PODCAST · health
Gettin' Gritty for Mental Health Therapists: Clinical Confidence + Reassurance, Reframing Imposter Syndrome, Overwhelm and Burnout
by Stefanie Armstrong + Cathy Schweitzer: Trauma Trained Mental Health Therapists, Practice Owners, Authors and Clinical Supervisors
As a mental health therapist have you ever been awake at 2am replaying sessions in your head, wondering if you’ve done and said the right thing? Do you ever feel isolated, overwhelmed, or unsure of your confidence as a clinician? Do you ever feel like you must be the only mental health therapist who feels this way? You’re not alone, we've been there too. We’ve lived the long days, secretly thinking "I'm just not good at this yet. My supervisor would do a better job with this client." We've been through the draining sessions, and the silent car rides home where you just can't help from crying. We know the weight of secondary trauma, burnout, and self-doubt and we also know the power of grit, resilience, and community. We're Cathy and Stef, two "been there, done that" trauma-trained, EMDR-certified, Somatic Experiencing-trained practice owners, and we created The Gritty Therapist as a safe space for clinicians who are tired of feeling like they’
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From Self-Doubt to Connection: What Every Therapist Needs to Hear with Erika Hanna Part Two
What happens when you're a brand-new therapist sitting in sessions thinking, "I have absolutely no idea what I'm doing"?In Part 2 of our conversation with therapist Erika Hanna, we get real about the insecurities, negative beliefs, and growing pains that so many therapists experience but rarely talk about out loud. Erika shares what it was like stepping from graduate school into real-world clinical work, navigating imposter syndrome, learning not to take client departures personally, and discovering that being a mental health therapist isn't about having all the answers.This episode is a powerful reminder that grit isn't confidence. Grit is staying in it when you're unsure. It's trusting the process when you feel overwhelmed. It's continuing to show up for clients while learning to extend compassion to yourself.We also explore one of the biggest lessons therapists learn over time: you working harder, pushing harder and worrying more, won't make clients heal faster. Erika shares her journey of moving away from the urge to "fix" or convince clients and toward respecting client readiness, autonomy, and the therapeutic process.As always, we bring the conversation back to what matters most: connection. While many therapists feel pressure to master every diagnosis, modality, and intervention, Erika reminds us that healing often begins with something much simpler. Being present. Being authentic. Creating a space where clients feel seen, heard, and accepted.In this episode, we discuss: Imposter syndrome and self-doubt as a new therapist Why grit matters more than perfection in clinical work Learning not to personalize client cancellations, no-shows, and termination The tension between wanting to help and respecting client readiness Self-care, therapist burnout prevention, and intentional nervous system regulation The pressure therapists feel to know everything Why therapeutic relationship and connection matter more than technique alone The role of authenticity in building trust with clients Erika's work with Access Period, a Nebraska nonprofit addressing period poverty and how taking meaningful action outside the therapy room can build hope and resilience Whether you're a practicum student, intern, provisional therapist, seasoned clinician, or somewhere in the messy middle of your career, this conversation offers a grounded reminder that therapy takes more than knowledge. It takes courage, humility, self-awareness, and grit.Because at the end of the day, clients aren't looking for a perfect therapist. They're looking for someone willing to sit with their story and not look away.Go get your gritty on.Connect with us! Check out our freebies and our NEW Grit School: Therapist AF: Grit School for the Real World, practical skills, nervous system grounding, and the reps grad school skippedThe Gritty Therapist freebies, tools, and support: thegrittytherapist.comThe Cord Where Science Meets Connection attachment/trauma-focused therapy. Follow along on Instagram @grittytherapist and go get your gritty on.
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From Teacher to Mental Health Therapist: Building Confidence and Trusting Your Instincts with Erika Hanna Part One
What does grit look like when life doesn't follow the plan?In this episode of Gettin' Gritty for Mental Health Therapists, we sit down with therapist Erika Hanna to explore the winding path from teacher to therapist, the challenges of balancing motherhood and career aspirations, and the courage it takes to trust your inner knowing when the next step isn't clear.Erika shares how unexpected detours led her to communities she never anticipated serving, how becoming a parent reshaped her perspective on helping others, and what it was really like transitioning from graduate student to practicing therapist. We unpack the role of nervous system awareness, attachment, and self-trust in building a sustainable career in mental health.This conversation is a powerful reminder that grit isn't about having all the answers. It's about staying present in the messy middle, listening to what your body and mind are telling you, and continuing to move forward even when confidence hasn't caught up yet.Erika also shares her passion for Access Period a non-profit that helps combat period poverty by providing free menstrual products to anyone who needs them in Nebraska. If you've ever questioned your path, doubted your abilities, or wondered whether you're really ready for the next step, this episode is for you.We discuss: Transitioning from teaching to therapy Trusting your intuition and nervous system cues The challenges of motherhood and professional identity Finding purpose through unexpected career detours Moving from intern to therapist with confidence Why growth often happens before you feel ready What grit really looks like in the therapist journey Because therapy takes more than knowledge. It takes grit. 💛Connect with us! Check out our freebies and our NEW Grit School: Therapist AF: Grit School for the Real World, practical skills, nervous system grounding, and the reps grad school skippedThe Gritty Therapist freebies, tools, and support: thegrittytherapist.comThe Cord Where Science Meets Connection attachment/trauma-focused therapy. Follow along on Instagram @grittytherapist and go get your gritty on.
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The Primal Question: How Your Own Wounds Might Be Showing Up in the Therapy Room Part Two
Have you ever found yourself feeling unusually reactive with a client, struggling to let go of a case, over-functioning in session, or questioning whether you're "doing enough" as a therapist?In Part 2 of our conversation about The Primal Question by Mike Foster, we're exploring how our deepest emotional wounds can quietly influence the way we show up in our clinical work, supervision relationships, businesses, and personal lives. From feeling unloved, unsafe, or unsuccessful, these unconscious "scrambles" often drive behaviors that leave therapists exhausted, frustrated, and stuck.In part two of our conversation we get honest about our own primal questions, how these patterns show up in our real-life therapy situations, and why self-awareness may be one of the most important clinical skills we've ever developed. And we encourage the same for you! If you've ever wondered why certain clients trigger you, why some cases feel harder to hold than others, or why you keep repeating the same patterns professionally, this conversation will help you connect the dots.In this episode, we discuss:✨ What Mike Foster's "Primal Question" framework is and why it resonates with therapists✨ The difference between "kid logic" and "adult logic" when you're emotionally activated✨ How therapists unknowingly bring their own attachment wounds into session✨ Why feeling unsuccessful can lead therapists to refer out clients prematurely✨ How understanding your primal gift can improve supervision, consultation, and clinical growth✨ Real-life examples of how primal questions show up in business partnerships, parenting, and relationships✨ Practical ways to notice when you're in "the scramble" and regulate before reactingThe most effective therapists aren't the ones who know the most interventions. They're the ones willing to do the deep self-reflective work that allows them to stay regulated, grounded, and present when clients need them most.Because therapy takes more than knowledge.It takes grit.Connect with us! Check out our freebies and our NEW Grit School: Therapist AF: Grit School for the Real World, practical skills, nervous system grounding, and the reps grad school skippedThe Gritty Therapist freebies, tools, and support: thegrittytherapist.comThe Cord Where Science Meets Connection attachment/trauma-focused therapy. Follow along on Instagram @grittytherapist and go get your gritty on.
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The Primal Question: Exploring What's Underneath Anxiety, Relationships & Clinical Work-Part One
What if the behaviors, anxiety, relationship struggles, perfectionism, and even therapist imposter syndrome all trace back to one core question running quietly beneath the surface?In this raw and unfiltered conversation, we dive deep into The Primal Question framework by Mike Foster and explore how these core emotional needs shape us personally, professionally, and clinically. From nervous system regulation to attachment wounds to therapist countertransference, this episode goes to the “why” underneath the scramble.Cathy shares how her primal question, Am I Secure?, shows up in money fears, clinical work, and even business ownership. I, Stefanie, open up about my question, Am I Loved?, and how fears of rejection can surface inside the therapy room. Together, we unpack how understanding the primal question can become a powerful roadmap for self-awareness, emotional regulation, and stronger therapeutic relationships.This conversation is especially powerful for EMDR therapists, somatic therapists, trauma therapists, and clinicians who want to better understand how their own nervous system responses show up in session.Inside this episode we cover: ✨ How the “scramble” connects to autonomic nervous system dysregulation ✨ Why therapists get emotionally triggered in session ✨ How attachment wounds shape clinical work and relationships ✨ The connection between trauma, somatics, and core emotional needs ✨ Using self-awareness to reduce burnout and imposter syndrome ✨ Why healing starts beneath the behaviorsIf you’ve ever found yourself overthinking sessions, needing reassurance, people pleasing, fearing rejection, or feeling emotionally activated by clients, this episode will hit home in the best possible way.This is Part 1 of a deeply honest two-part series.🔥 Ready to build more confidence and stop second-guessing yourself as a therapist?Check out our new training: Clinician Rewired: Grit Over Good Intentions Designed for therapists who are tired of feeling stuck in imposter syndrome and ready to feel more grounded, regulated, and confident in the therapy room.If this episode resonated with you: ⭐ Follow and subscribe ⭐ Leave a 5-star review ⭐ Share with another therapist who needs this conversationBecause therapy takes more than knowledge.It takes grit. 💛Connect with us! Check out our freebies and our NEW Grit School: Therapist AF: Grit School for the Real World, practical skills, nervous system grounding, and the reps grad school skippedThe Gritty Therapist freebies, tools, and support: thegrittytherapist.comThe Cord Where Science Meets Connection attachment/trauma-focused therapy. Follow along on Instagram @grittytherapist and go get your gritty on.
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The Nesting Dolls Intervention: Integrating Parts of Self, Emotional Regulation, and Memory Networks
What if the “big reaction” your client is having to everyday things isn’t manipulation, defiance, or attention-seeking… but a younger part stepping forward asking for care and trying to protect?In this episode of The Gettin’ Gritty Podcast for Mental Health Therapists, we walk you through one of our favorite trauma-informed interventions: the nesting dolls intervention for working with younger parts of self, attachment wounds, shame, and emotional triggers. Using simple stacking dolls, we explain how therapists can help both children and adults begin making sense of why certain situations pull them into “kid logic,” dysregulation, or deeply wounded emotional states.This is not about pathologizing clients or diving straight into trauma processing. It’s about building insight, compassion, regulation, and a cohesive narrative before the deeper work begins.Inside this episode, you’ll learn:✨ How to introduce the nesting dolls intervention with kids and adults ✨ The difference between parts of self and dissociation ✨ Why “triggered” behavior often comes from younger wounded parts ✨ How this intervention reduces shame and builds self-compassion ✨ Ways to incorporate attachment-focused resourcing and EMDR concepts ✨ Tips for using this intervention with parents in the room ✨ Practical “pro tips” for choosing and using nesting dolls in sessionWe also share how this intervention naturally bridges into EMDR resourcing, attachment repair, and building therapist confidence in trauma work.You'll find that this intervention will help clients understand the younger parts of themselves that still need safety, attunement, and connection. 💛 ⭐ Love the show? Share it with another therapist and leave a review to help us grow this gritty little corner of the mental health world.Connect with us! Check out our freebies and our NEW Grit School: Therapist AF: Grit School for the Real World, practical skills, nervous system grounding, and the reps grad school skippedThe Gritty Therapist freebies, tools, and support: thegrittytherapist.comThe Cord Where Science Meets Connection attachment/trauma-focused therapy. Follow along on Instagram @grittytherapist and go get your gritty on.
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Why Good Intentions Aren’t Enough: Building Grit and Resilience as a Mental Health Therapist
Do you feel like you are a "good therapist" but there's just something missing?In this honest and practical episode of The Gettin’ Gritty Podcast for Mental Health Therapists, we dive into the difference between good intentions and clinical grit. Because empathy, active listening, and caring deeply about clients matter... but they are not always enough to create transformation.This episode explores the uncomfortable but necessary actions therapists must sometimes take to help clients move forward: asking hard questions, challenging patterns, setting boundaries, involving families, and stepping outside our own comfort zones as clinicians.We share real clinical examples from trauma therapy, attachment work, therapist supervision, and family systems work to show how therapists can get “lost in the weeds” of being well-intentioned without taking the gritty clinical actions that foster actual change.You’ll also hear: Why good intentions can sometimes make therapists feel better more than clients How nervous system regulation and therapist discomfort are connected The importance of relational and attachment-focused therapy Why self-exploration is critical for therapist growth How therapist grit builds confidence, resilience, and stronger clinical outcomes A practical “call to action” challenge you can use immediately in your sessions this week If you’re a mental health therapist struggling with burnout, self-doubt, stuck cases, people-pleasing in the therapy room, or fear of challenging clients and families, this episode will feel like a deep exhale and a gentle push forward all at once.Now go get your gritty on! Connect with us! Check out our freebies and our NEW Grit School: Therapist AF: Grit School for the Real World, practical skills, nervous system grounding, and the reps grad school skippedThe Gritty Therapist freebies, tools, and support: thegrittytherapist.comThe Cord Where Science Meets Connection attachment/trauma-focused therapy. Follow along on Instagram @grittytherapist and go get your gritty on.
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Don’t Force It: The Grit of Letting Therapy be Human with Becky Caldwell
What happens when a fourth-grade teacher walks into a counseling class… and never looks back?In this episode, we sit down with Becky Caldwell, therapist and co-host of the Probably Bad Advice Podcast to talk about her unconventional path into the therapy world and the real, unfiltered experience of becoming a clinician later in life.We get into the stuff that doesn’t make it into textbooks: – The shock of hearing trauma for the first time – Carrying clients’ stories home in your body – Imposter syndrome that whispers, “Who do you think you are?” – And the moment you realize… you don’t actually have to have all the answersBecky shares how her age and life experience became an unexpected superpower in the therapy room, why connection matters more than technique, and what it really means to build grit as a therapist (hint: it’s not about pushing harder).We also talk about: -Letting go of perfection and embracing presence -The power of slowing down instead of “fixing” -Navigating rejection when a client doesn’t come back -Creating spaces for women to rediscover who they are outside of their rolesIf you’re a new therapist who's a little "older" (don't worry Becky says the same thing), a seasoned one, or somewhere in the messy middle, which is ALL of us, this episode will remind you:You’re not alone, you’re not doing it wrong, and the work is deeper and grittier than you think.You can find Becky on Instagram @probablybadadvicepodcast Connect with us! Check out our freebies and our NEW Grit School: Therapist AF: Grit School for the Real World, practical skills, nervous system grounding, and the reps grad school skippedThe Gritty Therapist freebies, tools, and support: thegrittytherapist.comThe Cord Where Science Meets Connection attachment/trauma-focused therapy. Follow along on Instagram @grittytherapist and go get your gritty on.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
As a mental health therapist have you ever been awake at 2am replaying sessions in your head, wondering if you’ve done and said the right thing? Do you ever feel isolated, overwhelmed, or unsure of your confidence as a clinician? Do you ever feel like you must be the only mental health therapist who feels this way? You’re not alone, we've been there too. We’ve lived the long days, secretly thinking "I'm just not good at this yet. My supervisor would do a better job with this client." We've been through the draining sessions, and the silent car rides home where you just can't help from crying. We know the weight of secondary trauma, burnout, and self-doubt and we also know the power of grit, resilience, and community. We're Cathy and Stef, two "been there, done that" trauma-trained, EMDR-certified, Somatic Experiencing-trained practice owners, and we created The Gritty Therapist as a safe space for clinicians who are tired of feeling like they’
HOSTED BY
Stefanie Armstrong + Cathy Schweitzer: Trauma Trained Mental Health Therapists, Practice Owners, Authors and Clinical Supervisors
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