🧠

A Therapist's Honest Take on CBT Techniques

By Maya Rodriguez, LPC • 2/23/2025


Before we get into the research and the tips, I want to acknowledge something: if you're reading this, you're probably dealing with something real. That matters.

What to Try This Week

This is where things get interesting — and where most generic advice falls short.

I had a client — let's call her Meera — who struggled with exactly this for years. She'd tried everything the internet suggested. The apps, the journals, the morning routines. Nothing stuck. What finally made a difference was surprisingly simple: she stopped trying to fix herself and started trying to understand herself.

What I've Seen Work

I want to be careful here because this gets oversimplified a lot.

A friend of mine — a psychiatrist who's been practicing for 20 years — puts it this way: "Everyone thinks they're the only one dealing with this. The irony is that this universality is itself universal."

The Practical Part

This is the part most people skip, but it might be the most important section.

A friend of mine — a psychiatrist who's been practicing for 20 years — puts it this way: "Everyone thinks they're the only one dealing with this. The irony is that this universality is itself universal."

Moving Forward

A 2023 meta-analysis in the Journal of Clinical Psychology looked at this exact question. Here's what they found.

Here's what the data actually says — and I'm going to be more nuanced than the clickbait headlines. A 2024 systematic review looked at 47 studies and found significant but modest effects. Translation: this stuff works, but it's not a miracle cure. You need to pair it with other strategies.

Progress isn't going to look like a straight line. There will be setbacks. Days where you feel like you're back at square one. You're not — you're just having a hard day. Those are different things.

Remember: seeking help isn't a sign of weakness. It's one of the bravest things you can do.