- Joined
- May 6, 2021
Going to therapy is advised for almost any problem these days. Whether you were passed up for promotion, killed your favorite houseplant, or found yourself in possession of a silver CWC coin, therapy is right for you. 'Everyone can benefit from being in therapy all the time', the PsychologyToday blog said.
But how good is therapy? What kind of people are drawn to the therapist profession? What do clients have to say about their experiences? Just how bad are the bad therapists and the nightmare clients? Luckily, therapists and clients of the internet can provide us the answers.
This thread is meant to chronicle the remarkable postings of mental health professionals and their clients on the topic of therapy and mental health.
Finding a Psycho(therapist)
Reddit is full of mental health (MH) subs. /r/psychotherapy (for practitioners), /r/TalkTherapy (full of clients who love/hate their therapist), /r/therapy, /r/BPD, /r/AutisticTherapist, /r/Psychiatry, /r/AskPsychiatry, /r/psychoanalysis, /r/AskaTherapist, /r/Narcissism, and many more, though therapy stories are abound across the internet. For example, this random goodtherapy.org article about warning signs of bad therapists has >1,600 comments, many of which describe despicable behavior by a supposed licensed professional. Some youtube therapists have also gained a following and there is drama in that community (e.g., a big one was the Chris Boutté/Rewired Soul saga, and vultures are starting to circle around Todd Grande, see: I unsubscribed from Dr. Grande months ago, and now you get why). 'Therapists of Tiktok' is now a thing, too. Ig is brimming with therapist accounts with cringe cliches to weird art, risque pics, woo, etc. It's also fun to play Find a Therapist - wrong answers only - using the PsychologyToday profile search.
Case studies
First, the guy that inspired this post. I've posted this here before. Notice how commenters are actually supportive of his stunning and brave admission.
If you thought clients would be horrified by this guy, think again. The OP about him on /r/TalkTherapy is more critical and she very aptly describes the user base in the sentence under the link, which is why the comments are full of asspats for the perv, who shows up to collect:
www.reddit.com
The members of /r/psychotherapy have been so reckless with sharing personal information about themselves and their clients that someone made a twitter account to dox them. The account has since been banned.
www.reddit.com
These people would be informants in North Korea
/r/psychotherapy users living up to the stereotype:
(yeah most votes probably came from the unverified spectators of the peanut gallery, but loads of verified posters talk about their diagnoses)
I don't want to demean people who seek help or take medication, but it seems that the motive to pursue a psych career is often rooted primarily in the desire to understand and help themselves. Research suggests and /r/psychotherapy mostly agrees that good therapists are born, not made, and I wonder how good these therapists are that went in with self-serving motives.
Speaking of which, Multiplicity&Me, the most respected creator in DID (faker) circles, who has a YT channel with 208K subscribers and recently 'integrated' the alters, stated recently that she is now a MH 'practitioner'. Want to be her client?
What would you think about having an autistic therapist, like these people:
www.reddit.com
or
www.reddit.com
Discussions among MH pros can also be interesting and sometimes hilarious in non-horrifying ways:
This user is a mod of /r/Psychiatry and other medical subs (he eventually deleted this comment)
This thread could also accommodate the bullshit spread by (pop)psychology publications. For example, the website PsychCentral says that DID alters may need different prescriptions for glasses lmfao
link
Finally, this would be remiss if it didn't dedicate some space to the overly attached clients found in /r/TalkTherapy and elsewhere:
The sheer number of these posts is impressive. Just a selection:
Call to Action
The psychotherapy sub is going private soon, and they're instituting a verification process to gain access to the new sub. This private group on fb would be interesting to get into as well for anyone who is or can portray themselves as a licensed pro or advanced student. It would also be great if people could help dig through /r/psychotherapy before it goes private.
Thanks for the tips @BootlegPopeye
But how good is therapy? What kind of people are drawn to the therapist profession? What do clients have to say about their experiences? Just how bad are the bad therapists and the nightmare clients? Luckily, therapists and clients of the internet can provide us the answers.
This thread is meant to chronicle the remarkable postings of mental health professionals and their clients on the topic of therapy and mental health.
Finding a Psycho(therapist)
Reddit is full of mental health (MH) subs. /r/psychotherapy (for practitioners), /r/TalkTherapy (full of clients who love/hate their therapist), /r/therapy, /r/BPD, /r/AutisticTherapist, /r/Psychiatry, /r/AskPsychiatry, /r/psychoanalysis, /r/AskaTherapist, /r/Narcissism, and many more, though therapy stories are abound across the internet. For example, this random goodtherapy.org article about warning signs of bad therapists has >1,600 comments, many of which describe despicable behavior by a supposed licensed professional. Some youtube therapists have also gained a following and there is drama in that community (e.g., a big one was the Chris Boutté/Rewired Soul saga, and vultures are starting to circle around Todd Grande, see: I unsubscribed from Dr. Grande months ago, and now you get why). 'Therapists of Tiktok' is now a thing, too. Ig is brimming with therapist accounts with cringe cliches to weird art, risque pics, woo, etc. It's also fun to play Find a Therapist - wrong answers only - using the PsychologyToday profile search.
Case studies
First, the guy that inspired this post. I've posted this here before. Notice how commenters are actually supportive of his stunning and brave admission.
If you thought clients would be horrified by this guy, think again. The OP about him on /r/TalkTherapy is more critical and she very aptly describes the user base in the sentence under the link, which is why the comments are full of asspats for the perv, who shows up to collect:
r/TalkTherapy - Another interesting post at r/psychotherapy
18 votes and 134 comments so far on Reddit

The members of /r/psychotherapy have been so reckless with sharing personal information about themselves and their clients that someone made a twitter account to dox them. The account has since been banned.
Reddit - Dive into anything

These people would be informants in North Korea
/r/psychotherapy users living up to the stereotype:
(yeah most votes probably came from the unverified spectators of the peanut gallery, but loads of verified posters talk about their diagnoses)
I don't want to demean people who seek help or take medication, but it seems that the motive to pursue a psych career is often rooted primarily in the desire to understand and help themselves. Research suggests and /r/psychotherapy mostly agrees that good therapists are born, not made, and I wonder how good these therapists are that went in with self-serving motives.
Speaking of which, Multiplicity&Me, the most respected creator in DID (faker) circles, who has a YT channel with 208K subscribers and recently 'integrated' the alters, stated recently that she is now a MH 'practitioner'. Want to be her client?
What would you think about having an autistic therapist, like these people:
Reddit - Dive into anything

or
r/AutisticTherapist - Professionalism Discussion
7 votes and 9 comments so far on Reddit

Discussions among MH pros can also be interesting and sometimes hilarious in non-horrifying ways:
This user is a mod of /r/Psychiatry and other medical subs (he eventually deleted this comment)
This thread could also accommodate the bullshit spread by (pop)psychology publications. For example, the website PsychCentral says that DID alters may need different prescriptions for glasses lmfao
link
Finally, this would be remiss if it didn't dedicate some space to the overly attached clients found in /r/TalkTherapy and elsewhere:
The sheer number of these posts is impressive. Just a selection:
Call to Action
The psychotherapy sub is going private soon, and they're instituting a verification process to gain access to the new sub. This private group on fb would be interesting to get into as well for anyone who is or can portray themselves as a licensed pro or advanced student. It would also be great if people could help dig through /r/psychotherapy before it goes private.
Thanks for the tips @BootlegPopeye
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