25/05/2026
What a therapist notices is often not what is being said, but what happens around the words.
The breath that suddenly stops when a parent is mentioned. The smile that appears while describing something painful. The apology for having feelings. The way someone talks about their life as if they are reading a report instead of telling their own story.
These small moments are rarely random. They can be traces of old adaptations—ways of coping that once helped us survive difficult relationships, emotional neglect, criticism, rejection, or environments where certain feelings were not welcome.
A therapist is listening to your words, but also to your pauses, your body language, your tone of voice, your nervous laughter, and the emotions that seem just out of reach. Not to judge or analyze you, but to understand the story beneath the story.
Healing often begins when we become curious about these patterns instead of automatically repeating them. Because what feels like "just the way I am" is sometimes a protective strategy that no longer serves us.
The goal isn't to become someone else. It's to reconnect with the parts of yourself that had to be hidden, silenced, or protected for a very long time.