Mental Health Blog : Therapy Tips, Coping Tools, and Resources in Fort Worth, TX
Table of Contents
(MOST RECENT TO OLDEST)
10 Small Habits That Support Emotional Healing
How Long Does Therapy Take to “Work”?
How Do I Find the Right Therapist for Me?
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
10 Small Habits That Support Emotional Healing
Emotional healing isn’t just one big moment, it happens in small, repeated moments. Oftentimes, the ones that feel uncomfy because it isn’t your default mode of operating. These habits are a good place to start if you’ve been feeling stuck, disconnected, or overwhelmed.
1. Naming What You’re Feeling When You’re Feeling It (Instead of Avoiding It)
Most people go straight to distracting or “fixing” the feeling because the feeling usually is considered “negative” whether that be mad, sad, upset, or angry. Naming emotions helps to regulate your nervous system and creates just enough space to respond instead of react.
Try this instead: pause and ask, “What am I actually feeling right now?”
If you need help pinpointing, feel free to look at a feelings wheel online.
2. Checking In With Your Body Once a Day
Emotions don’t just live in your head, they also show up physically sometimes unconsciously (looking at you intellectualizers).
Try taking 30 seconds to notice (not change) sensations in your body when you have an emotion.:
Tight jaw?
Heavy chest?
Ache in your stomach?
3. Letting Yourself Have Mixed Emotions
Healing is complex so you can feel multiple emotions at the same time. If you force yourself into one “acceptable” emotion, you stay stuck. You may be feeling:
Grateful and resentful
Hopeful and scared
Relieved and sad
4. Doing One Thing Slower Than Usual
When your nervous system is overwhelmed, you’ll often find yourself in fight or flight mode instead of rest and digest mode, which means that everything speeds up and can become reactionary. Slowness unconsciously signals safety to your body.
Try picking one thing like brushing your teeth, making coffee, walking to your car and do it intentionally slower.
5. Noticing Your Inner Dialogue (Without Immediately Changing It)
Instead of jumping to affirmations, try subtle awareness first. You don’t need to fix them, you just have to attempt to coexist with them so they become softer. Just noticing them weakens their grip.
Pay attention to thoughts like:
“I’m too much”
“I should be over this”
“I’m failing”
6. Creating a “Pause” Before Reacting
Regulating emotions and slowing down when you feel triggered is progress that growth and healing are taking place.
When you feel triggered:
Pause for a few seconds
Take one breath or count to 10
Ask: “What do I actually need right now?”
7. Reducing One Form of Emotional Numbing
Think about how you might be emotionally numbing. What are you doing instead of being present with your emotions as a way to suppress, push, or avoid them? It could be scrolling, overworking, zoning out, or just constant distraction. Healing requires some contact with your inner world.
You don’t have to eliminate it, just reduce it slightly and slowly:
10 minutes less scrolling
One less episode
One moment of choosing to stay present
8. Letting Safe People See a Little More of You
Vulnerability is a step towards creating healing moments, but you have to get out of your comfort zone to get there. You don’t have to share your whole life story with people you consider safe, just more genuine honesty than usual. Healing happens in connection, not in isolation and you have to practice outside of therapy what is discussed within therapy.
Try saying things like:
“I’ve actually been struggling lately” in response to “how are you doing” when asked by someone who is genuinely asking
“That bothered me more than I expected” when something concerns you
9. Following Through on Small Promises to Yourself
Trust isn’t just something you build with others, you must build it with yourself as well. Self-trust grows through consistency, not how much you do.
Pick something small and doable:
Drink water in the morning
Step outside once a day
Go to bed 15 minutes earlier
10. Recognizing Progress That Doesn’t Feel Like Progress
Most people stay stuck on what is not working or what they’re doing wrong so they might miss what progress actually can look like:
Catching a pattern after it happens
Feeling your emotions more intensely (not less)
Setting a boundary and feeling guilty
Emotional healing isn’t about becoming a different person, it’s about building a different relationship with yourself and those around you. I encourage you to pick one or two of these habits and start this week, don’t try to do all 10, all at once.
Sam Villarreal, MS, LPC, LCDC