You know you need it. The thought has been rattling in your head for weeks, maybe years. But the gap between knowing you should start therapy and actually starting feels impossibly wide.
This isn't about laziness. Procrastination is almost never about laziness. It's a defense mechanism. We put things off because they stir up uncomfortable feelings—anxiety, fear, self-doubt. And calling a stranger to talk about your deepest anxieties is the definition of uncomfortable.
So that browser tab with a list of therapists just stays open. For weeks.
The problem is thinking the task is "find a therapist." That’s too big, too vague. It’s a guaranteed way to freeze up. Your brain, trying to protect you from that stress, opts for the immediate relief of doing nothing at all. Which feels good for a minute, until the guilt and stress creep back in, even stronger this time.
Let's break that loop.
Make the First Step Ridiculously Small
Your goal isn't to "start therapy." Not today. Your goal is to take one tiny, non-threatening action. Forget the big picture. Your only job is to break the task into steps so small they feel stupid.
- Don't "find a therapist." Just open a directory website like Psychology Today. That's it. Open the tab. You win.
- Don't "research therapists." Just type your zip code in the search bar. Don't even look at the results.
- Don't "pick the right one." Just scroll. Let the faces and names wash over you without any pressure.
The point is to make the next action so small your brain doesn't see it as a threat. You're just clicking a link. You're just typing a number. This isn’t about finding the perfect therapist in ten minutes. It’s about building a tiny bit of momentum. It's about proving to yourself that you can take a step, however small.
I remember staring at my car keys at 4:17 PM one Tuesday, after promising myself all day I'd finally make the call. The weight of it was paralyzing. So I didn't. Instead, I just looked up the clinic's address on Google Maps. That was the whole task. The next day, I looked at one therapist's profile. It took a week of these tiny, almost pointless steps before I ever picked up the phone.
The "Good Enough" Therapist
Perfectionism is just procrastination in a nice outfit. You're not looking for the perfect therapist. You're looking for the right-now therapist. The hunt for a flawless match can trap you in research mode forever, convinced the ideal person is just one more click away.
But the connection you build with a therapist is more important than their resume. The single biggest factor in whether therapy works is the "therapeutic alliance"—basically, whether you feel a sense of trust and collaboration with the person in the room.