Talking Through
A conversation between psychologist Teal Fitzpatrick, and you, our readers, on our shared humanity and reclaiming self-care.
On Sweaters and Goodbyes
Readers, I am writing this column to say goodbye, and it has taken me weeks to get to a place where I could even begin to put words to page.
Healthy as a Horse, Happy as a Clam
So how do we come to understand our own mental health and what that looks like for us? One way, as discussed above, is to recognize what happens when we feel in poor mental health, and work our way backwards.
Hey Smarty-pants!
There is an ableist foundation to the concept of “normal” mental health, and it is worth recognizing and validating that we humans are all born with variation and difference in bodies and minds, some of which lends to great pleasure and creative ways of engaging with the world, and some of which causes discomfort, pain, or challenges.
I’m an INFJ, how about you?
So what do personality tests actually do, and can we trust them? The answer, as with all psychological tests, is complicated.
Slouching Toward Busyness
The toxicity of grind culture is not just that it describes a baseline of survival for many people, but that it also has found a way to glorify overwork so that it is celebrated.
Making Change
After pursuing psychology, I had relegated writing and art, my other great loves, as secondary activities. They had become one of my least favorite words: hobbies. And my insides, dear reader, were, in a word: fucked.
Ask and Answer: Fighting with Ghosts
A therapist of mine once used the term “fighting with ghosts” to describe those early childhood patterns that just keep coming up again and again. They can feel so persistent, so automatic, and so deeply ingrained that it is hard to imagine a different way.
Turn and Face the Strange
Insight can be tough-won, for sure—most of us encounter certain things that we, consciously or unconsciously, are invested in not-knowing. For most of us, though, it is the working-through that is the really tough work of creating change.
Let’s Talk About Needs, Baby
How skilled are we, as adults, at identifying and communicating our own needs? The answer for many of us is: not great.
We Meet Again As Strangers
What I have come to realize during this period of interrupted social autopilot is just how much autopiloted social interactions drained me in a cumulative way.
Three Psychology Lessons for Writers
My experience has taught me that psychology and literature are remarkable bedfellows, each exploring the experience of consciousness from different yet compatible positions.
Ask and Answer: How do I break up with my therapist?
The client is never responsible for taking care of the therapist’s needs — emotionally, financially, or physically. This dynamic comes up a lot as clients, particularly when we have caregiving tendencies, or tend to defer to those around us.
Liberation Work Is Mental Health Care
North American culture has a disastrous fetishization of individualism which shows up in two significant messages: 1) you can and should “do it all” and do it perfectly; and 2) if you experience a problem or concern, you should solve it on your own. Humans are just not designed this way, folks.
Ask and Answer: Specifying Today
Specifying “today” may sound a little strange, but it helps us remember that self-care should respond to a want or need, and those can change day to day, hour to hour. It suggests that we check in by asking ourselves “what would feel good now?”
Liberation Psychology — Part I
I came to Liberation Psychology through my own research during a period of growing disenchantment with, and anger at, the current state of American Psychology. What I saw and experienced, clinically and theoretically, was a willful erasure of the massive impact of oppression on the individual experiences of clients by medical and psychological systems.
Ask and Answer: Personalizing Self-Care Practices
So often we are offered skills and practices that don’t quite work for us. As a fellow human who also panics during meditation attempts, I have had to learn more about the process of grounding (grounding defined here as feeling safe and present, as opposed to anxious and distracted) and using this as a roadmap to find what works for me.
The Anatomy of a Breath
I want to talk to you about breathing, specifically about the anatomy and function of the breath and how we can learn to work with our own breathing to take care of our nervous system and emotional well-being.
Ask and Answer
There are many studies in research psychology that demonstrate what has been coined “emotional contagion.” One much-replicated study demonstrates that babies only a few days old will cry when they hear other babies crying (and will not cry at other loud noises, showing emotional discernment).
Talking Through
I am a clinical psychologist, trained in identifying and treating psychopathology and mental illness. Almost every person that I have worked with met some diagnostic criteria for a mental health disorder on paper. And yet, I would describe few of these clients as mentally ill.