The Therapy Journal
This is where psychotherapy steps out of the session and into conversation. From our defences that shape our daily lives to the emotions that drive our choices, these pieces explore the human mind through a psychodynamic lens.
Whether clinical or cultural, every post asks the same question: what happens when we stop avoiding our feelings?
Where therapy meets everyday life…
Women’s Mental Health Right Now: Why So Many Are Exhausted, Anxious and Still Telling Themselves They’re Fine
Many women appear to be coping while carrying ongoing emotional strain. This article explores how anxiety and exhaustion can grow from constant emotional labour, and why therapy can offer a space to slow down, reconnect, and rebuild capacity.
When Care Feels Impossible: Exhaustion, Responsibility, and What Therapy Can and Cannot Hold
Caring for someone in distress can quietly become exhausting. This reflection looks at the tension between compassion and responsibility, and how therapy helps people move beyond burnout, resentment, or withdrawal without reducing complexity or blame.
How Abandonment Shows Up in Adulthood and Why Insight Alone Doesn’t Set You Free
Abandonment often appears as patterns rather than memories. This article explores how early relational experiences shape adult reactions, why insight alone does not change them, and how deeper therapy works inside the moments where those patterns still activate.
What My Vinyl Collection Taught Me About Memory, Regulation, and Meaning
Organising music by emotional function rather than genre revealed unexpected parallels with therapy. This reflection explores memory, nervous system regulation, and how meaning develops gradually when experience is allowed to settle without pressure.
What BACP Accreditation Means and Why It Matters Right Now
Therapy in the UK is not statutorily regulated, which can feel confusing when choosing support. This article explains what BACP accreditation actually means, what it does not guarantee, and how it can help people make informed therapy decisions.
Therapy and the Experience of Being Seen
Many people come to therapy looking for strategies but discover something deeper. This reflection explores how being emotionally seen and understood can reduce anxiety, soften self-criticism, and help previously confusing patterns begin to make sense.
From Pattern to Presence: How Early States Shape What We’re Drawn To
What repeatedly pulls our attention is often linked to early emotional states rather than the object itself. This article explores how patterns form, why repetition happens under stress, and how therapy helps restore choice through understanding state rather than content.
Emotional Fragility and the Need for a Raft in Intensive Therapy
Written for therapists, this article explores emotional fragility in depth work and why building containment before intensity prevents collapse. A practical reflection on capacity, countertransference, and why slowing down often protects both therapist and client.
What the Latest UK Therapy Data Really Tells Us and What It Means If You’re Thinking About Therapy
Therapy has quietly become mainstream in the UK, with more than a third of adults having tried it, and most finding it helpful. But beneath anxiety and stress, loneliness is often the real driver. As therapy moves online and into everyday life, this piece explores why human connection still matters, how to choose support wisely, and what actually makes therapy work.
Four Thousand Hours: A Reflection on Depth, Distance, and the Digital Room
After thousands of hours of online therapy, this reflection explores what makes emotional depth possible through a screen. It looks at how anxiety, defences, and emotional capacity show up in online sessions, and why presence and consistency matter more than physical location.
What Happens When You Finally Feel a Feeling You’ve Avoided?
Avoided emotions often feel intense when they first appear. This article explains why anxiety rises as feelings come closer to awareness, how emotional capacity develops in therapy, and why learning to stay present with emotion gradually reduces the need for avoidance.
The Hidden Map of Suffering: The Three Core Fears in Therapy
Anxiety, self-criticism, and relationship struggles often follow recognisable emotional themes. This article introduces three common fears: fear of self, fear of feelings, and fear of closeness, and explains how therapy helps people understand and work with these patterns over time.
The Unseen Battle: What Stranger Things Suggests About Trauma, Shame, and the Inner Critic
Using themes from Stranger Things as metaphor, this article explores how avoidance, shame, and self-criticism can shape internal experience. It looks at the “Upside Down” as a symbol for psychological conflict and explains how therapy helps people approach difficult emotions more steadily.
What Therapists Feel But Rarely Say
Therapists do experience emotional responses during sessions, but those reactions are used carefully as part of the work. This article explains countertransference, why therapists rarely talk openly about their own feelings in sessions, and how emotional awareness helps guide the therapeutic process.
You’re Not Relating. You’re Re-Enacting…
Many people repeat similar relationship patterns without understanding why. This article explores re-enactment and how early emotional dynamics can shape present relationships, and how therapy helps make these patterns visible so that connection becomes less driven by automatic repetition.
The Therapist’s Silence: What It Really Means
Silence in therapy can feel uncomfortable, but it is often intentional. This article explores how therapeutic silence supports emotional awareness, slows automatic responses, and creates space for feelings to become clearer. It explains what therapists are usually doing internally during quiet moments in session.
What Your Therapist Really Thinks About You
Many people worry about being judged in therapy. This article explains what therapists are actually paying attention to during sessions, how self-criticism often shows up in the room, and why the therapeutic focus is usually on emotional patterns rather than personal evaluation.
When the “Monster” Speaks: What True-Crime Stories Reveal About Human Psychology
True-crime stories often reflect themes of isolation, shame, and emotional fragmentation. This article looks at why these narratives are psychologically compelling and how therapy understands containment, emotional regulation, and the quieter forms of internal struggle that many people recognise in themselves.
When Growth Feels Like Collapse
Therapy sometimes feels harder before it feels easier. Anxiety may rise and familiar coping patterns can feel less stable. This article explains why periods of discomfort are common during psychological change and how therapy helps people stay grounded while new ways of responding begin to develop.
What Cures in Therapy Is Truth…
Insight can explain patterns, but change often happens when emotions are experienced rather than analysed. This article explores why understanding alone is rarely enough, how emotional truth shows up in therapy, and why small moments of honest experience can gradually shift long-standing patterns.