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Making the Invisible, Visible

If therapy and Fight Club have a common thread, it's their first rule: don't talk about it. This code works wonders if you're in the loop, but it's less helpful when you're on the sidelines, contemplating whether or not to step into the ring.

Think of these articles as your insider's guide to therapy.

I'll offer you a candid view of my work as a therapist, without sacrificing the sacredness of my client's confidentiality. Like your favorite reality TV show, we'll delve into the highs, lows, and 'pour-the-red-wine' moments of life for women in their 30s and 40s.

I'm pulling back the curtain on the invisible world of therapy for women who think their struggles aren't "significant enough", one blog post at a time.

IFS Therapy, Self-Discovery KARISSA MUELLER IFS Therapy, Self-Discovery KARISSA MUELLER

Why You Relate to Eldest Daughter Syndrome as a Middle/Youngest/Only Child

Eldest daughter syndrome is officially a thing. The jokes, the memes, the “eldest daughter starter pack” reels…it’s everywhere right now. I mean, Taylor Swift even wrote a song about it, and if that doesn’t mean it’s gone mainstream, I don’t know what does. 

But what if, as a woman who is equal parts tired, capable, and quietly furious, you resonate with all the eldest daughter stuff but you’re not the oldest daughter in your family? What does that mean? 

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Mental Health, Self-Discovery KARISSA MUELLER Mental Health, Self-Discovery KARISSA MUELLER

Why are Millennial Women Obsessed with Therapy?

I saw this post from Dr. Becky the other day — the one about how we’ve overcorrected from “kids’ feelings don’t matter” to “kids’ feelings decide everything.” It stopped me.

Dr. Becky (Kennedy), the psychologist behind Good Inside, has become something of a millennial mom whisperer. Her take on parenting isn’t just about raising kids — it’s about how we were raised. And that post, in particular, nailed something I see in almost every millennial woman I work with in therapy - the tension between feelings and boundaries.

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IFS Therapy, Self-Discovery KARISSA MUELLER IFS Therapy, Self-Discovery KARISSA MUELLER

Is IFS Good for Healing Eldest Daughter Syndrome?

Eldest Daughter Syndrome. Firstborn Daughter Burnout. Whatever the internet is calling it this week, it all ends up sounding like cute branding for a life that’s slowly suffocating you.

Before your feet even hit the floor, you’ve already run three mental checklists: yours, your kid’s, and your partner’s (plus your mom’s, because someone has to). You respond to texts, make mental edits to your work presentation, try to remember if there’s milk left, if the field trip form is due, if you ever switched the laundry last night—and somehow, none of that counts as doing anything yet.

You are high-functioning. Hyper-responsible. Chronically needed. Loudly capable. Quietly on the verge.

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IFS Therapy, Mental Health KARISSA MUELLER IFS Therapy, Mental Health KARISSA MUELLER

What I’ve Learned From the Women Who Always Hold It Together

Most people assume that high-achieving women thrive on tidy kitchens and back-to-back meetings, that they sleep better with a color-coded calendar and a to-do list by the bed. 

But that’s just because most people can’t spell. Lucky for them, some high-achieving women will help them out:

Tidy kitchens? That’s  R-E-S-P-O-N-S-I-B-I-L-I-T-Y. 

Back-to-back meetings? That’s B-E-I-N-G-A-G-R-O-W-N-U-P.

Color-coded calendars? That’s N-E-C-E-S-S-A-R-Y.

To-do lists by the bed? That’s C-O-P-I-N-G..

And thriving? Oh, that one’s easy. It’s spelled S-U-R-V-I-V-I-N-G. Which is exactly why this high-achieving woman is one goldfish cracker away from L-O-S-I-N-G H-E-R S-H-I-T.

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IFS Therapy, Mental Health KARISSA MUELLER IFS Therapy, Mental Health KARISSA MUELLER

What Seven Years of IFS Therapy with Women in St. Louis Has Taught Me

Seven years ago, while in grad school to become a licensed counselor myself, I was sitting across from my therapist, intellectually spiraling about something my husband did: over-explaining, analyzing, looping through every possible angle. You know. Tuesday.

She paused and asked if I’d be willing to try something different. Instead of talking about the frustration, she asked me to speak to it. To listen to it. To let it respond. It was weird. But it also worked.

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IFS Therapy, Self-Discovery KARISSA MUELLER IFS Therapy, Self-Discovery KARISSA MUELLER

An IFS Therapist Explains: You Don’t Need to Calm Down

You don’t need to be less reactive—you actually need to be better at it.

Some version it always comes up with new clients: “I just want to be less reactive.” Not less hurt. Not less unseen. Just…less reactive. 

Sometimes it’s buried under paragraphs of context. Sometimes it’s the whole damn paragraph. Either way, it’s one of the most common reasons my clients cite for starting therapy—the thing they think will make everything feel more manageable. 


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IFS Therapy, Self-Discovery KARISSA MUELLER IFS Therapy, Self-Discovery KARISSA MUELLER

Who Is IFS Therapy Best For?

“So… what kind of clients do you see?” It’s a simple question, but I never quite know how to answer because the truth is, I don’t think in diagnoses or demographics. I think in nervous systems. I think in spirals. I think in her. Women just like you—the ones who are smart, high-functioning, and secretly unraveling.

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IFS, Relationships KARISSA MUELLER IFS, Relationships KARISSA MUELLER

Why You Can’t Decide If You Should Get a Divorce

It’s 2:14AM and your phone screen is burning holes in your face. You’ve got 17 tabs open, and none of them are helping. Why not? Because you’re not actually looking for an answer. You’re looking for relief. From the guilt. From the grief. From the whiplash of feeling one thing in the morning and the opposite by dinner.

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