One of the most common questions I get from clients is some version of: "Is this working? Should I be feeling different by now?" It's a fair question, and one that's hard to answer because therapy progress doesn't always look like you'd expect. Sometimes the things that feel like setbacks are actually progress. Sometimes the things that feel like breakthroughs don't hold. Here's what I actually look for.
The early signs that are easy to miss
Real change in therapy usually starts small and quiet. Not with a dramatic crying-through-a-breakthrough moment, though those happen sometimes. Much more often with these:
You notice things you didn't notice before
A week in, you catch yourself in the middle of a reaction you used to just ride through. You don't necessarily do anything different yet. You just see it happening. That's new, and that's the first crack in the automatic pattern. The seeing always comes before the changing.
The intensity drops before the behavior changes
The thing that used to send you into a spiral still bothers you, but it bothers you less. It doesn't ruin your whole day anymore. You still lose sleep over it sometimes, but not every time. The size of the reaction is shrinking even though the trigger is still there. That's the nervous system recalibrating. It's happening below the level of strategy.
You use language you never used before
You find yourself describing something with a new word, a new frame, a new metaphor. You weren't trying to. It just came out. That's your brain reorganizing how it holds the experience. That's a structural shift.
You start protecting your energy in ways you didn't before
You cancel a plan that would have drained you. You decline a request you would have agreed to. You leave a situation you would have stayed in. Small acts of self-protection that you don't have to justify to yourself afterward. That's a shift in your baseline sense of what you're allowed to need.
The signs that look like setbacks but aren't
Some things feel like therapy is failing when actually they're part of the process:
You feel worse for a little while
Therapy can stir up things that were buried for a reason. When they come up, you feel them, and feeling them is worse than the numbing you were doing before. This often shows up in the first month or two. It's not a sign therapy isn't working. It's a sign the protective layer is thinning. Talk to your therapist about it so they can help you titrate, but don't assume it means you need to quit.
You notice new patterns you didn't see before
Suddenly you realize how often you people-please, or shut down, or avoid conflict, or reach for your phone, or whatever. It feels terrible to notice. It feels like "oh god, I'm worse than I thought." You are not worse than you thought. You are more aware than you were, which is the only way anything ever changes.
You get angry at someone from your past
Therapy sometimes reshuffles how you understand your history. A parent, an ex, an old friend, a former boss. You find yourself genuinely angry at someone you previously framed in a kinder way. This usually feels destabilizing. It's also usually part of something honest being integrated for the first time.
The signs therapy actually isn't working
None of what I described above means you should stay in therapy that isn't a fit. Here's when something is actually wrong:
- After three to four months, you genuinely feel nothing has shifted at all. Not worse, not better. Just the same. At that point, talk to your therapist about it directly. If they can't name what you're working on or what they're doing, that's a signal.
- You don't trust your therapist. This is the biggest predictor of outcome. If the relationship feels off, the work isn't going to land. It's worth trying to name it and repair it. If it can't be repaired, it's worth finding someone else.
- You're regularly leaving sessions feeling worse and staying worse. Not the normal temporary stirring-up. Actually destabilized, for days at a time, with no repair.
- Your therapist is defensive when you bring up concerns. A good therapist welcomes this conversation. A defensive one is usually more focused on their own comfort than your progress.
What I tell my clients
I invite every client to tell me if something isn't working. Not as a polite offer. As a real invitation. Because the feedback is how we calibrate, and because a client who doesn't feel permission to say "this isn't helping" is a client who quietly drifts away without either of us ever fixing the thing.
Therapy is a collaboration. The work happens between you, not to you. If you're unsure whether it's working, the best first move is almost always to bring that question into the room with your therapist. A therapist who handles that conversation well is probably also someone you can keep doing the work with.
Looking for a therapist who welcomes real feedback?
I try hard to make sessions a place where you can tell me what's working and what isn't. If that sounds like the kind of therapy you're looking for, you can book through my Tava Health profile.
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