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Why People Wait So Long to Start Therapy — and What It Costs Them

Myke Cooper, LCSW  ·   ·  5 min read

Almost universally, the people who come to therapy say some version of the same thing once they've been at it for a while: "I wish I had done this sooner." Not dramatically. Just plainly. Like something they now understand that they didn't before.

The average time between when someone first recognizes they might benefit from therapy and when they actually make an appointment is years. Sometimes a decade or more. In the meantime, things don't stay the same — they compound. Patterns deepen. Relationships absorb the weight. The self gets smaller, slowly, in ways that are hard to notice from the inside.

I'm not writing this to make anyone feel bad about when they started or haven't started yet. I'm writing it because understanding what keeps people from going is the first step to deciding whether those reasons actually hold up.

The Reasons People Give — and What They're Really About

"I should be able to handle this myself." This one runs deep, particularly for men, for people who were raised to be self-sufficient, for anyone who learned early that needing help was a liability. The belief underneath it is that going to therapy is an admission of failure — that capable people don't need it. The reality is that capable people use every tool available to them. Therapy is a tool. Using it is not weakness.

"Things aren't bad enough." The threshold keeps moving. It'll be bad enough when the relationship ends. When I lose the job. When something actually breaks. The problem with waiting for bad enough is that by the time things are bad enough, you've been living in a diminished version of your life for a long time. You don't have to be in crisis to deserve support. Wanting more from your life is enough.

"I don't have time." This one is worth taking seriously, because time is real and schedules are real. But it's worth asking honestly: is there no hour in the week? Or does the scarcity of time reflect how low the priority has gotten? People make time for what they've decided matters. The question is whether this has made that list.

"I don't know if it would actually help." Fair. Therapy has a variable track record depending on the therapist, the approach, and the fit between them. A bad therapy experience — or a story about someone else's bad therapy experience — can make it feel like a gamble. But this is more solvable than it feels. A good initial consultation gives you real information about fit before you commit to anything.

“You don’t have to be falling apart to deserve support. Wanting more from your life is enough.”

"What if someone finds out?" This one rarely gets said out loud, but it's real. The stigma around mental health has softened considerably, but it hasn't disappeared — and in certain environments, communities, or professions, the concern is legitimate. Telehealth has changed this significantly. You can be in your car, your bedroom, your office with the door closed. Nobody has to know.

What the Waiting Actually Costs

When someone waits years to address something, they don't just lose those years of potential growth. They often build an entire life on top of the thing they haven't dealt with.

None of this is catastrophizing. It's just what I've seen from sitting with people who are doing the work of understanding how long they've been working around something rather than through it.

What Finally Moves People

In my experience, people usually start therapy when one of three things happens. A crisis — something breaks loudly enough that it's undeniable. An accumulation — nothing dramatic, just a slow build-up where one day the weight is simply too much to keep carrying alone. Or a decision — someone decides, without a crisis forcing it, that they want more from their life than they're currently getting.

The third category is the one I find most interesting. Those clients come in with a different kind of clarity. They're not waiting to be rescued from a breakdown. They're choosing, proactively, to invest in themselves. That intention tends to produce results faster.

If you're somewhere in the waiting — if you've been thinking about therapy for a while and haven't made the call — I'd ask you honestly: what are you waiting for? Not to challenge you. Just to get a clear look at the actual obstacle. Because often, once you name it directly, it's smaller than it seemed.

The first conversation is free. There's no paperwork before it, no commitment after it. It's just a conversation to see if it makes sense to work together. That's a low bar. And for most people, it's worth clearing.

If you've been on the fence about therapy for a while, a free consultation is a low-stakes way to find out if this is the right fit. No paperwork, no commitment — just a conversation about what's going on and whether working together makes sense.

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MC

About the Author

Myke Cooper, LCSW is a licensed clinical social worker with over 10 years of experience. He provides therapy in Atlanta, GA and online across Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, New York, Colorado, and Nevada.

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