A steady, compassionate space to navigate the persistent fog of low mood and find your way back to yourself.
There are seasons in life when everything feels heavier. Energy fades, motivation disappears, and even simple tasks can feel overwhelming.
Whether you are grieving a specific loss or struggling with a persistent depression that is hard to explain, these experiences are not signs of weakness. They are often signals that your system has been carrying more than it can reasonably hold.
At So You Need Therapy, you don’t have to pretend you’re okay. Therapy offers a place to slow down, process what you’re carrying, and gradually reconnect with yourself and the parts of life that once felt meaningful.
Depression and grief are often the body’s way of protecting itself. When life becomes too loud, too painful, or too overwhelming, our nervous system can move into a state of ‘functional freeze’ or shutdown to prevent further damage. Imagine living life where the colour has been drained out, and even the air feels heavy. It is not a character flaw; it is a physical and neurological restructuring of your world in response to loss or chronic stress. Our goal is to help you look under the fog to see what your system is trying to protect and slowly signal to your body that it is safe to re-engage.
Understanding these experiences as signals from your nervous system is the first step toward self-compassion. These are not flaws, but markers of a system that has moved into survival mode:
Feeling as though your limbs weigh a ton and your body is moving through water, making every movement feel like an effort.
A sense of numbness where joy, and even deep sadness, feel distant and inaccessible — a way for your brain to ‘buffer’ intensity.
Finding yourself pulling away from relationships and activities that used to nourish you because your ‘social battery’ is utterly empty.
Difficulty making decisions, focusing on tasks, or finding the right words; your brain is prioritizing survival over ‘high-level’ thinking.
For neurodivergent individuals, the world may feel physically abrasive, leading to a sensory-based ‘freeze’ that looks like depression but feels like overload.
A quiet but heavy sense that you have lost your connection to who you are and what you care about, leaving life feeling flat or disconnected.
Because shutdown can look similar across different experiences, we help you look at the how behind your low mood to find the right path forward.
A physical ache and ‘heaviness’ triggered by a memory or a void.
A sudden inability to speak or move due to sensory or social overload.
A persistent, nameless fog where the world feels muted for weeks.
Cycles of energy that peak and crash depending on the ‘waves’ of grief.
Low energy specifically tied to how much ‘masking’ you’ve done that day.
A constant feeling of being ‘offline,’ where even sleep doesn’t restore you.
Focused on the past and the process of integrating what was lost.
Overwhelmed by ‘details’ and an inability to process vague instructions.
Difficulty seeing a future or finding any threads of interest/joy.
| LOOKING AT… | Grief & Loss | Neurodivergent Shutdown | Clinical Depression |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Moment | A physical ache and ‘heaviness’ triggered by a memory or a void. | A sudden inability to speak or move due to sensory or social overload. | A persistent, nameless fog where the world feels muted for weeks. |
| Energy | Cycles of energy that peak and crash depending on the ‘waves’ of grief. | Low energy specifically tied to how much ‘masking’ you’ve done that day. | A constant feeling of being ‘offline,’ where even sleep doesn’t restore you. |
| The Mind | Focused on the past and the process of integrating what was lost. | Overwhelmed by ‘details’ and an inability to process vague instructions. | Difficulty seeing a future or finding any threads of interest/joy. |
We use gentle, high-level clinical approaches designed to help you slowly find your footing again.
We use gentle body-based tools to help you recognize the physical cues of shutdown and teach you how to signal to your system that it is safe to slowly return.
We work together to find the small, quiet threads of who you are, slowly weaving your interests and values back into your daily life.
Because grief and depression take a physical toll, our Nurse Practitioners can address sleep, energy levels, and biological regulation to provide a steady floor for your therapeutic work.
There is no timeline for grief. Our goal is not to ‘get over it,’ but to help you build a life that can hold the grief while still allowing for moments of connection and peace.
Yes. ADHD and autistic individuals often experience ‘rejection sensitive dysphoria’ or sensory-based shutdowns that can look like depression but need specific neuro-affirming strategies rather than just standard talk therapy.
Not necessarily. Medication is one tool that can help raise the ‘floor’ of your mood so you have the energy for therapy, but it is always a collaborative choice between you and your clinical team.
Two things can be true here. If you’d like guidance on how to support someone who’s struggling, that’s a real and meaningful thing to bring to a session — we can talk through what helps, what doesn’t, and how to be present without burning out yourself. AND if loving someone through grief or depression is shaping your own life — through worry, your own sadness, the slow loss of the relationship as it was, or the strain of being the one holding it together — that’s its own important work, and we’d be glad to support you through it.
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