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by Travis Heath
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In this Therapist Confidential short, Travis Heath tackles one of the most common—and most loaded—questions clients ask at the start of therapy: “How long is this supposed to take?” Travis breaks down the tension between brief, structured, goal-oriented therapy and longer-term work that focuses on patterns across time—attachment, relationship dynamics, meaning, and identity. He also names the forces that shape our expectations (insurance, social media, and late capitalism’s demand for measurable outcomes) and why the “right” length of therapy isn’t a rule—it’s a fit. Using real-world examples (panic while driving vs. repeating emotionally unavailable relationships), Travis argues that therapy length should match the depth of change someone is seeking: symptom relief, skill-building, support through a season of life, or deeper repatterning. He also highlights something we rarely name: therapist style and fit can influence how quickly change happens, and both clients and clinicians can carry quiet shame—whether they practice brief work or stay in therapy longer. This episode offers practical questions to ask—so decisions about staying or leaving are guided less by ideology and more by what’s actually useful.
In this Therapist Confidential short, Travis Heath explores a simple but often-forgotten truth: your therapist is a person. Therapists walk into sessions with moods, histories, cultural identities, blind spots, and preferences—because we’re human. The goal isn’t to erase that humanity or pretend it isn’t there. The work is noticing it, metabolizing it, and staying responsive so it doesn’t quietly run the session. Travis unpacks the “blank slate” myth and why neutrality is impossible (and, at times, misleading). Therapy isn’t just an exchange of ideas—it’s two nervous systems coming into contact. Clients often sense micro-shifts in a therapist long before anything is named: tightening, softening, pulling away, leaning in. Using a practical example of how a therapist’s emotional state can subtly push a client toward (or away from) confrontation, Travis highlights the importance of self-awareness—and the power of rupture and repair. This is a warm, grounded invitation to bring more honesty and humanity into the therapeutic relationship—without letting the therapist’s inner world take over.
In this Therapist Confidential short, Travis Heath takes a playful (and affectionate) look at therapist language—the phrases that show up in sessions, supervision, and training rooms so often they’ve become a dialect. From “holding space” and “what I’m hearing you say is…” to “let’s sit with that” and “where do you feel that in your body,” Travis roasts the clichés many of us rely on—himself included. This mini-episode isn’t a takedown of therapy skills. It’s a reminder that cliché phrases often start as useful training wheels—slowing things down, conveying presence, and creating safety—but over time can lose flavor and drift into autopilot. In an era where clients increasingly recognize therapy-speak (thanks to social media and mental health content), Travis invites clinicians to get curious about their own language: why we say what we say, when it helps, and how repeating scripts can sometimes get in the way of real human contact. Warm, self-deprecating, and practical—this one’s for therapists, students, and anyone who’s ever heard “that makes so much sense.”
In this solo episode of Therapist Confidential, Travis Heath explores the internal conversations therapists have every day—but rarely say out loud. Beneath the public image of therapy as a space of clarity, certainty, and expertise lies a quieter reality shaped by judgment, doubt, ethical tension, and very real limits. Travis reflects on uncomfortable but human thoughts therapists hold: noticing judgments, choosing not to relieve distress too quickly, sensing when therapy may not “fix” what a client is facing, and grappling with the ways therapy exists within economic and social systems. Rather than exposing these thoughts as confessions or grievances, this episode frames them as part of the responsibility of therapeutic work—held carefully, often privately, and sometimes alone. A reflective episode about presence over solutions, dignity over improvement, and why therapy’s power often lies not in certainty, but in staying with what cannot be easily resolved.
Travis Heath sits down with Dr. Tammie Lee Demler—board-certified psychiatric and geriatric pharmacist—for a wide-ranging conversation on psychopharmacology, stigma, loneliness, and what clinicians often miss when they talk about “meds.” From deprescribing and the realities of polypharmacy in older adults to the ethics of access and affordability, Dr. Demler offers a grounded, collaborative perspective that’s especially relevant for therapists who work alongside prescribers. They also unpack the Surgeon General’s framing of loneliness (and how it differs from social isolation), the importance of “noticing,” and why directly asking about suicide can be relieving—not harmful. Along the way, Dr. Demler shares research on teaching to reduce stigma, explores why testing “taboo” hypotheses can still be good science, and breaks down what’s notable (and challenging) about a newer antipsychotic option with a novel, muscarinic-based mechanism.
In this solo episode, Travis Heath explores the fast-moving question on every therapist’s mind: what does AI mean for psychotherapy—right now? After a surprising personal encounter with a highly realistic “client bot,” Travis unpacks why AI no longer feels like a future thought experiment, but an active force reshaping mental health care. He walks through the most compelling possibilities (access, 24/7 support, therapist relief, psychoeducation, and AI as a reflective mirror), alongside the most pressing concerns (privacy, misguidance, equity, overreliance, dehumanization of care, and subtle relational harms). Rather than panic or naïve optimism, Travis argues for a more useful stance: curiosity, ethical clarity, and collaboration—while protecting what is uniquely human about therapy. Ultimately, this episode asks a deeper question: if AI can do the worksheets, scripts, and surface-level empathy, what will it demand of us as therapists—and what might it invite us to reclaim?
In this solo episode of Therapist Confidential, Travis Heath reflects on what it means to speak the unspeakable in therapy. Drawing from years of clinical work and recent conversations in the aftermath of a polarizing act of political violence, Travis explores how people often experience feelings they are not given permission to have—relief, anger, shame, grief, and confusion—often all at once. He discusses why therapy can be one of the few places where these contradictions can be spoken without judgment, and why curiosity is not a soft skill but an ethical practice. This episode invites therapists and listeners alike to consider how systems shape emotion, how polarization flattens complexity, and how speaking what feels forbidden can restore humanity.
In this episode of Therapist Confidential, Travis Heath speaks with psychologist and researcher Dr. Daryl Chow about what actually makes therapists effective. Drawing from decades of research on deliberate practice and feedback-informed treatment, Daryl challenges some of psychotherapy’s most comfortable assumptions—including the idea that experience alone leads to better outcomes. Together, they explore why therapists often stop improving, the difference between performance and learning systems, and why humility, curiosity, and surprise may be hallmarks of highly effective clinicians. The conversation also touches on premeditated treatment plans, the limits of psychotherapy models, the role of good conversation, and what human therapists offer that AI cannot. A thoughtful, grounded episode for anyone serious about becoming a better therapist.
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Produced by Psychotherapy.net, Therapist Confidential is a raw, real, and unscripted podcast, creating an authentic dialog by pulling back the curtain on what it really means to be a therapist. Host Travis Heath pushes beyond the surface-level conversations, diving deep into the successes, struggles, fears, and failures that reveal guests in a way they’ve never been heard before.
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