Vulnerability in the Counseling setting
I want to talk with you about what it is like to be vulnerable when you come into a counselor's office. A lot of people when they come in for the first time, may have not even sought out help before, or may have been struggling seeing someone but they weren't the right fit. A lot of times they have experienced that pain of rejection by other people as well. So coming in and talking to someone about your deepest secrets can often be difficult.
So how is a counselor different from just having a friend? A counselor is capable of looking at things from a non-harsh point and can help you see things from a clearer vision. It is often difficult to be vulnerable with that person because they are essentially a total stranger. The good news is that most counselors have sat on that side of the couch as well and should be able to help you talk about stuff that is extremely difficult and maybe even painful.
Now, does this come easily and quickly? Sometimes it doesn't, and that is not unusual. I have worked with clients for a long time and they will still say "I was afraid to share that with you because I was afraid that you might judge me or make a mean comment about it." The thing about a really good counselor is they are not there to judge you. They are there to help you resolve whatever issues might be happening. The vulnerability piece is definitely difficult but our job is to help you figure out what the pain is that you're experiencing and then help you work through the pain
It is not unusual for people to hang on to things like sexual abuse for a long time and when you approach that subject a client may pull back and say "I’m not ready to deal with that." If you are that patient that is not ready to deal with it, your counselor should give you the space and say "okay we're not going to deal with that right now but we'll come back to it.”
Vulnerability is tough for most people but when you're going into a counselor, don't think that they expect you to give all of your deepest darkest secrets immediately. We are also human beings and we recognize that some things are just too painful to share. However, we also know that if you share it we can work on the healing process. When you get to the other side, you are going to feel a lot better.
Now, knowing a little about the healing process, it is often relieving when you first start sharing your information. If you think about the therapy process as being in a tunnel, when you first go in you might see a little bit of light, but the further you go in the tunnel the darker it may get. Sometimes it gets darker before you see the light again, so expect that when going into the therapy process. Your counselor is there to be with you every step of the way as you're going through that process and opening yourself up.
As a therapist, I know it's hard and I understand how difficult vulnerability can be, however I also know that if you work through the process, there is so much healing on the other end.
My suggestion to you would be to find a therapist that you really trust, and open up to them because they are here to help you heal. I hope this helps! If you've been having some doubts about whether or not you can share something with your therapist and if you have been holding things in, please reach out to them. They are there for you!
If you would like to work with me, visit the “New Patient Registration” link to get started!
Hey Empaths 3 Reasons Why I want you to be The Bad Guy today
Empaths have a really hard time saying no. Empaths put ourselves in other people's positions and give too much of our time to others, sometimes to the wrong people.
My challenge to you for this week is I really want you to work on being the bad guy. I want you to work on feeling uncomfortable. I know that might seem counterintuitive, but the reason I want you to work on feeling uncomfortable is because often we can't say no to boundaries. Boundaries are hard for us. If we're empaths, we have a really hard time when we say no, because we can feel the other person's disappointment. Those emotions can be confusing to us. They can make it difficult, because on one hand we want to be able to say no, but on the other hand, we feel the other person's disappointment and pain. So a lot of times we'll say yes, even when it's not in our best interest.
Allow it to be okay for you to not feel like you are the hero or the savior or the person that somebody can rely on. It's hard for us to disappoint others. When you're able to say no to people, then you are able to really begin to discern what you want to say yes to and what you don't want to say yes to. Nobody likes being told no. So when you are the bad guy to tell somebody, no, it often upsets them. Don't worry about it. They will get over it. They may not like it, but they will. So give yourself permission.
Often when we're an empathic person that people come to when they really want help or need help, sometimes these may be people that we don't even know. We can be standing in the middle of Target and someone will just come up and start talking to us. So being able to say no and be the bad guy is a part of good self care.
We are capable of jumping in and fixing things. The problem with that is that we are circumventing the person from having their own healthy learning experiences. I often use the example that if we try to prevent our babies from ever falling or bumping their head or skimming their knee, we are actually preventing them from learning. When they fall and bump their head, they experience pain. It allows them to get back up and figure out how to adjust to avoid the pain. Well, emotions can sometimes be like that too. As empaths, we often want to save people from those emotions because we feel pain so deeply. But when we help them avoid their pain, we're actually disabling them from not being able to have their own experiences. I want you to think about that when you're attempting to save other people from their pain. You're actually disabling them, you're not doing them a service.
By taking care of ourselves, we're ultimately able to pick and choose who we want to give our time and energy to. If we're giving it to everybody, we don't have enough time, energy, and emotional resources to give to the people that we really want to focus our energy on. Sometimes that becomes those closest to us. Sometimes that becomes ourselves and things that we need to do for ourselves are all in self care.
Now for me, sometimes I tend to be an emotional reactor. I will often say yes without thinking about it. My first tip is give yourself a minute to think about it. If a minute, isn't long enough, then ask for some time. Sometimes we need time to think about things, we need time to process. The other tip I have for you is to write notes for yourself. Give yourself pointers as to why you're going to say no. You may never need those pointers, but it helps you stay focused when you're talking to the other person. The third tip that I have for you is to trust your gut instinct. You are an empath and you will know if you really take a minute to feel about it. You are going to know whether or not it's the right thing to do and to say. Learning to trust your gut instinct on things is really helpful.
Anyway, those are my tips for this week. I hope to talk to you guys again soon. If you have any questions or comments, please feel free to message me!
Is what you are actually feeling yours? A Guide for Empaths in Florida
Empaths absorb the world around them. That is not a metaphor.
If you identify as an empath, a highly sensitive person, or a neurodivergent woman who feels things deeply, you already know that you experience the emotional world differently than most people. You walk into a room and immediately sense the energy. You scroll through social media and feel the weight of what you read long after you put your phone down. You sit across from someone who is struggling and find yourself struggling too, even if you had been perfectly fine five minutes before.
This is not your imagination. This is how your nervous system works
Prefer to watch? The video above covers the highlights. Keep reading for the full guide including grounding techniques and FAQs.
Just because you are feeling it does not mean it belongs to you. Here is how to tell the difference and give back what was never yours to carry.
Hi, I'm Laura Zane, a holistic online therapist serving highly sensitive, neurodivergent, and empathic women throughout Florida. One of the questions I get asked most often, and one that has come up repeatedly with clients week after week, is some version of this: "I don't know why I feel so sad right now. Nothing is actually wrong in my life." If that sounds familiar, this post is for you.
Because here is something that most people, and even most therapists, do not talk about enough. Just because you are feeling something does not mean it is yours
Empaths absorb the world around them. That is not a metaphor.
If you identify as an empath, a highly sensitive person, or a neurodivergent woman who feels things deeply, you already know that you experience the emotional world differently than most people. You walk into a room and immediately sense the energy. You scroll through social media and feel the weight of what you read long after you put your phone down. You sit across from someone who is struggling and find yourself struggling too, even if you had been perfectly fine five minutes before.
This is not your imagination. This is how your nervous system works. Empaths and HSPs have a heightened ability to absorb and process the emotional energy of the people and environments around them. It is one of your greatest gifts. It is also, when unmanaged, one of your greatest sources of confusion and exhaustion.
"Just because you are feeling it does not necessarily mean it is yours to own."
When you are feeling sadness, anxiety, or anger and you cannot trace it back to anything specific in your own life, it is worth pausing and asking a different question. Not "why am I feeling this" but "whose is this?"
The world around you amplifies everything you feel
There are times when the collective energy around us is especially heavy. Local environmental issues, news cycles, social media, the people in our immediate circle, and even broader energetic shifts can all land in the body of a sensitive person like a wave they never saw coming. When the world is stirred up, empaths feel it first and feel it most.
For those of us who are sensitive, this kind of amplified energy does not always announce itself clearly. Instead it shows up as a vague depression that seems to come from nowhere. A low-grade anxiety that does not have a clear source. A heaviness that makes you feel like you cannot do anything, even though nothing has actually gone wrong in your personal world. Sound familiar?
This is especially true when there is environmental distress in your area, collective grief or fear in your community, or when you have been spending time with people who are carrying a lot. Your system picks it all up. And if you are not paying attention, you will start to believe that what you are absorbing is actually yours.
How to tell if what you are feeling belongs to you
This is the most important skill an empath can develop. Mindfulness gives us a way to step back from our feelings and observe them rather than simply be swept away by them. From that grounded place, you can start to ask some real questions.
Pause and notice. When a feeling arrives, especially one that feels sudden or out of place, stop for a moment. Take a breath. Do not immediately try to explain or fix it. Just notice it is there.
Ask: was I feeling this before? Think back to before you entered the room, had the conversation, opened social media, or watched the news. Were you already feeling this way? Or did it arrive with something external?
Check the source. Is there something happening in your own life right now that would explain this feeling? If the answer is no, that is important information. The feeling may belong to someone or something outside of you.
Give it back. This is not about being cold or uncaring. It is about energetic boundaries. You can acknowledge someone's pain, offer compassion, and still consciously choose not to carry it as your own. Visualize handing it back, gently and with love.
Ground yourself. Feel your feet on the floor. Take three slow breaths. Notice five things you can see around you. Grounding brings you back into your own body and your own emotional baseline, where you can get a clear read on what is actually yours.
You cannot fix the whole world. And that is okay.
One of the most painful patterns I see in highly sensitive and empathic women is the weight of feeling responsible for everything. The suffering in the news. The friend who is struggling. The state of the environment. The collective grief of an entire community. Empaths want to fix it all, and when they cannot, the guilt and helplessness can feel crushing.
Here is what I want you to hear. You do not have to take on the world to make a difference. What you can do is identify what is actually yours to work with and focus your energy there. Maybe that looks like signing a petition. Maybe it means showing up for one person who needs you. Maybe, and this is just as valid, it means recognizing that right now your energy is needed for your own family, your own healing, your own rest. That is not giving up. That is wisdom.
Even the smallest action, taken with intention, creates a ripple effect. You do not have to carry all of it to matter. You just have to show up for the piece that is genuinely yours.
Self care is not optional for empaths. It is essential.
When the world feels heavy and you are absorbing more than usual, self care becomes less of a nice idea and more of a non-negotiable. Sleep, boundaries, time in nature, quiet, and mindful practices like grounding and meditation are not luxuries for highly sensitive people. They are the infrastructure that keeps your nervous system functioning.
When you are well rested, boundaried, and grounded, you are actually better equipped to show up for the people and causes you care about. Taking care of yourself is not selfish. It is how you sustain your capacity to give.
Frequently asked questions
How do I know if I am an empath or just a highly sensitive person?
These two things often overlap significantly. A highly sensitive person (HSP) has a nervous system that processes sensory and emotional information more deeply than others. An empath tends to go a step further, actually absorbing or taking on the emotional states of people around them, sometimes to the point of losing track of where their own feelings end and someone else's begin. Many of my clients are both. The good news is that the tools for managing both are very similar: grounding, emotional boundaries, and mindful awareness of what belongs to you.
Is absorbing other people's emotions a real thing or is it in my head?
It is very real, and it is not something to be embarrassed about. Research on mirror neurons suggests that humans are wired to resonate with the emotional states of others. For empaths and HSPs, this system is simply more sensitive than average. You are not making it up. You are experiencing something that is genuinely happening in your nervous system, and learning to work with it rather than against it is one of the most powerful things you can do.
Why do I feel more anxious and depressed when things are happening in the news or on social media?
Because your nervous system does not clearly separate what is happening to you from what is happening around you. When you scroll through distressing content, your body responds as if the threat is personal and immediate. For highly sensitive people this effect is amplified. Limiting your news and social media intake, especially during already difficult emotional periods, is not avoidance. It is nervous system hygiene.
How do I stop absorbing other people's energy without becoming cold or disconnected?
This is the question I hear most often and it is such a good one. The goal is not to stop feeling. It is to feel with awareness. When you develop the practice of checking in and asking "is this mine?" you can stay compassionate and present with others while still maintaining a clear sense of your own emotional baseline. Think of it as keeping a hand on your own heartbeat even while you reach out to someone else.
Can therapy help with being an empath or highly sensitive person?
Yes, absolutely. Working with a therapist who actually understands the empath and HSP experience makes a significant difference. A lot of highly sensitive women have spent years in therapy with well-meaning therapists who did not quite get it, and they leave feeling like something is wrong with them. There is nothing wrong with you. You just need support that is designed for how your system actually works. That is exactly what I offer through online therapy for empaths and HSPs throughout Florida.
What are some quick grounding techniques for empaths who feel overwhelmed?
Some of my favorites are the 5-4-3-2-1 technique (notice 5 things you can see, 4 you can touch, 3 you can hear, 2 you can smell, 1 you can taste), slow diaphragmatic breathing, placing your feet flat on the floor and pressing down, holding something cold or warm in your hands, and spending even five minutes outside in nature. These practices bring you back into your own body and out of the absorbed emotional field of whatever or whoever you have been around.
Ready to figure out what is actually yours?
If you are an empath, HSP, or highly sensitive woman in Florida who is tired of carrying emotions that do not belong to you, I would love to help. Through online therapy, we can work together to build the emotional boundaries, grounding practices, and self-awareness that let you stay connected to the world without drowning in it. Bring a willing heart. I will bring the tea.