
Anthony Smith, LMHC
1.3K posts

Anthony Smith, LMHC
@ASmithLMHC
22 years as therapist, court evaluator, professor, supervisor. See Up&Running @psychtoday for my blog. My posts don't replace your provider/supervisor's advice.


I agree. But also, in my experience, very few therapists seem to be good at everything. Does calling it all “psychotherapy” not have downsides too? One issue is you can risk hinging it all on a hope that for many is incredibly difficult: finding one amazing therapist who can do it all, is available, and you can afford. Another is that when choosing a therapist, it helps to have names for different kinds of work. This might help you ask and have a conversation with them to understand how they approach therapy in general or how they might do it with you.

About 20 percent of children experience bullying, yet many of them don't speak up about it, even to a trusted adult. Here's what therapists need to know to help, explains @ASmithLMHC psychologytoday.com/us/blog/up-and…



A note on exercise. depression, and why recommending exercise for depression is not always helpful.





To understand another person's thoughts and feelings thoroughly, with the meanings they have for him, and to be thoroughly understood by this other person in return -- this is one of the most rewarding of human experiences, and all too rare. Carl R. Rogers #understanding


We must be prepared to assume the existence in us of not only a second consciousness, but of a third, fourth, perhaps of an unlimited number of states of consciousness, all unknown to our everyday self. --Freud



"By enacting frightening scenarios, the unconsciously anxious person turns passive into active, transforming a sense of helplessness and vulnerability into an experience of agency and power, no matter how negative the drama that is played out." - Nancy McWilliams



Mark my words, phone-free spaces, particularly those that involve adventure and physical activity, such as junk playgrounds, will be the new enrichment activities of the next decade. Kids will include these experiences on their resumes to demonstrate to potential schools and employers that they possess social skills, grit, and creativity. @LetGrowOrg wapo.st/3TzDtv6

Folks seem to have found the post on splitting below helpful. Well, we can't consider really understand splitting without understanding projective identification So, here's my take on projective identification, arguably the most interesting and complex 'defence': 🧵


Important message for our modern political world from Frank Yeomans, MD Everyone can regress to splitting... It can even be fun... Idealization/devaluation, tribal thinking -> not taking responsibility, only blaming others... Share with me an example that comes to your mind...


