Get Help: See A Psychotherapist

What is psychotherapy?
Talk therapy, also called psychotherapy, is used to help people deal with challenges in life, emotional difficulties, and mental illness. Psychotherapy helps a person to make their life better through introspection and healing.
If we start being honest about our pain, our anger, and our shortcomings instead of pretending they don’t exist, then maybe we’ll leave the world a better place than we found it. – Russell Wilson
Some of the most comforting words in the universe are ‘me too.’ That moment when you find out that your struggle is also someone else’s struggle, that you’re not alone, and that others have been down the same road. – Unknown
Anything human is mentionable, and anything mentionable can be more manageable. When we can talk about our feelings, they become less overwhelming, less upsetting, and less scary. – Fred Rogers
The strongest people are those who win battles we know nothing about. – Unknown
Introduction
I got the most horrifying text of my life. A very close friend of mine, since college, passed away on Tuesday, early morning.
It is not possible. We just spoke on Monday morning. We were going to have lunch on Thursday. I was teasing him about being the king of Facebook. Also, since his dad was 90, I told him that he would probably outlive all of us and therefore attend my funeral.
After that, on a cold day in March, here I was at the funeral home facing his cold, lifeless body. In addition, a thousand memories since we were teenagers kept flashing across my mind.
The same year in April, a young gentleman drove a van across a street where I had lived for more than a decade, killing 10 people and injuring 16.
Similarly, in July as I was heading to the Danforth for a meeting, another male shot and killed 2 people and injured 13 at a nearby restaurant.
Three incidents in less than six months hit home. Why? Could any of the above situations be avoided?
Life happens
My close friend had issues from a young age. It tormented him. Over the years, I begged him, pleaded with him to get help. In 2015, he lost his job and disappeared. I finally got hold of him six months later and he was putting up a front. In 2017, I took him out for lunch for his birthday. Little did I realize that would be the last time I would be seeing him. We spoke throughout the summer, about his marriage, his parenting and how he felt about living in the basement of his parents’ home.
Above all, unemployed, separated from his wife, alone, lonely, feeling rejected, drugs and booze became his best friends. What stopped him from getting help? Did he not realize the hurt he was causing those close to him and especially his kids? How come he did not know his limits and boundaries? Why did he not seek psychotherapy?
What is masculinity?
As I think about my friend and the other two men, involved in the killings, I am forced to ask myself, why do men not get help? Is it a sign of weakness? Is it considered macho to just suck up and deal with your issues through drugs, porn and substance abuse? Is this masculinity?
Or is masculinity dealing with our issues head-on, accepting responsibility for where you are in life, being grateful, forgiving and getting help?
I wish the three men would have got help. They could have avoided so much pain for themselves and those around them.
Advantages of getting help
When you go to see a psychotherapist, you get feedback on what you are going through from an objective perspective. Here is a trained third-party individual who listens, gives you feedback on what you are going through.
The second advantage is that you get to deal with your negative past. The therapist might ask you to write down your hurts, resentments, bitterness issues, challenges or just he/she will listen.
The third advantage is that it allows you to get in touch with reality. When you are doing drugs, booze, porn, and sleeping around, these are helping you to escape reality.
The fourth advantage is that you end up in better mental and physical health.
The fifth advantage is that it allows you to get to the root cause of your problems. The therapist gives you healthy coping mechanisms.
The final advantage is that you learn to take it easy on yourself and finally no one is judging you at the clinic. They are all encouraged that you have the courage and guts to deal with your issues.
I challenge you that if you are facing issues no matter what go ahead and get professional help.


Everyone needs to read this and bookmark it. There is STILL a stigma around therapy in so many places, but it’s so incredibly helpful.
It’s crazy to me that men still have these ideas that therapy makes them weak. It makes you far weaker to succumb to your own issues and hurt another person, if you ask me.
Such a helpful treatment for healing and comforting to prevent mental illness, to make our life better and valuable us individual and for our love ones .
So many tragedies in the world today, as the ones you share. Psychotherapy is a powerful tool for everyone to live a better life and make a better world.
WOW, this was such a powerful read. I’ve never understood why so many men struggle to seek help or take care of their health. As a retired nurse, I’ve seen this time and time again, and it’s always heartbreaking. Seeking help isn’t weakness, it’s freedom from what’s been weighing them down for years.
This is such an important and meaningful topic. It’s great to see the positive impact therapy can have highlighted in such a clear and encouraging way. Thank you for sharing this perspective.
This can most certainly help. Having an unbiased third-party person who will listen without judging is so helpful. Honest feedback to me is important, for sure.
Such an important article and reminder for everyone. A woman in our small village community took her own life two weeks ago. Such a shock to everyone. People who are struggling might find it difficult to open up to people they know. Getting professional help when needed is so important.
Psychotherapy is so underrated. People benefit from speaking. Imagine how well it could help to have a positive outlet for issues in our lives.