What To Expect
Step 1: Consultation Call
After you reach out we will contact you to set up a 10-15 minute consultation call. This is a brief screening to make sure that your needs can be met at our practice.
Step 2: Intake Session
This is structured like a typical 45 minute therapy session. It is an opportunity for us to become better acquainted and see if there is a good fit between therapist and client. This is a very important step. Each client needs to feel comfortable with their therapist and the intake session is a good opportunity for you to “interview” your therapist to see if they are right for you.
Step 3: Setting Up Weekly Appointments
Therapy works best when sessions are consistent, and once a week is the most appropriate frequency. More than once a week is typically too much and less than once a week usually results in a “failure to launch” situation where the therapist and client never really get into a good rhythm and develop a comfortable and open therapeutic relationship.
Once weekly sessions are established, treatment planning and therapeutic goals are created to make sure that therapy is well directed and improvement can be better tracked.
Step 4: Ongoing Treatment
The most common question asked during the screening call is, “How long does therapy typically last?” This is a fair, understandable, and difficult question to answer. Each person is different so their length of treatment will differ as well. The best answer that we can provide is that both parties should have a good feeling about how things are going after eight sessions. At this point everyone should be well acquainted and we should be well on our way toward our treatment goals. While it is likely that more time is necessary, you should be feeling different and clearly on the path toward the long-term goals.
Step 5: Completion of Primary Treatment Goals and Maintenance
At this point in therapy the primary treatment goals have been met and there will be significant and substantive emotional and behavioral improvement. While you may be in a place where you would not initiate therapy, there may be some secondary goals that you would like to work on and this is the stage in treatment where this occurs. Others feel relatively content and wish to stay in treatment in a Maintenance Stage. During this stage core therapeutic concepts are reinforced and some people appreciate the weekly support and opportunity for reflection and introspection.
Step 6: Concluding Therapy
This can take place at the end of the maintenance stage or after the completion of the primary treatment goals. A good sign that we have reached this point is that there isn’t much to talk about each week since we have tackled all the big problems. Some people will opt to wind down therapy by switching to biweekly or monthly appointments. Regardless, the end of regular appointments is not the end of a relationship. It takes a lot of emotion and effort to participate in therapy and the alliance formed between therapist and client is not artificial but genuine and significant. Every client is welcome to stay in touch and come back for a refresher session or to reengage in treatment if necessary. Our doors are always open.