Marty Cooper, PhD, MFT: Psychotherapy for Anxiety and Depression

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Marty Cooper, PhD, MFT: Psychotherapy for Anxiety and Depression Psychotherapy for Anxiety and Depression, from a Mindfulness perspective.

Thoughts, videos, and links to information on the management, and uprooting, of depression and anxiety.

It’s been a fairly heady run of Internal Family Systems articles these last months (see the IFS section under Writing on...
11/07/2025

It’s been a fairly heady run of Internal Family Systems articles these last months (see the IFS section under Writing on my website), hence I wanted to address something a bit more tangible this month. What follows, then, is talking about the tools for working on depression, although not so much in their particularities (the mood journals, exercising, gratitude journal, etc.) but in how to orient in general towards using them (pacing, selection, etc.). As much as we might want a fix-all device, unfortunately tools do not deploy themselves; we are the ones holding the handle of these tools, and thus how we approach them has a lot to do with how useful they are. So, I hope this gives you a clearer framework, a kind of protocol for using all of your tools.

May your summers be appropriately languid and not ennui-ridden; may the heat be enlivening rather than just wilting; may the river water be refreshing rather than merely cold; and may your connections be heart-lifting and plentiful, and not empty. Where it’s the latter rather than the former, I wish your courage and support to meet the difficulties with effective tools, and a willingness to believe that there’s still goodness in the world.

A framework of guidelines for using all our depression tools.

This month’s article should be the last in the run about Internal Family Systems (IFS), as it is  intended to tie all th...
09/06/2025

This month’s article should be the last in the run about Internal Family Systems (IFS), as it is intended to tie all the previous articles together in relationship to depression, which of course is why we’re all here. Specifically, I’m discussing how my basic point that losses of things that are too important to our survival (mental, emotional, or literal) cannot be normally grieved, and thus invite depression. Or simply: depression is a defense against grief when a loss is too important to let go of.

I hope you find this, and all the IFS writing, useful. May your late Spring be giving you an abundance of flowers and only an appropriate number of challenges.

(If you need an IFS refresher, the previous articles are on my website: The core parts: Protectors, Exiles, Self; and the developmental parts: the Infant/Divine Child, the Child, the Teen, the Young Adult, and the Adult. And for the deep dive into IFS: No Bad Parts [the lay introduction] and Internal Family Systems Therapy [the clinical manual].)

Looking at depression through the developmental IFS perspective of Parts.

April will be the second to last installment in the recent series of articles on IFS; next month will be the roundup and...
04/05/2025

April will be the second to last installment in the recent series of articles on IFS; next month will be the roundup and the direct relating of it all to depression. Specifically, I’m rounding out the Parts with a discussion of the Child (distinct from the infant/toddler), which more than others is the Part who plays. It’s also a part that is commonly shut down, either during its time as a child because the environment could not tolerate its aliveness, or during adolescence or early young adulthood, when the Child is seen as an obstruction to the serious business at hand. I hope you find it helpful in further locating who’s who in your own psyche.

(If you need an IFS refresher, the previous articles are on my website: The core parts - Protectors, Exiles, Self, and the developmental parts - the Infant/Divine Child, the Teen, the Young Adult, and the Adult. And for the deep dive into IFS: "No Bad Parts" (the lay introduction) and "Internal Family Systems Therapy" (the clinical manual).)

I hope your spring is starting out well, and the childlike exuberance of new growth is finding its way into your life.

Article describing IFS and the Young Adult part.

Continuing on with the series on the Parts of the psyche seen through the lens of Internal Family Systems Theory, here i...
27/03/2025

Continuing on with the series on the Parts of the psyche seen through the lens of Internal Family Systems Theory, here is the entry on the Teenager. The Teen is routinely misunderstood, if not maligned, by adults and parents, who themselves have not come to terms with who and what the teenager is in themselves. This rejection leads to the teenager’s dynamic self turning chaotic, because it is left with no other option for self-expression. This is not to say that the Teen’s nature, and the teenager stage of development, doesn’t encode an unstable relationship between order and chaos, belonging and autonomy. It does, as Dan Siegel ("Brainstorm") makes clear. But whether there is a relatively elegant maturing through this stage, and an integration of the Teen Part in later years, depends a lot on how accepting parents are (externally and internally).

Regarding IFS and depression, there are some of these IFS articles which poke at it, but in a few months I will do a summary of “depressed parts” to bring it all together.

May your Springs be coming with some relief from Winter’s severity, and reminding your various parts about the inevitable relatedness of dark and light.

(If you need an IFS refresher, the previous articles are on my website: Protectors, Exiles, the Infant/Divine Child, the Young Adult, the Adult, the Self, and World Events. And for the deep dive into IFS’s progenitor, Dick Schwartz: "No Bad Parts", and the clinical manual, "Internal Family Systems Therapy")

Article describing IFS and the Young Adult part.

Apparently I’ve gotten very inspired by Internal Family Systems Theory, because I’m writing again on it here, in this ca...
12/02/2025

Apparently I’ve gotten very inspired by Internal Family Systems Theory, because I’m writing again on it here, in this case on the nature of the “Adult” part. I wrote last month about the Young Adult, distinguishing it from the Adult, but did not detail what I meant by that Part. So read on for that clarification, and as ever, I welcome feedback if you are moved to send it.

May your February be cozy and not bleak, may you see the subtle shades of grey rather than the lack of color, and may you be finding community, support and courage in these chaotic times.

(If you need a refresher, the previous month's articles on my website: Protectors, Exiles, the Self, the Young Adult, the Divine Child, and World Events). And for the deep dive, books: "No Bad Parts", and the clinical manual, "Internal Family Systems Therapy", both by Richard Schwartz.)

Article describing IFS and the Young Adult part.

This month’s article continues the run of Internal Family System (IFS) reflections (on Protectors, Exiles, the Self, and...
22/01/2025

This month’s article continues the run of Internal Family System (IFS) reflections (on Protectors, Exiles, the Self, and World Events) this time on the Young Adult part. The YA is the part of the psyche that emerges generally (in the West) about early to mid-20’s, when there is a transition from the more protected environments of family and school into having to build out an adult life. This is not the full Adult, which is marked by a stabilized ability to know and accept the world as it is, and regulate the inner world as one navigates with sufficient skill the external world. It’s a difficult and often un-demarcated phase of development, which leads to a blurring of the Adult and YA, an unhelpful conflation. So, the following piece attempts to clarify what the YA is and isn’t, and I hope it helps in spotting this Part in yourself, such that you can keep bringing forward the full Adult. (If the IFS lens is intriguing, you can check out the popular version of IFS, "No Bad Parts", and the clinical manual, "Internal Family Systems Therapy", both by Richard Schwartz.)

During this winter, may you be finding warmth in the cold, and light in the dark.

Article describing IFS and the Young Adult part.

For December's article, I will be continuing on with the run of IFS articles (on Exiles, Protectors, and the Self - you ...
12/12/2024

For December's article, I will be continuing on with the run of IFS articles (on Exiles, Protectors, and the Self - you can view them on the website) to give a sketch of IFS applied to ourselves and macro-level actors at a time of such social and political upheaval. To see current reality clearly, we need multiple lenses, but it would seem that an accurate psychological lens is sorely missing. There is much more to be said and explored about psychology and groups than I can cover here, but hopefully the article can give you a sense of what IFS can offer both to understanding, empathy, and compassionate social relationships. Whatever side of the aisle you sit on, hopefully it’s clear that all of those qualities are desperately needed.

If you are in America, may your Thanksgiving have been filled with genuine gratitude, and otherwise may you be finding strength, resilience, and useful challenges in these interesting times.

A sketch of IFS applied to understanding our relationship to macro events.

In this month’s article, I continue the depiction of how the Internal Family Systems (IFS) “plural mind” model intersect...
26/11/2024

In this month’s article, I continue the depiction of how the Internal Family Systems (IFS) “plural mind” model intersects with the phenomenon of depression (you can find the previous articles on my website), with a focus on the Self, what IFS considers the central organizing principle and force of the psyche. Essentially, the Self can be thought of as the archetype of the ideal parent, but one that can and needs to be installed in the middle of our psyche for all the various parts to calm down and collaborate. Arguably, this installation is both what heals depression, and what psychotherapy itself is ultimately about.

IFS is a very rich model which these last articles are only sketching, so if you get interested and want to go further, you can check out the popular version of IFS, "No Bad Parts", and the clinical manual, "Internal Family Systems Therapy", both by Richard Schwartz.

Describing the relationship between IFS’s “Self” and depression.

In this short run of articles about Internal Family Systems (IFS) and depression, we covered last month the Protector wh...
26/11/2024

In this short run of articles about Internal Family Systems (IFS) and depression, we covered last month the Protector who deploys depression in the service of exiling unwanted parts of the personality. These parts who are ostracized are known as “Exiles” in IFS, and they will be the focus for this month, what they are and how they are related to depression. (To explore in more detail, see "No Bad Parts", by Schwartz.)

IFS, depression, and the nature of the Exile parts.

The next few issues will be looking at depression through the lens of Internal Family Systems Theory (IFS), a model of p...
10/09/2024

The next few issues will be looking at depression through the lens of Internal Family Systems Theory (IFS), a model of psychotherapy that dates back decades (with its roots going back even further to the early days of Freud and Jung) but is seeing a huge surge in interest amongst psychologists and clinicians. Although depression can be seen through multiple lenses, IFS has probably one of the best lenses on the condition, particularly in its framing depression as related to what IFS calls the Protector. Depression is best seen as a systemic defense, rather than a persecutor, and IFS offers an elegant way of highlighting this vital point.

A description of depression as Protector from the IFS lens.

I try to give a “pointillistic” view of depression in these newsletters, from the very pragmatic to the rather abstract,...
03/09/2024

I try to give a “pointillistic” view of depression in these newsletters, from the very pragmatic to the rather abstract, to give multiple ways to think about this complex experience. Today’s newsletter will be more of the latter, although in a weird sense (as hopefully you’ll see) fundamentally pragmatic. So, this month I’ll be describing what Carl Jung called the archetype of the Divine Child, specifically seen through the lens of a Jungian analyst named Donald Kalsched.

Kalsched writes about what he calls the “self-care system”, which is essentially the way our psyches protect themselves from damage when in contact with a threatening or caustic outside world. We’re all aware of the normal protections, such as defensiveness (“I didn’t do anything wrong!”), but Kalsched unpacks a more primal phenomenon, a defense system at the level of the basic archetypes which is organized around the protection not of the personal “Inner Child,” but of the more fundamental Divine Child.

Take a read and see if or how this idea might apply to your own life. Once you get the concept, it can be a very useful addition to the pragmatics of dealing with depression.

The Divine Child archetype and its relationship to depression.

Unsurprisingly, I’ve been having many conversations this week about national and global politics, about power vs. powerl...
23/07/2024

Unsurprisingly, I’ve been having many conversations this week about national and global politics, about power vs. powerlessness, and survival. With the attempted assassination of Donald Trump, the assaults on democracy worldwide, and the uncertainties of our future, it is no wonder that these subjects are part of the therapy conversation. Yet, for all the details and myriad particular concerns, the central questions all essentially seem to boil down to: How do we remain active? And how do we stay centered in the storm?

For this month's article, I discuss "faith" as a skill to aid in maintaining balance in the currently increasing overwhelm.

A description of stalled grief and life in the necropolis.

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