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Understanding Therapy · Getting Started

Does therapy
actually work?

Yes — when the conditions are right. Therapy has a strong evidence base. For anxiety, depression, trauma, relationship difficulties, and most of what brings people to a therapist's office, the research consistently shows that therapy works. But the headline answer obscures what actually matters: the conditions under which it works.

This page is for people genuinely asking the question before committing. That's a reasonable thing to want answered honestly.

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The Reality

When therapy works
and when it doesn't

The research shows that the therapeutic relationship is the single strongest predictor of outcome. Not the modality. Not the therapist's credentials alone. The quality of the relationship between you and your therapist. A bad fit with a highly credentialed therapist will produce worse results than a strong fit with someone less decorated.

Therapy also works better when you're ready to be honest. Not comfortable — honest. There's a difference. You can be terrified and make real progress. But if the point of coming is to perform okayness rather than examine what's actually happening, the hour will pass without much changing.

The fit is the most important variable. If you've tried therapy and it didn't work, the most likely explanation is that the fit was wrong — not that therapy doesn't work for you.

Expecting results takes patience. Most people start to notice real shifts around 6–12 sessions. Some things take longer. Very few things happen in session one.

You have to actually show up. Consistent attendance matters significantly more than most people account for when they're evaluating whether therapy is working.

Honesty is the mechanism. Therapy is proportional to how honest you're willing to be — with your therapist and with yourself.

What Makes Therapy Work

The actual factors that
determine whether it helps

These aren't guarantees — but they're the conditions under which therapy consistently produces real change.

The Right Therapist

Someone you can be honest with. Who challenges you without dismissing you. Who doesn't need you to perform wellness.

Consistent Attendance

The work compounds over time. Sporadic attendance limits what's possible.

Honesty Over Comfort

The sessions where you say the thing you didn't want to say are usually the ones that matter most.

Realistic Expectations

Therapy isn't linear. There will be sessions that feel like nothing happened and weeks later something shifts.

Willingness to Be Uncomfortable

Change happens at the edge of what's familiar. Avoiding all discomfort limits how far you can go.

The Right Timing

Sometimes people come to therapy before they're ready to do the work. That's okay — but readiness matters.

"Therapy works.
The question is whether
the conditions are right for you."
— Myke Cooper, LCSW
Atlanta, GA · Online Across Six States

Ready to find out
if this is the right fit?

In-person in Atlanta. Online across Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, New York, Colorado, and Nevada.

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