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  • Book A Session!
    • English - Book a Session
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    • Jessica Darling, LMFT
    • Dan Katz, LCSW
    • Marti Tourville, LMFT
    • Sharon "Sherri" Broome, Asw
    • Mishell Knoess, ASW
    • Elena Diaz, ASW >
      • Elena Diaz - Russian Language
    • Juen Arzadon, AMFT/APCC >
      • Juen Arzadon - Filipino Language
    • Maureen Hornyak, ASW
    • Christi Dodson, AMFT
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1/5/2026 0 Comments

Creating Safety to Feel Again: How Trauma-Informed Self-Care Rebuilds Confidence from the Inside Out

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Divorce recovery is tough terrain to navigate. I've been working with trauma survivors for years, and I can tell you that rebuilding confidence after a marriage ends isn't just about positive thinking or "moving on." It's about creating safety in your nervous system so you can actually feel again, without panic, without that constant knot in your stomach, without your mind racing through worst-case scenarios.
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The truth is, divorce often triggers our deepest attachment wounds. Your nervous system doesn't distinguish between physical danger and emotional threat. When your primary relationship dissolves, your brain interprets this as a survival crisis. That's why you might feel like you're losing your mind, even when you know logically that you're going to be okay.

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What Happens to Your Nervous System During Divorce

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12/29/2025 0 Comments

The Letdown After the Big Plan: What Happens When the Excitement is Over

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The post-achievement crash is a tough topic to talk about because it catches us so off-guard. You've just accomplished something meaningful, maybe you graduated, got married, finished a big project, or survived a challenging life transition, and instead of feeling triumphant, you feel... empty. Deflated. Like the air has been let out of your balloon.

As a therapist, I see this pattern constantly in my office. Clients come in confused and sometimes ashamed, wondering what's wrong with them that they can't just enjoy their success. "I should be happy," they tell me. "I worked so hard for this, so why do I feel so low?"
Let me start by saying this: there is nothing wrong with you. What you're experiencing is not only normal but actually shows your nervous system is working exactly as it should.

Your Brain on Achievement: The Neuroscience of Letdown

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12/22/2025 0 Comments

Emotions Series Part 1: What's the Difference Between Feeling and Showing an Emotion?

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Emotions can feel like a mystery, even to those of us who work with them every day. You might notice your heart racing during a difficult conversation, but your face remains completely neutral. Or maybe you've had the experience of someone asking "Are you okay?" when you thought you were hiding your frustration perfectly well. This disconnect between what we feel inside and what others see on the outside is more common than you might think, and it's rooted in fascinating neuroscience.

As a therapist, I see this emotional complexity play out in my office daily. The difference between feeling an emotion and showing an emotion shapes how we connect with others, how we heal, and how we navigate our relationships. That's why I'm excited to start this four-part series exploring the intricate world of emotions and expression.

The Neuroscience Behind Feeling vs. Showing

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12/1/2025 0 Comments

Self-Care or Avoidance? Why Isolation Isn't Always Healing (Especially for Trauma Survivors)

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Isolation versus self-care, it's one of the trickiest distinctions I encounter in my practice. As a therapist, I've sat across from countless trauma survivors who genuinely believe they're taking care of themselves by pulling away from others. And I get it. After experiencing betrayal, abuse, or overwhelming loss, the world can feel unsafe. People can feel unsafe. So naturally, we retreat.

But here's what I've learned in my years of practice: there's a profound difference between the solitude that heals and the isolation that keeps us stuck. And for trauma survivors especially, this distinction can mean the difference between recovery and remaining trapped in cycles of pain.

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When "Self-Care" Becomes Self-Sabotage

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10/9/2025 0 Comments

Tips to Move Toward Secure Attachment: Practical Strategies

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Changing your attachment style as an adult is challenging work. I won't sugarcoat that. The patterns we developed in childhood run deep, and they've been our go-to strategies for navigating relationships for years, maybe decades. But here's what I want you to know: it's absolutely possible to move toward more secure attachment, no matter where you're starting from.
Whether you tend toward anxious attachment (constantly seeking reassurance), avoidant attachment (keeping people at arm's length), or disorganized attachment (swinging between the two), you can develop the skills that securely attached people seem to naturally have. It just takes intentional practice and a lot of self-compassion along the way.

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9/15/2025 0 Comments

Your expectations are too high! The difference between a standard and an expectation

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I hear this phrase a lot in my therapy office: "My partner says my expectations are too high!" And honestly? Sometimes they're right. But here's the thing: when someone tells you your expectations are too high, they might actually be pointing to something much deeper than what you think you're asking for.
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As a therapist who's spent years working with couples and individuals struggling with relationship dynamics, I've learned that the real issue isn't usually about lowering your standards. It's about understanding the crucial difference between standards and expectations: and how confusing the two can actually damage the very relationships we're trying to protect.

​What's Really Going On in Your Brain

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7/28/2025 0 Comments

Common Mistakes in Love: When Your First Big Relationship Happens in Your Thirties or Forties

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Let's talk about something that might feel a little awkward to admit: having your first serious relationship in your thirties or forties. While society often assumes everyone has their romantic "training wheels" phase in their teens and twenties, life doesn't always follow that script. Maybe you were focused on career, dealing with family obligations, working through personal challenges, or simply hadn't met the right person yet.
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Here's the thing though – when love finally shows up later in life, it can feel both exhilarating and terrifying. Without those earlier relationship experiences that typically teach us the ropes, many people find themselves making mistakes that feel surprisingly familiar to what teenagers do. The difference? The stakes feel much higher, and there's often less patience for trial and error.

The Timeline Trap: When "Running Out of Time" Drives Your Decisions

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3/27/2025 0 Comments

Overly Dependent: When Your Partner Feels Like Oxygen (But You're Gasping)

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Being overly dependent in a relationship is a tough topic to talk about. It brings up feelings of shame, guilt, and fear that many of us would rather avoid. But here's the thing - recognizing dependency patterns doesn't mean there's something inherently wrong with you or your partner. It means you're human, and you're ready to create healthier connection.

If your partner feels like they can't breathe without you, or if you find yourself suffocating under the weight of being someone's emotional lifeline, you're not alone. This dynamic affects countless couples, and understanding it is the first step toward breathing easier together.

What Overly Dependent Actually Looks Like

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3/15/2025 0 Comments

Overly Independent in Love: Why Walls Don't Actually Protect Your Heart

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​Being overly independent in love is a tough topic to talk about. It sounds like a contradiction, right? How can being strong and self-reliant be a problem in relationships? But here's the thing, when independence becomes a fortress that keeps everyone out, it stops protecting your heart and starts imprisoning it instead.

I've worked with countless clients who've built these emotional walls thinking they were being smart. They've been hurt before, so they figure if they don't need anyone, they can't be disappointed. If they handle everything themselves, they won't be let down. But what they discover is that walls designed to keep pain out also keep love from getting in.

What Does Being Overly Independent Actually Look Like?

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1/10/2025 0 Comments

7 Mistakes You're Making When Someone Rolls Their Eyes at You (And How to Respond)

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Eye rolling is one of those behaviors that can instantly make your blood boil. You're mid-sentence, making what you think is a perfectly reasonable point, and suddenly, there it is. That dramatic upward glance that seems to scream "you're being ridiculous."

It's natural to feel triggered when someone rolls their eyes at you. But here's what I've learned after years of working with couples and families: most people handle eye rolling in ways that actually make things worse, not better.
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The truth is, eye rolling isn't just disrespect for the sake of disrespect. It's usually a signal that something deeper is going wrong in your communication. And when you respond poorly, you miss a critical opportunity to actually solve the real problem.

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12/27/2024 0 Comments

Finding the Sweet Spot: Interdependence in Romantic Relationships

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Relationship balance is one of those things that sounds simple in theory but feels impossibly complex in practice. You've probably found yourself swinging between extremes: either clinging too tightly to your partner or pushing them away when things get intense. Maybe you've lost yourself completely in a relationship, or perhaps you've built walls so high that genuine intimacy feels scary.

Here's the thing: most of us weren't taught how to navigate the delicate dance between "me" and "we" in romantic relationships. We learn from what we see growing up, and let's be honest: many of us saw relationships that were either suffocatingly codependent or coldly distant.
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As a therapist, I've worked with countless couples who struggle to find that sweet spot between losing themselves and shutting their partner out. The good news? There's a middle ground called interdependence, and it's absolutely learnable.

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12/23/2024 0 Comments

Stop Wasting Time on Surface Arguments: Try These 7 EFT Techniques for Deeper Connection

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You know that feeling when you and your partner are arguing about who forgot to take out the trash... again? But fifteen minutes in, you realize you're not really fighting about garbage at all. You're fighting about feeling unheard, unappreciated, or disconnected. Sound familiar?

Here's the thing: most relationship arguments aren't actually about the surface issue that started them. As a therapist, I see this pattern constantly. Couples get stuck in these endless loops, rehashing the same complaints without ever addressing what's really going on underneath.
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That's where Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) comes in. EFT doesn't focus on teaching better communication skills or problem-solving techniques. Instead, it helps couples understand the deeper emotional needs and attachment fears driving their conflicts. When we address those underlying feelings, the surface arguments often resolve themselves.

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    The various therapists at Inspired Life Counseling contribute to this blog.  Please look for the author of each individual blog to be listed at the bottom of the page for each post.  Thank you.

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(530) 809-1702
[email protected]
Locations: 
​​1025 Village Lane, Chico CA 95926  
1610 West Street, Ste 4, Redding CA 96001

Inspired Life Counseling is NOT a crisis center and is not equipped with the necessary tools to help in an emergency.  Please click below for more information if you or your loved one is in crisis: Crisis Information.  
Crisis Information

By texting Inspired Life Counseling at ( 530) 809-1702, you agree to receive conversations (external) messages from Inspired Life Counseling.  We are NOT a crisis response.  If you are in a mental health crisis or feel you are a danger to yourself or someone else, please contact 911.  If you would like to no longer receive SMS correspondence Reply STOP to opt-out; Reply HELP for support; Message & data rates may apply; Messaging frequency may vary. Visit https://www.inspiredlifechico.com/contact to see our privacy policy and our Terms of Service.

MISSION: To provide a tranquil and healing space in which people in our community can find calmness internally through the relaxing atmosphere, along with respectful and engaging therapy conversations.  To contribute to happier and more secure families by helping individuals, couples, and teens heal within and thereby creating different ways of engaging with themselves, the world, and those they love.

VISION: Creating a new kind of therapy experience in the Chico and Redding areas in which therapists have smaller caseloads, giving them the flexibility to spend more time with clients as needed - longer sessions, phone calls, client-centered advocacy.  Creating a space in our community where clients can go between sessions to sit, linger, and re-center themselves when they're having difficult days.  A place to belong while they heal their hearts and relationships.  A therapy office that embodies the unconditional love of Christ, no matter what a person's gender identity, romantic disposition, or previous life hardships, experiences, or actions might have been.  To be a safe place.

Inspired Life Counseling
Inspired Life Counseling is owned and directed by ​Jessica Darling, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist #104464. ​​
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