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NYC Psychotherapist Blog

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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Understanding Your Core Self and Your Parts in IFS Parts Work Therapy

I have written about IFS (Internal Family Systems) Parts Work Therapy in prior articles (see links for these articles at the end of this article).

What is IFS Parts Work Therapy?
IFS is an evidence-based therapy approach to psychotherapy that views the human mind as made up of a complex system of parts that are led by an undamaged Core Self.


IFS Core Self, Managers, Firefighters and Exiles

Developed by Dr. Richard Schwartz in the 1980s, IFS operates on the fundamental principle that there are "no bad parts". In other words, every part of yourself developed with a protective intention of helping you to survive.

What is the Structure of the Mind in IFS?
In IFS your mind consists of of a Core Self (also known as a True Self) and three distinct aspects:

The Core Self
The authentic, compassionate part of your being, the Core Self cannot be damaged by trauma. The qualities of the Core Self consist of the 8 Cs: 
Exiles
Exiles are the wounded, vulnerable parts of your mind. They usually originate from childhood trauma which often carry painful emotions like shameanxiety and loneliness. Exiles are often out of conscious awareness until they get triggered so that they might not cause you overwhelming pain. They are "managed" by Manager and Firefighter parts (see below). 

Common examples of exile parts include: 
  • The Abandoned Child Part: This part carries a deep terrifying fear of being rejected, left behind or unloved.
  • The Shamed Child Part: This part carries the core belief of being inherently defective, unlovable, ugly or not good enough.
Shamed Child Exile Part
  • The Invisible Child: This part feels completely unseen, unheard, uncared for and unimportant to caregivers and peers.
  • The Terrorized Part: This part stores the raw terror, helplessness and physical panic of a past traumatic event.
  • The Neglected Part: This part experiences chronic emptiness and a painful longing for affection and care.
  • The Judged Part: This part contains the harsh criticism, feeling constantly scrutinized and inadequate.
What Are Common Triggers That Activate Exiles?
  • A partner not responding to a text immediately
  • Receiving constructive feedback during a work review
  • Feeling excluded from a social event or group chat 
  • Experiencing a minor medical scare or physical injury
Managers
Proactive protectors that run your daily life, they help to keep you organized, controlled, safe by trying to ensure that Exile parts don't come to the surface and flood you with overwhelming pain. Examples of manager parts include: 
  • The Inner Critic: Monitors and evaluates your behavior with harsh self-talk. It shames you internally as a maladaptive way to motivate. It aims to correct flaws before anyone else detects them and judges you (see my article: Making Friends With Your Inner Critic).
Inner Critic
  • The Perfectionist: Sets impossibly high standards and demands flawlessness. This part believes that if your performance, appearance or work is completely "perfect", you will remain safe from failure, rejection or embarrassment (see my article: What is Perfectionism?).
The Perfectionist
  • The People Pleaser/Caretaker: Prioritizes the emotions, comforts and needs of others over your own self-care. It seeks constant validation and smooths over external conflict to keep others happy, ensuring they never abandon you or reject you (Trauma and the People-Pleaser Part).
The People Pleaser/Caretaker
  • The Planner/Controller: Attempts to micro-manager every aspect of your life, schedule and relationships. It obsesses over predictability and prepares for worst case scenarios to eliminate the danger of unforeseen emotional triggers. 
  • The Achiever/Taskmaster: Drives relentless productivity and focuses heavily on success. It links your basic human worth to tangible output and accomplishments to shield you from feelings of inadequacy.
The Achiever/Taskmaster
  • The Intellectualizer/Thinker: Relies strictly on logic, data and rational analysis. It acts as a cognitive shield, analyzing problems from a detached distance to explain away feelings and keep you from experiencing raw emotion.
  • The Avoider/Passive Pessimist: Keeps a safe distance from emotionally risky situations, intimacy or new challenges. It protects the system by shutting down, opting for withdrawal or passivity so that closeness cannot trigger suppressed wounds.
Firefighters:
Firefighter are reactive protective parts that step in aggressively when an Exile's pain breaks through the Manager's defenses. They attempt to rapidly extinguish or numb emotional distress by any means necessary. 

Unlike Manager parts which proactively plan to manage pain, Firefighter parts act impulsively and they are focused on immediate, short term relief without considering the long term consequences. These include:

The Numb-Out and Escape Strategies: These parts seek to detach from reality or dull the intensity of an activated emotion:
  • The Binge Watcher/Compulsive Scroller: This part can spend hours scrolling social media, playing video games or binge watch TV to completely tune out reality.
Binge Watcher/Compulsive Scroller on Social Media
  • The Dissociator: Pulls your mind away from your body causing you to "zone out" during intense situations or to feel detached from your physical presence.
  • The Sleeper: Uses extreme fatigue or unprompted naps as a tactical emergency exit to avoid experiencing distress.
  • The Daydreamer: Escapes chronic pain by retreating entirely into elaborate fantasies or internal worlds. 
The Substance Abuse and Comfort Soothers
These parts look to external, chemical or physical substances to smother painful feelings immediately:
  • The Drinker/User: Relies heavily on alcohol, marijuana or other substances to artificially quiet an internal emotional storm.
  • The Comfort Eater: Urges overeating to blanket feelings of loneliness, sadness or stress.
The Impulse and Adrenaline Chasers
These parts attempt to replace unbearable underlying emotions, like shame or helplessness, with highly stimulating, high octane physical sensations:
  • The Rager: Deflects vulnerable feelings by launching into sudden, explosive angry outbursts, slamming doors or starting verbal fights.
The Risk Taker
  • The Risk Taker: Drives dangerously or engages in reckless behavior such as extreme speeding, gambling or unsafe sexual encounters, using adrenaline to overpower emotional pain.
  • The Self Harmer: Expresses internal pain or seeks release from emotional numbness through physical self injury or suicidal ideation.
How Do Managers and Firefighters Differ From Each Other?
To understand your internal world, it helps to understand the difference between Manager parts, Firefighter parts and Exiles:

Managers
  • Core Strategy: Control and prevention
  • Behavioral Goal: Keep life orderly; minimize social and emotional risk
  • Timing: Proactive (before pain occurs)
Firefighters
  • Core Strategy: Distraction and numbing
  • Behavioral Goal: Extinguish overwhelming emotional fires at all costs (e.g, drinking, drugging, gambling, dissociation, etc).
  • Timing: Reactive (after an exile is triggered)
Exiles
  • Core Strategy: Vulnerability and burden
  • Behavioral Goal: Contain deep emotional wounds, childhood trauma, shame and loneliness
  • Timing: Suppressed (hidden beneath protector parts)
Getting Help in IFS Parts Work Therapy
IFS is an effective, evidence-based, gentle trauma therapy. 

Although it is gentle, it is also powerful in terms of healing trauma.

Get Help in IFS Parts Work Therapy

IFS prioritizes pacing, internal consent and a non-pathologizing framework that doesn't force a client to relive their traumatic events. 

If you have been unable to work through problems on your own, consider working with a skilled IFS therapist so you can lead a more fulfilling life.

About Me
I am a licensed New York psychotherapist, hypnotherapist, EMDR, AEDP, EFT (for couples), Somatic Experiencing, Parts Work (IFS and Ego States Therapy) and Certified Sex Therapist.

I have helped many individual adults and couples over the years.

To find out more about me, visit my website: Josephine Ferraro, LCSW - NYC Psychotherapist.

To set up a consultation, call me at (917) 742-2624 during business hours or email me.

Also See My Articles:














 








Tuesday, May 26, 2026

How to Develop Emotional Depth in Your Relationship

As a psychotherapist who works with individual adults and couples, a common complaint I hear from clients is that they feel their relationship lacks emotional depth.  This leaves both partners feeling lonely.

Developing Emotional Depth in Your Relationship

How to Develop Emotional Depth in Your Relationship
Emotional depth can be learned and developed over time. While some people are naturally wired with higher neurological sensitivity, emotional depth is a capacity that can develop when you consciously choose to unlearn emotional detachment and practice expanding your inner world.

What is Emotional Depth?
Emotional depth includes: 
  • The capacity to be profoundly affected by life experiences
  • The ability to hold space for nuance
  • The ability to sit with emotional discomfort without trying to avoid it
Why Do Some People Lack Emotional Depth?
A lack of emotional depth is usually a learned survival mechanism which involves suppressing depth due to:
  • Childhood Conditioning: Being raised by emotionally distant role models or being taught that emotional vulnerability is a "weakness"
  • Protective DetachmentNumbing emotions or using constant busyness, humor and escapism to avoid processing painful emotions
  • Fear of Complexity: Choosing superficial interactions because stepping into deeper emotional waters feels unpredictable or overwhelming
How to Develop Emotional Depth
If you want to develop emotional depth, you can retrain yourself through deliberate habits including:

Shifting From Fact-Sharing to Emotional Labeling
Many couples mistake daily logistics ("How was your day?" or "Did you pay that bill?") for meaningful communication, but depth requires moving down into your internal emotional experience:
  • Expanding Your Emotional Vocabulary: Stop describing your state as just "fine", "good" or "bad". Use tools like the Wheel of Emotion to identify the precise layers of what you are experiencing (e.g., distinguishing anger from underlying grief or rejection).  Learning to name emotions builds a bridge between your logical brain and your inner world.
  • Practicing Staying With Discomfort: When difficult emotions arise, your instinct might be to distract yourself, self-medicate or find a quick fix solution. Instead of trying to move away from difficult emotions, pause, take a deep breath and observe the physical sensations in your body. Whether your emotions are pleasant or unpleasant, you will probably discover that emotions are often like waves--they rise, peak and then subside (see my article: The Life Cycle of Emotions).
  • Increasing Emotional Vulnerability Incrementally: Share minor internal fears, insecurities or meaningful childhood memories. This takes time to develop. So, recognize that you don't have to share your heaviest secrets overnight. Start by trying to be a little more emotionally open with your partner.
Practicing Active Attunement
Attunement means leaning in and emotionally connecting with your partner when your they reach out. This ensures that they feel safe, seen and validated:
  • Listening to Understand--Not to Fix: When your partner vents, suppress the urge you might feel to offer immediate solutions. Focus entirely on their emotional experience.
Developing Emotional Depth in Your Relationship
  • Asking Open-Ended Discovery Questions: Replace generic questions with deep, curiosity-driven questions ("What is a major dream you are currently feeling scared about?" or "What did your childhood teach you about handling your anger?").
Establishing Rituals of Connection
Rituals of connection anchor a relationship, ensuring that building depth is a priority even during stressful and hectic times in life:
  • Daily Emotional Communication: Set aside 15-20 minutes every evening where you turn off all electronics to check in with each other's internal worlds.
Developing Emotional Depth in Your Relationship
  • Non-Sexual Physical Affection: Prioritize long hugs, holding hands or cuddling on the couch. Regular non-sexual touch releases oxytocin, which naturally lowers defenses and deepens your emotional bond.
  • Share Novel Experiences: Step out of your comfort zones together by learning a new skill, volunteering or exploring an unfamiliar place. Facing the slight vulnerability of a new environment together forces you to rely on each other and connect with each other.
Leaning Into Constructive Conflict
Contrary to what most people think, couples who rarely or never fight often lack emotional depth because they are actively avoiding uncomfortable truths. Working through disagreements with care is a powerful way to accelerate emotional intimacy:
  • Share the "Anger Iceberg": Anger is often a secondary emotion. Look beneath the irritation to discover the primary emotion, a more vulnerable emotion driving the anger--such as hurt, fear or loneliness.  Instead of focusing on your anger, communicate the deeper emotions underneath the anger (see my article: Anger as a Secondary Emotion).
Developing Emotional Depth in Your Relationship
  • Use "I" Statements: Frame disagreements around your personal feelings rather than pointing fingers at your partner.  Say, "I feel disconnected from you when we don't spend time together" instead of "You always ignore me."
Get Help in Couples Therapy
If you and your partner are having difficulty trying to develop emotional depth in your relationship, you could benefit from working with a licensed mental health professional who is an experienced couples therapist. 

Get Help in Couples Therapy

Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) For Couples is especially helpful in bringing couples together and helping them to build the necessary skills over time so they can experience emotional vulnerability and depth (see my article: What is Emotionally Focuse Therapy (EFT)?).

Rather than struggling on your own, seek help in EFT couples therapy so you can have a more fulfilling relationship.

About Me
I am a licensed New York psychotherapist, hypnotherapist, EMDR, AEDP, EFT (for couples), Parts Work (IFS and Ego States Therapy), Somatic Experiencing and Certified Sex Therapist.

I have helped many individual adults and couples over the years.

To find out more about me, visit my website: Josephine Ferraro, LCSW - NYC Psychotherapist.

To set up a consultation, call me at (917) 742-2624 during business hours or email me,

Also See My Articles:














Monday, May 25, 2026

Cinema Therapy: How Can Watching Movies Improve Your Relationship?

In my prior article, Cinema Therapy: How Can Watching Movies Improve Your Mental Health?, I began a discussion about how cinema therapy (also known as movie therapy) is used in psychotherapy to improve mental health.


Watching Movies Can Improve Your Relationship

In the current article, I'm focusing specifically on cinema therapy for relationships and couples therapy.

How Can Cinema Therapy Be Used in Couples Therapy?
One way cinema therapy can be used in couples therapy is to help the couple deepen their emotional connection.

Watching Movies Can Improve Your Relationship

Cinema therapy is one potential tool in couples therapy. 

Cinema therapy uses movies, TV programs or videos to help couples to explore their relationship dynamics in a safe, structured way. While watching a movie, couples can project their feelings onto the characters which can make it easier to discuss difficult truths:
  • Metaphor As a Bridge: Couples identify with characters' struggles.
  • Emotional Distance: It can feel safer to look at a movie character's strengthens and challenges than it does to look at yourself or your partner.
  • Shared Vocabulary: Scenes provide a reference point for discussion for the individuals in the relationship and in their couples therapy.
  • Empathy Building: Partners see perspectives visually illustrated on screen. 
How to Watch Movies As a Couple to Improve Your Relationship
  • Choice of Films: The couples therapist chooses films with complex characters which are relevant to your issues.  The therapist might also choose films that will help to generate discussions between you and deepen your connection.
Couples Therapy Can Include Cinema Therapy
  • Watch Actively: Notice your reaction to the characters, their dilemmas and their choices. Notice what triggers discomfort in you and what resonates with you.
  • Discuss Openly: After you and your partner watch the film, have an open discussion with them about the characters including:
    • What character did you empathize with the most and why?
    • Which character flaws, if any, reminded you of your own?
    • Which character strengths reminded you of your own and your partner's?
    • How do the characters in the movie deal with conflict compared to how you and your partner deal with conflict?
    • Do you see any of your communication blind spots in this movie? Which ones? 
    • What did the characters need from each other? Did they get what they needed? How does this compare to how you and your partner meet each other's needs?
    • Which unexpressed fear or desire did the movie bring out in you?
    • If you could change one choice a character made, what would it be? How would you change it?
    • What thoughts and feelings did the movie bring up about how you and your partner can support each other better?
    • Did the character's actions or choices change how you view your relationship or a certain life situation?
    • What is one lesson from the movie that you can apply to your relationship and life?
An Example of a Movie For Cinema Therapy For Couples (No Spoilers):
The movie, 45 Years, is a powerful tool for cinema therapy for couples because it helps couples to confront the illusion that keeping secrets protects a relationship.

The movie illustrates how unexpressed insecurities and buried secrets from the past can quietly fester over time. It also illustrates how sudden realizations can create emotional distance between the couple.

The movie also shows the necessity of maintaining emotional connection rather than just settling for a comfortable routine.

Get Help in Couples Therapy
Cinema therapy is one possible component in couples therapy.

If you and your partner have been struggling, seek help from a licensed mental health therapist who is a couples therapist so you can have a more fulfilling relationship.

About Me
I am a licensed New York psychotherapist, hypnotherapist, EMDR, AEDP, EFT (for couples), Parts Work (IFS and Ego States Therapy), Somatic Experiencing and Certified Sex Therapist.

I have helped many individual adults and couples over the years.

To find out more about me, visit my website: Josephine Ferraro, LCSW - NYC Psychotherapist.

To set up a consultation, call me at (917) 742-2624 during business hours or email me.

Also See My Articles:














 

Friday, May 22, 2026

Cinema Therapy: How Can Watching Movies Improve Your Mental Health?

Watching movies with complex characters can be beneficial to your mental health. The practice known as cinema therapy (also known as movie therapy) is a growing therapeutic technique which uses the narrative arc and depth of films to foster psychological growth.

Cinematherapy Can Improve Your Mental Health

When you engage in multi-layered, three-dimensional characters, rather than flat, predictable archetypes, it stimulates specific cognitive and emotional processes that can directly support well being.

Watching complex characters can benefit your mental health through several key mechanisms:

Safe Emotional Distance and Projection
Discussing or processing your own personal pain can sometimes make you feel vulnerable  under certain circumstances. In cinema therapy complex characters in a movie provide an emotional buffer that includes:
  • Safe Exploration: You can project your own fears, unvoiced struggles or internal conflicts onto a character.
Cinematherapy Can Improve Your Mental Health
  • Objective Detachment: This allows you to process intense themes, including grieftrauma or confusion, with enough distance to evaluate them objectively without flooding your nervous system.
Catharsis and Emotional Regulation
Bottled up feelings can lead to anxiety and pent up stress.  Complex stories act as an emotional pressure valve:
  • Controlled Release: Watching a character face existential dilemmas or deep emotional pain provides a structured container that invites you to laugh, cry or feel anger in a safe way.
  • Neurochemical Reset: This cathartic release can trigger a drop in cortisol and an increase in dopamine which can lower physical and emotional tension.
Cognitive Flexibility and Shattering Binary Thinking
Flat characters teach us to view the world in black-and-white terms (good vs evil). Complex, morally ambiguous characters force your brain to stretch:
  • Brain Activation: Neuroimaging studies show that watching complex characters activates the parts of the brain that handle perspective-taking and the management of cognitive conflict.
  • Nuanced Realism: Seeing a character who is deeply flawed yet capable of profound kindness helps you to reject harsh, binary judgments about yourself and others, which builds tolerance for life's natural ambiguities.
Building Inner Resources and Resilience
When characters navigate complicated psychological terrain, they model coping mechanisms and self discovery:
Cinematherapy Can Improve Your Mental Health
  • Active Reflection: It inspires post-viewing reflection, which is the mental integration that happens after watching the movie. It can help you to apply the character's breakthroughs and gained wisdom to your own life.
Universal Experiences and Reduced Isolation
A core part of many mental health problems is that you feel alone with your experience and that no one else has ever experienced what is happening to you, so watching movies with complex characters helps you to realize you're not alone:
Cinematherapy Can Improve Your Mental Health
  • The Power of Shared Humanity: Seeing those hidden, complicated parts of yourself reflected on the screen helps you to realize that many problems are universal. This can help you to realize that your struggles are a normal part of being a human being.
How Does a Psychotherapist Use Cinema Therapy in Therapy Sessions?
A psychotherapist uses cinema therapy (or movie therapy) as an emotional bridge to help clients to discuss personal issues. 

The therapist uses a structured framework where clients watch the movie, discuss the movie and process their own real-life experiences which are similar to what the characters dealt with in the film.

How Therapists Use Cinematherapy With Clients

Talking about fictional characters can feel less threatening than if clients talk directly about their problems. 

The therapist will often ask questions like, "Why do you think the main character made that choice?" or "What would you have done in this character's place if you had the same dilemma?"

The therapist can also explore with clients what it was like to watch the movie and to realize they aren't the only ones who have these types of problems. 

They also ask questions like "Would you have handled this problem in the same way or in a different way?"

After clients have processed their thoughts and feelings about the movie with the therapist, the therapist can also ask what it was like to discuss the movie with her. This is called metaprocessing.

This can help clients to open up to discuss their own problems and reflect on their therapeutic relationship with the therapist.

What Kind of Movies Can Help to Improve Your Mental Health
There are so many movies that can be beneficial.

Here is one example that can be beneficial for individuals and couples to watch:

The Before Trilogy: The Before Trilogy is a highly acclaimed series of three romantic dramas by Richard Linklater and starring Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy. The three films in the trilogy are:
  • Before Sunrise (1995)
  • Before Sunset (2004)
  • Before Midnight (2013)
The trilogy follows the evolving relationship between an American man named Jesse and a French woman named Celine. This series, which was filmed in real time over several years, is famous for its naturalistic conversation-driven format.

What Can You Learn From Watching the Before Trilogy? (No spoilers)
The Before Trilogy teaches that long term relationships require active continuous choices rather than relying only on romantic fate:
  • Love changes over time
  • Communication predicts survival of the relationship
  • Love requires constant effort
  • Time can alter your perspective
When I assign this trilogy to watch over a period of a few weeks, I use the films to help the client reflect on their personal struggles and how the characters in the movie dealt with similar struggles.

If I assign it to a couple, I ask them to watch the movies and discuss it afterward in terms of the characters and the dilemmas the characters faced in an effort to stimulate deeper communication between them and a deeper understanding of their relationship.

Conclusion
Cinema therapy is an expressive therapeutic modality where a mental health professional assigns a certain movies to help clients process emotions, gain new perspectives and heal. Therapists can also use TV programs or other types of videos.

Cinema therapy works by using carefully selected movies as a "third person" tool to mirror real-life struggles, encourage empathy and prompt breakthroughs.

It can be beneficial for individual adult clients or couples.

About Me
I am a licensed New York psychotherapist, hypnotherapist, EMDR, AEDP, EFT (for couples), IFS and Ego States Parts Work, Somatic Experiencing and Certified Sex Therapist

I have helped many individual adults and couples over the years.

To find out more about me, visit my website: Josephine Ferraro, LCSW - NYC Psychotherapist.

To set up a consultation, call me at (917) 742-2624 during business hours or email me.


















Thursday, May 21, 2026

Coping With Dating Anxiety

When you have anxiety, dating can feel like an exhausting job interview.

Coping With Dating Anxiety

My article discusses both the internal and external hurdles that you might encounter when you're dealing with dating anxiety and how to manage your anxiety:

What Are the Internal Hurdles?
  • Overthinking: You don't have to analyze every text, how long it takes the other person to respond to your text and try to interpret whether the person likes you or not by the inclusion or exclusion of emojis (see my article: Tips on How to Stop Overthinking).
  • Fear of Rejection: When you shift your focus from "Will they like me?" to "Will I like them?", you can take back your personal power (see my article: Reclaiming Your Personal Power).
  • Social Fatigue: Keep the early dates short to manage your anxiety and avoid possible social fatigue where you feel drained by the other person. You can manage dating anxiety by treating early dates as low stake social events rather than high-pressure auditions.
Coping With Dating Anxiety
  • Self Sabotage: Focus on being curious and getting to know the other person. Don't focus only on looking for flaws or red flags that don't exist. Also, don't complain about how horrible online dating is or your prior dating or relationship disasters (see my article: Overcoming Self Sabotaging Behavior).
  • Early Disclosure Anxiety: Don't overshare the details of your mental health concerns or your family trauma on your first date. Also, don't complain about your exes.
  • A Constant Need For Reassurance: Avoid asking your date for constant reassurance due to your anxiety. Focus on yourself.
  • Settling: Once you have dated the person a few times and you feel the two of you aren't compatible, don't "settle" for the wrong person just to avoid dating anxiety.
Managing Pre-Date Anxiety
Since anxiety thrives on uncertainty, you can minimize the unknown variables before the date to lower your anxiety:
  • Limit Time on Dating Apps: Since spending a lot of time on dating apps or waiting for responses can fuel rumination, plan to spend only a limited amount of time on apps. Set a time limit, like 10 or 15 minutes every day or every other day (or whatever works for you) to prevent stress and burnout.
Coping With Dating Anxiety
  • Plan Low Stakes Short Activities: Instead of meeting for dinner, choose short activities, like meeting for coffee or tea. 
  • Pick Familiar Territory For Your Date: Suggest a place you already know well. Knowing the layout, the menu or parking situations removes logistical anxiety and stress.
  • Have An Exit Plan: You can reduce your anxiety by knowing that you have a short get-together so you don't have to remain for long if you don't want to stay.
Managing Anxiety During the Date
  • Stay Grounded: If your mind starts spinning due to anxiety, ground yourself by silently naming things to yourself. For instance, you can choose a color, like blue, and silently notice all the things around you that are the color blue. In this way, you orient yourself to your environment rather than focusing on anxiety. You can also silently focus on how your feet feel on the ground to feel calmer.
  • Manage Your Expectations: Remember that a date is like having a conversation. It's not a marriage proposal. Aim for having fun and not for finding your "soulmate".
Coping With Dating Anxiety
  • Have Topics in Mind to Discuss: If the conversation starts to drag or it gets boring, have a few topics or open-ended questions in mind so you don't become anxious when there are silences.
  • Focus on the Here-and-Now: Instead of allowing your anxiety to spin out of control with thoughts like, "He doesn't like me" or "She's bored", focus on the here-and-now rather than the thoughts spinning in your head. Are they smiling? Are they asking you questions? Focus on the present rather than your anxious internal commentary.
Managing Anxiety After the Date
  • Establish a Wind-Down Routine For Yourself: Plan a wind-down activity for yourself for after the date. This might include journaling or watching a TV program that is comforting for you. This can ensure that the rest of your day ends on a good note regardless of how the date went.
Coping With Dating Anxiety
  • Mute Dating App Notifications: Turn off push notifications on your dating apps. This can stop the addictive dopamine loop and allows you to be in control of when you want to look at the apps.
  • Remember Your Autonomy: Remember that you are responsible for managing your emotions. Don't expect a new date to constantly reassure you or alter their texting habits which could put a strain on a new dating relationship.
Getting Help in Therapy
If anxiety feels unmanageable or if it is due to prior unhealthy relationships or unresolved trauma, get help from a licensed mental health professional.

Getting Help For Anxiety in Therapy

A skilled psychotherapist can help you to manage your anxiety by providing you with tools and strategies as well as dealing with the underlying issues that might be fueling your anxiety.

Rather than struggling alone, get help so you can live a more fulfilling life.

About Me
I am a licensed New York psychotherapist, hypnotherapist, EMDR, AEDP, EFT (for couples), IFS and Ego States Therapist, Somatic Experiencing and Certified Sex Therapist.

I have helped many individual adults and couples over the years.

To find out more about me, visit my website: Josephine Ferraro, LCSW - NYC Psychotherapist.

To set up a consultation, call me at (917) 742-2624 during business hours or email me.

Also See My Articles: