Explore all things mental health. Check out some of our latest journals below.
Relationship Issues
In any relationship, communication is the foundation of understanding and intimacy. A strong connection between partners often hinges on their ability to express thoughts, feelings, and needs effectively. This article explores practical strategies for enhancing communication in a relationship, fostering a deeper bond of understanding, and reinforcing the ties that bind.
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Relationship Issues
Empathy, the capacity to understand and share another's emotions, is integral to maintaining healthy relationships. It aids in fostering strong connections, reducing conflicts, and promoting emotional intimacy. This article explores how one can become more empathetic within a relationship.
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Relationship Issues
Becoming a better person in a relationship entails personal growth while nourishing the bond with your partner. It's about developing empathy, respect, and understanding while maintaining individuality. This article delves into how you can become a better person within a relationship.
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Relationship Issues
Every successful relationship has a common denominator - a strong partnership. Being a good partner goes beyond love; it's about commitment, understanding, and mutual respect. This article explores ways you can be a better partner in your relationship.
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Relationship Issues
Effective communication is a cornerstone of any strong relationship. However, truly successful communication only partially relies on articulation but equally on the ability to listen. This article provides a deep dive into the importance of active listening in relationships and offers practical tips to enhance your listening skills.
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Relationship Issues
Resentment in a relationship is a toxic emotion that can erode trust and intimacy, leading to distance and discord. This article discusses the importance of recognizing resentment and understanding its sources and provides strategies to address and overcome this emotion for a healthier, more satisfying relationship.
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Relationship Issues
Confidence is a cornerstone of fulfilling relationships. It shapes how we perceive ourselves, influences how others view us, and impacts the quality of our relationships. This article outlines strategies to enhance personal confidence in a relationship, leading to improved interactions, better communication, and stronger emotional bonds.
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Relationship Issues
In any relationship, communication is essential for maintaining harmony and mutual respect. Being assertive and expressing your needs and feelings clearly and honestly is key to effective communication. This article guides how to become more assertive in a relationship, fostering mutual understanding and stronger emotional connections.
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Relationship Issues
Finding the right balance of togetherness and individuality is crucial for maintaining a healthy relationship. You may need to ask for space to replenish your energy or regain perspective. This article explores the art of effectively communicating your need for space in a relationship without causing undue tension or misunderstanding.
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Relationship Issues
Healthy boundaries in a relationship are the backbone of mutual respect, trust, and understanding between partners. They define the limits of individual comfort zones, ensuring each person feels secure and respected. This article delves into healthy boundaries and how to establish them effectively in a relationship.
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Relationship Issues
Manipulation, a behavior often detrimental to relationships, can be subtle and difficult to recognize in oneself. However, acknowledging this behavior and committing to change are crucial first steps towards healthier, more respectful relationships. This guide explores manipulative behavior in relationships and provides strategies for overcoming it.
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Relationship Issues
Toxic behavior in a relationship can manifest in various ways, such as manipulation, excessive control, or lack of respect for boundaries. Acknowledging toxic behavior is the first step in making a change.
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Relationship Issues
Conflict is a normal part of any relationship. It arises from differences in perspectives, values, or desires between individuals. However, how conflict is handled can either strengthen the bond or contribute to the deterioration of the relationship.
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Relationship Issues
Vulnerability, the openness about feelings and experiences, forms the backbone of deep, meaningful connections. Relationships grow stronger when partners feel safe enough to reveal their authentic selves, including their fears, hopes, and imperfections.
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Relationship Issues
Conflict is an inevitable part of any relationship. It is a regular occurrence resulting from differences in perceptions, desires, or values between two individuals. The key lies not in eliminating conflict but in understanding its dynamics and learning to navigate it healthily and constructively.
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Relationship Issues
Jealousy, a powerful emotion that can stir feelings of insecurity, fear, and anxiety, often arises when an individual perceives a threat to a valued relationship. While it's a normal emotion experienced by many people, excessive jealousy can lead to damaging behaviors and cause strain in relationships. Recognizing and understanding the root causes of jealousy is the first step toward managing it effectively.
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Relationship Issues
At its core, insecurity refers to feelings of uncertainty or anxiety about oneself or a situation. When it infiltrates relationships, insecurity can lead to negative patterns such as jealousy, dependence, or overcompensation. Often, these patterns result from past experiences, unmet needs, or lack of self-confidence. Understanding the origin of your insecurity is the first step towards overcoming it and cultivating healthier relationships.
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Relationship Issues
The trust serves as the bedrock of any healthy relationship. When this trust is broken due to dishonesty or deception, it can severely strain the relationship and make it challenging to move forward. However, while difficult, rebuilding trust after lying is not impossible. It requires time, patience, and consistent effort from both parties involved.
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Relationship Issues
Gaslighting is a form of psychological manipulation used to make someone question their sanity, perception of reality, or memories. This deceptive tactic, often employed in relationships, results in the victim doubting themselves, leading to confusion, anxiety, and low self-esteem.
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Relationship Issues
Overthinking in relationships refers to excessive worry or rumination about the relationship, its dynamics, or its future. This mental habit can lead to unnecessary stress and anxiety and even harm the relationship. Understanding the nature of overthinking and its impact is the first step toward addressing it.
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DBT
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a mental health condition that can occur in individuals who have experienced or witnessed a traumatic event. Symptoms can include flashbacks, nightmares, severe anxiety, and intrusive thoughts about the event. While PTSD is a serious condition, there are effective ways to minimize its symptoms and regain control over one's life. This article will explore strategies for reducing symptoms of PTSD, including mindfulness, exposure therapy, and cognitive restructuring.
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DBT
The concept of Radical Acceptance is rooted in the idea that all suffering originated not in pain, but in our attachment to pain. In fact, Radical Acceptance has origins in Buddhism with the tenant that relief from suffering begins first and foremost with acceptance. As a Dialectical Behavior Therapy skill, Radical Acceptance refers to the ability to accept our situation when the circumstances are out of our control, which can reduce the suffering we feel. Instead of being attached to our
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DBT
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) teaches critical skills relative to Emotional Regulation, which is arguably relevant for people of all backgrounds, behavior types, and with or without mental health conditions. We can all benefit from greater emotional regulation. While emotions are important and feelings are relative in our relationships and day to day life and processing (they help us communicate and understand our experiences), they can also create a great deal of emotional suffering
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DBT
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is, at its core, founded upon principles of Dialectical thinking, which involves an integration of two foundational opposites: acceptance and change. Learning to think and act in a dialectical manner can open up your thought process and increase your awareness of the different nuances in the world around you, rather than allowing you to exist in extreme black and whites. Extreme highs and lows are what drive many of the mental health conditions DBT is use
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DBT
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), is a specific type of psychotherapy under the Cognitive Behavioral Therapy umbrella that was curated for Borderline Personality Disorder. However, this type of therapy has been proven to be successful in the treatment of a myriad of other mental health conditions, including but not limited to anyone struggling with: Overwhelming emotions.Impulsive behavior.Self injury.Suicidal thoughts.Substance abuse.Eating disorders.PTSD and other trauma disorders. 
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DBT
Over 28.8 million Americans will have an eating disorder in their lifetime. Eating disorders are generally classified as a type of mental illness characterized by harmful behaviors related to food. Those with eating disorders (such as bulimia, anorexia, binge eating, ad more) usually struggle with impulsivity, compulsive behaviors, negative body image, and even coexisting conditions like depression, anxiety, and more. Eating disorders are the second most deadly mental illness (the first is
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DBT
These days over 18% of US adults are living with an anxiety disorder. For many people living with chronic anxiety, experiencing a daily, significant and ongoing sense of fear or anxiety can lead to restlessness, panic attacks, isolation, poor sleep, and physical symptoms such as headaches, nausea, body aches, stomach pain, and more. These and a host of other symptoms can be debilitating and may significantly decrease the sufferer’s quality of life. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is usu
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DBT
Depression is a common mental health condition characterized by persistent sadness, decreased interest in activities, and difficulty functioning daily. While there are many treatment modalities for depression, Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is particularly effective in providing individuals with tools to manage their symptoms. This article will delve into the ways DBT can aid in coping with depression.
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DBT
Are you interested in learning more about Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)? This unique form of psychotherapy - a variation of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), can be used for a wide variety of mental health issues and conditions. While DBT was specifically developed for treating individuals who have difficulty managing and regulating their own emotions, (such as with Borderline Personality Disorder), this treatment type has also been proven to be effective for a variety of other condi
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BPD
Living with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a difficult challenge for many. The struggle to control thoughts, actions, and reactions permeates their everyday lives and relationships. Their sense of self is highly dependent on their mood swings and often chaotic relationships with others, and they have difficulty managing stress, conflict, and the emotions of others. Living with BPD essentially means coping with a pattern of regular instability that spans mood, behaviors, identity, commu
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DBT
Do you have intense emotional highs and lows? Maybe regularly find yourself engaging in self-destructive behaviors such as substance abuse, self-harm, eating disorders, and interpersonal conflict? Have you been diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder? Or maybe you can identify with one of the following: ADHDAnorexia NervosaBulimia NervosaAnxiety DisordersMajor Depressive DisorderSuicidal BehaviorOCDPTSDIf so, Dialectical Behavior Therapy may be the right treatment to get you back on
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DBT
Psychotherapy offers exclusive benefits as a treatment method which differs from traditional talk therapy. If you’re at all familiar with psychotherapy, you’ve probably heard the terms “DBT” and “CBT.” DBT stands for Dialectal Behavior Therapy, and CBT stands for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. If you’re trying to decide which one is right for you, it’s important to understand the differences between the two. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy CBT is closer in concept to traditional talk ther
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DBT
If you’re considering Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) for you or a loved one, you probably already know the basics: DBT was developed in the late 1980s by Dr. Marsha Linehan specifically for patients with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). DBT is a highly beneficial treatment for many individuals for various mental health disorders and conditions, and traditionally follows the same path or protocol of treatment through 4 key modules to achieve success. The 4 main stages of DBT are:&n
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All Articles
In today’s day and age, mental health is a HOT topic, and we’re excited about that! However, for many people entering a new, sometimes scary world of discussions about inner workings, mindset, worldviews, diagnoses, emotions, and more, it may be daunting to get pulled into a discussion about mental health. If you’re struggling to understand what kind of language to use to participate in discussions around mental health, or even to discuss your own, this guide will help you get started on t
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DBT
Dialectical Behavior Therapy, or DBT, is a modified version of another well-known type of psychotherapy called Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). The primary goal of DBT is to help individuals struggling with certain behaviors and mental health conditions to better cope with stress, regulate their emotions, stay present in every moment, and consequently improve the health of their relationships with others. While DBT was initially developed to treat a specific condition - Borderline Perso
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DBT
When approaching Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), many people are surprised to find that online group sessions actively work on the skill development required to succeed. While it’s often presumed that DBT is most effective in a one-on-one setting, in reality DBT skills are best adopted in a group setting where members can actively practice their new skills and participate in discussion around common mental health challenges. Benefit 1: Community & AccountabilityFor the majority of
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BPD
When it comes to Borderline Personality Disorder, there is currently only one empirically-supported treatment protocol for this condition: Dialectical Behavior Therapy, or DBT. A form of psychotherapy developed in the late 1980s by Dr Marsha Linehan, this treatment protocol is based on cognitive behavioral principles applied in specific ways in order to target common symptoms of BPD such as chaotic relationships, emotional lability, instability, and impulsivity. Over the last few decad
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DBT
Dialectical Behavioral Therapy, or DBT, was developed in the late 1980s by Dr. Marsha Linehan following extensive use of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). DBT was developed specifically because it became clear that CBT was not fully effective for patients with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). In order to improve treatment for BPD, Dr. Linehan and colleagues created and tested additional techniques in order to achieve greater success as they sought to improve the health and wellbeing of t
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DBT
Dialectical Behavior Therapy, or DBT, is a modified version of another well-known type of psychotherapy called Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). The primary goal of DBT is to help individuals struggling with certain behaviors and mental health conditions to better cope with stress, regulate their emotions, stay present in every moment, and consequently improve the health of their relationships with others. While DBT was initially developed to treat a specific condition - Borderline Perso
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OCD
The road to treatment for OCD can be a difficult one, and often requires significant courage and determination to succeed. Establishing a healthy level of support from a group can encourage you during the treatment process and is a healthy and beneficial step as you get started. ERP & SRIsThe majority of psychologists will agree that the best and most effective treatments for OCD are Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) in combination with medication such as serotonin reuptake inhibitors (
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