Starting or continuing therapy can feel unsettling. You may leave sessions feeling emotionally raw, confused, or even wondering if something is wrong. If therapy feels uncomfortable, you’re not alone and you’re not doing it wrong.
Many people are surprised to learn that discomfort is often part of the healing process. When therapy is working, it gently challenges old patterns, brings suppressed emotions to the surface, and encourages real change. While this can feel difficult, it’s often a sign that meaningful progress is happening.
In this article, we’ll explain why therapy feels uncomfortable, how to tell the difference between healthy discomfort and harm, and what to do if therapy starts to feel overwhelming, especially in addiction and recovery treatment.
Why Therapy Feels Uncomfortable
Therapy isn’t just about talking. It’s about change. And change, even positive, can feel uncomfortable.
Therapy Challenges Old Coping Mechanisms
Many coping strategies, like avoidance, emotional numbing, or substance use, are considered maladaptive. They are developed to protect you from pain. Research published in the NIH National Library of Medicine shows that people with substance use disorders, particularly those also experiencing depression, tend to rely more on avoidant coping strategies than adaptive ones. Therapy gently dismantles these patterns, which can leave you feeling exposed or unsteady at first.
Talking About Suppressed Emotions Activates Vulnerability
Therapy often invites you to talk about emotions or experiences you’ve pushed aside for years. Opening up activates vulnerability, which can feel unfamiliar and uncomfortable, even when it’s healing. This is part of the process where therapy may feel worse before it gets better, as your mind and body adjust to facing long-suppressed feelings.
The Brain Resists Even Healthy Change
Our brains are wired to prefer familiarity and predictability. When therapy introduces new ways of thinking, feeling, or responding, the brain may interpret this as a threat. This can trigger discomfort, emotional resistance, and increased cognitive effort, which can make therapy feel mentally demanding even when it’s supporting healing and growth.
Signs Therapy Is Actually Working
Discomfort alone doesn’t mean therapy is effective, but certain patterns often indicate progress. Here are common therapy progress signs:
You’re Feeling Emotions You Used to Avoid
Experiencing sadness, anger, grief, or fear can mean you’re finally allowing emotions to surface instead of suppressing them.
Sessions Feel Heavier but More Honest
Conversations may feel more intense, yet also more authentic. Many people describe this phase as difficult but meaningful.
You’re Noticing Patterns and Triggers More Clearly
Therapy, such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), often increases self-awareness. You may begin recognizing emotional triggers, relationship patterns, or behaviors you hadn’t noticed before.
You’re Uncomfortable Between Sessions but More Aware
Growth doesn’t stop when sessions end. Reflecting between appointments, even when uncomfortable, can be a sign your mind is actively integrating change. Experiencing emotional discomfort in therapy between sessions is common and can indicate that real progress is taking place.
The Difference Between Healthy Discomfort and Harm
Not all discomfort is helpful. It’s important to know the difference.
Healthy Discomfort
- Feels challenging but safe
- Increases awareness and emotional understanding
- Happens within a supportive, respectful therapeutic relationship
Harmful Therapy
- Feels unsafe, invalidating, or shaming
- Pushes beyond your emotional capacity without adequate support
- Reopens trauma without helping you feel grounded
- Can lead to hesitation about continuing or seeking future treatment
If therapy ever feels overwhelming or unsafe, it’s okay to speak up. Adjusting the pace is part of ethical, effective care.
How to Support Yourself When Therapy Feels Hard
If therapy feels uncomfortable, these strategies can help:
- Grounding Techniques - Breathing exercises, mindfulness, or sensory grounding can help regulate emotions after sessions.
- Journaling After Sessions - Writing helps process emotions, track insights, and reduce mental overload.
- Honest Communication With Your Therapist - Sharing how therapy feels allows your therapist to adjust pacing, approach, or focus.
- Leaning on Recovery Supports - Support groups, trusted peers, and treatment teams help reinforce stability between sessions.
You Don’t Have to Navigate This Alone
Therapy can bring up strong emotions. Our team at Sunrise Recovery is here to support you every step of the way throughout Clarksville, Jeffersonville, and Lafayette.
Call Sunrise Recovery today or verify your insurance to explore supportive treatment options.
FAQs on Why Therapy Feels Uncomfortable
Yes. Emotional discomfort in therapy is often a normal part of growth, especially when old coping strategies are challenged.
When therapy introduces new ways of thinking, feeling, or responding, the brain may resist change. This resistance can temporarily make sessions feel heavier or more challenging before real progress emerges.
Therapy progress signs include feeling emotions you used to avoid, noticing triggers or patterns more clearly, having honest and deep sessions, and increased self-awareness between sessions.
Grounding techniques, journaling, honest communication with your therapist, and leaning on recovery supports can help you navigate moments of discomfort safely.
Yes. Addiction therapy discomfort is common as substances are removed and emotions resurface. Structured, compassionate therapy helps process these feelings and supports long-term recovery.
If you or someone you care about is struggling with addiction, please contact the SAMHSA Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357).
