it is directly tied to it. Chronic fear, generational survival instincts, and cultural pressures live within our bodies. They shape how we move through the world, how we connect with others, how we trust, and how we rest or how we don’t. That is why therapy is not just a luxury or part of a self-care routine, it’s resistance. It's a reclamation. The horrors persist, but so do we, in spite of it all, we must continue.
I work with people who have had to be strong for everyone else and are slowly learning how to be soft with themselves. People who carry intergenerational trauma, cultural expectations, and a deep desire to be the one who “breaks the cycle” for the future generations after them. People who are trying to rest even when it feels unsafe, who are trying to hope even when the world feels fragile and hopeless.
Therapy is not a fix all, but I do know when therapy is relational, trauma-informed, and rooted in the belief that healing is political, ancestral, and personal all at the same time, it can help people become less fragmented, less alone, and more resistant to the horrors outside.
I do this work because surviving isn’t enough. Because our communities deserve care that sees our entire identity, context, and history included. Healing in a world that wants you silent is revolutionary and I believe in the quiet power of people healing together. There’s hope in the shadows, hope in the behind the scenes work, hope in the anticipation of the work. I see that power every day and it gives me endless hope. We are not alone. Feel free to reach out here.
Sam Villarreal
Licensed Chemical Dependency Counselor and Licensed Professional Counselor Associate supervised by Melinda Porter, LPC-S

Queer Resources in Fort Worth and Nationwide: Support for LGBTQIA+ and BIPOC Communities
Whether you’re looking for mental health support, connection, housing resources, or just community, you deserve access to spaces that see all of who you are. Below are some resources in Fort Worth and beyond that offer affirming, community care for LGBTQIA+ folks, including BIPOC and QTPOC (queer and trans people of color) communities.
🌈 Fort Worth and DFW Queer Resources
LGBTQ Saves
A Fort Worth-based nonprofit offering safe spaces for LGBTQ youth to express themselves and build community. They offer virtual and in-person meetups, mentorship programs, family support, and emergency funds.
Finn’s Place
A community center in Fort Worth for trans and gender-diverse people to gather, grow, and flourish. They work to provide a safe space for the trans community to gather and access resources, educate the community about trans and LGBTQ+ people and their experiences, and create opportunities for trans joy.
Abounding Prosperity Inc. (Dallas)
Founded to address health, social, and economic disparities impacting Black LGBTQIA+ communities. Services include HIV prevention, mental health, food, housing assistance, and a drop-in center.
Resource Center (Dallas)
One of the largest LGBTQIA+ community centers in Texas, offering services ranging from health and wellness programs to advocacy, support groups, and HIV services.
Prism Health North Texas
An inclusive health center providing sexual health care, HIV prevention and treatment, and behavioral health services.
Trinity Pride FW
More than just an annual celebration, they are a hub for community events, local advocacy, and visibility throughout the year.
Housing Resources
Housing Crisis Center - Offers housing support and case management in the DFW area.
🌎 Nationwide Queer and BIPOC Resources
The Trevor Project
Support for LGBTQ youth under 25, including a 24/7 crisis line, text/chat support, and an online community platform.
📞 1-866-488-7386 | 🌐 https://www.thetrevorproject.org/
Trans Lifeline
Peer support run by and for trans people. Also offers microgrants and resources for name/gender marker changes.
📞 877-565-8860 | 🌐 https://translifeline.org/
LGBT National Help Center
Offers free and confidential support lines, youth and senior hotlines, and weekly chatrooms for connection.
📞 1-888-843-4564 | 🌐 https://lgbthotline.org/
PFLAG
The nation’s largest organization for LGBTQ+ people, their families, and allies — offering local chapters, education, and advocacy.
Desi LGBTQ+ Helpline for South Asians
Support for South Asian LGBTQ+ individuals in the United States
📞 908-367-3374 | 🌐https://www.deqh.org/
NQAPIA
Federation of LGBTQ+ Asian Americans, South Asian, Southeast Asian, and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Organizations
The Okra Project
Provides meals and wellness support to Black trans people and now also offers emergency funding and therapy sessions.
BEAM (Black Emotional and Mental Health Collective)
Focuses on mental health access and healing for Black communities with LGBTQ+ inclusive resources, training, and healing spaces.
Finding support as a queer person can be hard, but you are not alone. If you’re in Texas and seeking queer-affirming and trauma-informed therapy, I’d be honored to connect with you. Feel free to reach out here.
Sam Villarreal
Licensed Chemical Dependency Counselor and Licensed Professional Counselor Associate supervised by Melinda Porter, LPC-S