Thank you for being here.
I’ve put together some of my favorite blog posts for you below.
They’re a great starting point if you’re looking to learn more about relationships and the therapy process.
Be sure to check out my Instagram account for more related content.
Rebranding “Daddy Issues”
This phrase makes me cringe so much, and you might feel similarly. To say that someone has “daddy issues” is typically a fast way to metaphorically throw a punch to someone’s gut — and that someone is usually a woman. In my experience, this phrase is casually thrown around as an insult that’s used to discredit what a woman experiences in an intimate relationship. As in, when someone expresses a concern in a relationship, they can be met with. “They just have daddy issues that they’re projecting onto me.”
I want to focus on two of the many ways this can be harmful.
5 Affirmations for Ending 2020
I had the opportunity to partner with Women We Love Wednesday to reflect on the end of the year, and I'm so excited to share this guest blog post with you today. It feels like the perfectly poetic way of wrapping up this year and closing out my first year in private practice. Read my last blog post of the year here: 5 Affirmations for the End of 2020.
We’re Still Doing This Self-Compassion Thing
You know how after there’s a death, the first week or so is full of support and then people move on with with their lives? It feels like with Covid, March was the equivalent of that first week. My social media timelines were flooded with supportive memes about self-care (I clearly follow a lot of therapists) and conversations with friends and family centered around making sure we were all “okay.” Fast forward seven months, a few weeks away from the election, and I’m feeling pulled to revisit the themes of March. Many of us are preparing for colder weather and losing the ability to shake off cabin fever with a socially-distanced outdoor hangout or long walk in a park.
On Loneliness
It’s okay to feel lonely.
There’s no shame in needing people and in needing human connection. This month I had the opportunity to sit down with Marvin Toliver, LCSW, from @melanatedsocialwork and lead him through a guided exercise on cultivating a sense of connection when we feel lonely. If you missed the live event, you can click here to watch. If you prefer to go at your own pace, scroll down for the written script.
I chose the topic of loneliness because it’s a common experience, yet doesn’t get much air time. On social media, we are bombarded with images of folks connecting, or at least displaying their social capital. We can feel lonely in the process of a breakup, in a romantic relationship that isn’t meeting our needs, or really any time we aren’t getting enough experiences of connection. We feel connected when we feel seen, heard, understood, and celebrated. It takes courage to risk showing ourselves to others, and it takes skill to communicate when we aren’t having our needs met.