Michael Campbell, MSW, Licensed Master Social Worker

Michael Campbell, MSW, Licensed Master Social Worker

Cookeville, Tennessee
VerifiedTelehealth Available

Professions: Counselor, Mental Health Counselor

Languages: English

Telephone: 814-813-9380

My Approach to Therapy

My approach to therapy starts with meeting you where you are. I believe therapy works best when it feels like a real conversation, not a clinical interrogation. You deserve a place where you do not have to perform, stay composed, or protect everyone else. Therapy can be a private space to speak honestly without worrying about being judged. I work with people who are used to carrying a lot: first responders, veterans, nurses, veterinary professionals, healthcare workers, helping professionals, and others in high-pressure roles. Many of the people I work with are still functioning on the outside, but inside they may feel exhausted, anxious, numb, irritable, disconnected, burned out, or unsure how much longer they can keep pushing through. In our work together, we will focus on understanding what you are carrying and what it is costing you. That may include reducing the impact of stress and painful thoughts, building practical coping skills, improving communication, strengthening relationships, processing trauma or grief, reconnecting with your values, and making changes that feel realistic for your life. I do not believe therapy should be vague. You should have a sense of what we are working on and why it matters. Before becoming a therapist, I worked as an emergency medical technician (EMT), a trauma emergency room (ER) and intensive care unit (ICU) nurse in Los Angeles, spent years in veterinary medicine, and served as a combat veteran of the Persian Gulf War. Those experiences shape how I sit with people. I understand that some roles change how you see the world, how much you carry, and how difficult it can be to say certain things out loud. I often use cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), solution-focused therapy, motivational interviewing, and skills from dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), but I do not believe therapy should feel like a script. We will look at what is happening in your life, what has shaped you, what is helping, and what is no longer working. If you are carrying trauma, moral injury, grief, burnout, relationship strain, or the weight of always having to function, we will move at a pace that respects your safety, privacy, and trust. I ask questions, I listen carefully, and I will be honest about what I notice. I may gently challenge you when I think it could help, but I will not talk over you or treat you like a diagnosis. I take privacy, boundaries, and ethical care seriously, and I work to create a space where you can be honest without feeling like you have to edit every word. For telehealth clients, you may occasionally see one of my four cats make a brief appearance. I like to call them my unofficial therapy assistants, although they are independent contractors and decide for themselves when they feel like helping. If you have ever felt like you needed to translate yourself before a clinician could understand you, I want to offer something different. With me, no translation is needed.

On the Fence About Going to Therapy?

It makes sense to have questions before starting therapy, especially if privacy matters to you. Many people worry that talking to a therapist means their employer, insurance company, coworkers, or others will somehow find out. Therapy is confidential, with limited legal and ethical exceptions related to safety, abuse, neglect, or court requirements. I work with ClaryT Wellness, a private-pay practice, which means we do not bill insurance. Your therapy is not reported to your employer or insurance company unless you specifically authorize that in writing. This can give you more privacy and more control over your care. Therapy is also an investment in your health, relationships, work, and quality of life. That does not mean you have to be in crisis to start. Sometimes therapy is about having a private space to think clearly, process stress, build coping skills, and stop carrying everything alone. It really is a private place where you can share your stuff without being judged.

Why Going to Therapy Does Not Mean You are Weak or Flawed

Many people I work with are used to being the calm one, the capable one, or the person others depend on during difficult moments. For first responders, veterans, healthcare workers, and others in high-stress roles, asking for support can feel uncomfortable because strength is often connected with pushing through. I do not see therapy that way. Therapy is not about being broken. It is about having a confidential space to sort through stress, trauma, burnout, grief, moral injury, relationship strain, or the weight of always having to function. Reaching out for support can be a sign of insight, responsibility, and self-respect. You do not have to wait until everything falls apart to talk with someone.

Expertise & Specialties

Age Groups I Work With

TeensAdultsElders

Groups I Work With

I work with adults, couples, veterans, first responders, healthcare and veterinary professionals, and others in high-pressure roles. Many of my clients are people who are used to being the strong one, helping others, or pushing through stress until it starts affecting their relationships, mood, sleep, confidence, or sense of self. I support clients dealing with anxiety, depression, burnout, grief, trauma, moral injury, relationship concerns, and life transitions.

Therapy Services & Specialties

CoachingConsultationCounseling for OffendersHome-Based TherapyIndividual Therapy & CounselingLegal DocumentationMarriage, Couples, or Relationship CounselingMediation

Concerns & Challenges Addressed

Abuse / Abuse Survivor IssuesAdjusting to Change / Life TransitionsAnxietyAttachment IssuesBlended Family IssuesBreakupBullyingCaregiver Issues / Stress

Therapeutic Approaches & Evidence-Based Methods

CoachingCognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)Critical Incident Stress ManagementInterpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT)Motivational Interviewing Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT)Systems Theory /TherapyTrauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT)

Industries & Communities

First Responder/Medical ProfessionalsMilitary/Law EnforcementEducationSelf-Employed and Freelance ProfessionalsLGBTQ+BIPOC

Video Introduction

Location & Contact

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