What's happening.
On the drive home from a session. Your 15-year-old: “I want to quit therapy. I think I'm done.” You glance over.
What we usually say — and why it backfires.
Absolutely not. You'll go every week until your therapist says you're ready.
I literally cannot make myself go anymore. I just sit there.
Then sit there. You're going.
(goes physically, disengages mentally, wastes the slot for months)
- Insisting on attendance you can enforce produces compliance you can't use. Therapy without participation is a waste.
- “Until your therapist says you're ready” outsources the decision to a third party and removes the teen's agency entirely.
- The actual question (“is this person stuck or is the work hard right now?”) never gets asked.
What works — and why.
Okay. Tell me more — is it that the therapist isn't right for you, or is the work itself feeling like too much right now?
The work. We started getting into the bullying stuff and I just don't want to talk about it anymore.
Got it. That's actually a sign therapy is working, not a sign it's not. The body wants to back away when the work gets to the hard part. Here's what I'm thinking — let's not quit. Let's tell your therapist exactly what you just told me. A good therapist hears 'this is too much right now' and adjusts the pace — they don't make you push through. And if you both agree it's truly stuck, we make a real plan to wind down, not just stop.
...okay. I can try telling her.
- Distinguishing “wrong therapist” from “work is hard” is the conversation that surfaces the actual situation almost every time.
- Naming that the body backs away when therapy gets to the hard part normalizes the experience and reframes it from failure to progress.
- “Tell your therapist exactly what you told me” is the meta-skill they'll use in every future therapeutic relationship.
Key phrases to reach for in the moment.
- Is it that the therapist isn't right, or is the work itself feeling like too much right now?
- The body wants to back away when the work gets to the hard part. That's a sign it's working.
- Let's not quit. Tell your therapist exactly what you just told me.
- If you both agree it's stuck, we make a real plan to wind down, not just stop.