9 Ways to Make Your Psychotherapy Sessions More Effective

At the beginning of therapy, many people are curious about what they need to do to make therapy work for them. They know that they will have to work in therapy to make it effective, but they often don’t know what that entails. Unfortunately, the unknowns of therapy cause some to feel that they’re just wandering and not making progress, or it causes them to leave therapy before they get to experience all the wonderful benefits. On a different end of the spectrum, these circumstances can also cause a person to stay in therapy too long and still not reap the rewards of good psychotherapy.

Getting the most out of therapy requires an alternation of spontaneity and focused reflection. It’s important to let your feelings and thoughts flow freely, but it’s also important to slow down, step back, and reflect on what those thoughts and feelings tell you. There are many ways and many areas of your own self-exploration in which you can practice this. While the content of your therapy sessions will be unique, I’d like to offer some additional guidance I’ve picked up from people who seem to get a great deal out of their therapy sessions:

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Use of even a few of these points can help you not only overcome symptoms, but it can also help you develop a fuller, more satisfying life. Please don’t feel you have use all of these suggestions, or that these are rigid rules that you must follow. It may take time to develop the ability to use these, and that’s OK. It is the exercise of them that makes therapy so potentially powerful. Many people have entered therapy to fix a specific problem and leave treatment with a more balanced personality and more fulfilling approach to life. If you are using these suggestions, rest assured that your work in therapy will bear fruit.

I’m always curious as to what others have done to make their therapy effective. Please leave a comment and let me and other readers know how you get the most out of your therapy.

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