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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.
By Travis HeathIn 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.