Depression and Professional Help
Daniel Crosby • October 27, 2025
Depression + Professional Help

So the big questions is: “How do I know when it’s time to go see a counselor about depression? When is it beyond just trying self-help strategies?”

Only you know how you’re feeling internally but here are some signs that it’s time to reach out:

• Suicidal thoughts – Call or Text 988 Immediately!
• Can’t function with work – You don’t care that there may be consequences for poor performance and you’re slacking on deadlines
• Parenting – You’ve given up on typical caretaking duties like healthy meals, cleaning up, or setting healthy boundaries with the kids
• Finances – You have a “screw it” mentality where you stop budgeting and just spend to try to find happiness OR You stop paying bills altogether
• Hygiene – Your personal hygiene tanks and you don’t care about brushing your teeth, bathing, wearing deodorant, etc.
• Isolation – You’ve consistently been avoiding others and turning down attempts of friends and family to pull you out of your slump
• Significant change in the way you normally function day to day

Call a therapist if you want…
• Accountability
• An outside perspective
• To dig deeper into the “why” 
• A judgement free zone
• New ideas to try 

Before beginning medication, ask these questions:
• “Hey doc! What is your philosophy on prescribing? (Conservative, Experimental, etc?)
• “Hey doc! Is there a time limit to how long you will keep me on this medication? 
• “Hey doc! How will you be measuring how my progress and when to raise/lower dosage and begin or discontinue a medication?” 
• “Do I feel at peace with how the Dr. explained this medication?” 
• “Did the Dr. have the heart of a teacher or were they quick to prescribe without hearing me out?” 
• “Did the Dr. take time with me or rush in and rush out?
• “Have I done my own research on the medications the Dr. is recommending?”

Homework:
If you’re not sure about any of the above, give me a call. I’ll happily do a FREE 15
Minute Consultation Call whether you want to come to see me or not. I’ll give you my
professional opinion about what might be the next right step.
By Daniel Crosby March 10, 2026
Level 3: Words + Actions Trust At this stage, trust begins to deepen beyond proof. The betrayed partner is no longer just asking, “Are you doing the right thing?” but also, “Do you understand what this did to me?” Words matter but only when they match consistent actions. Apologies without empathy feel hollow. Empathy without follow-through feels unsafe. Healing requires both. This is the level where emotional repair becomes central for the partner who caused the harm. – Can you listen without defending? – Can you take ownership without shifting blame? – Can you respond to pain without shutting down or counterattacking? For the betrayed partner, this stage is a shift from testing to expressing. Instead of checking to see if your partner behaved or met your standard, begin directly saying what hurts, what you need, and what helps. This is vulnerable work. It requires risking disappointment — but also opens the door to real repair. Triggers will still come. Memories will still surface. But instead of storing them as evidence to protect yourself later, this stage invites you to bring the hurt into the light where we can work on it together rather then letting it fester and turn into resentment. Trust at this level grows when: – Hurt is spoken instead of hidden. – Repair is attempted instead of avoided. – Consistency replaces defensiveness. This is where trust begins to feel less mechanical and more relational. For the partner who caused the harm: Speak with empathy, take ownership, and show consistent follow-through. Don’t just explain, try to understand and help your partner heal through action. For the betrayed partner: Express hurt and needs directly rather than testing your partner. Begin allowing repair efforts to matter. State your triggers instead of storing them up as evidence for protection later.
By Daniel Crosby March 3, 2026
Level 2: Substitute Trust At this stage, trust is still really shaky. Many betrayed partners say, “Show me. I need proof. I want to see your phone, your location, your actions.” Think of Substitute Trust like a cast on a broken bone. It’s not a replacement for bone itself, but it holds the bone in place while it heals. When transparency is offered voluntarily it tells the injured partner, “You don’t have to chase the truth. I’m bringing it to you.” When a hurting person has to demand transparency, it causes more distrust and paranoia. For the betrayed partner, the goal is not to eliminate fear it’s to reduce chaos. Proof can bring relief, but it’s important to notice when checking becomes a way to regulate anxiety rather than restore connection. Substitute trust should support healing, not replace it. This stage works best when both partners understand that transparency is not punishment. It protects the relationship, emotional safety, and gives us momentum to keep growing. Over time the need for constant proof should slowly decrease, not because you’re forcing yourself to stop checking, but because your nervous system no longer needs it as much. For the partner who caused the harm: Practice radical transparency. Voluntarily offer proof rather than waiting to be asked. C onsistency matters more than one-time disclosures. For the betrayed partner: Use transparency as a temporary support for safety, not a permanent way to regulate anxiety or gain certainty. Be honest about whether the proof you seek is truly helping or becoming a crutch.
By Daniel Crosby February 24, 2026
Level 1b: Self-Trust After betrayal, many people don’t just lose trust in their partner, they lose trust in THEMSELVES. “Did I miss the signs?” “Was I naive?” “Can I ever trust my own judgment again?” Rebuilding self-trust is not about becoming fearful or suspicious of everyone. It’s about reconnecting with your perceptions, instincts, and internal signals and learning to respect them again. Maybe you sensed something was off but talked yourself out of it to preserve the relationship or the family. That doesn’t mean you’re bad it means you were trying to do the right thing and ended up getting bit. This level runs through EVERY stage of trust rebuilding. Even as your partner becomes more consistent, your work is to begin to listen to your inner self again. When self-trust grows, you’re no longer relying entirely on your partner’s behavior to feel safe. You begin to carry safety inside yourself again. For the partner who caused the harm: Be patient. Support your partner in regaining confidence in their own feelings and reality. Avoid defensiveness, minimizing, or anything that resembles gaslighting. For the betrayed partner: Practice trusting your instincts and emotional responses. Recall times when you listened to your gut well. Reestablish what you will and will not accept in a relationship and honor those boundaries consistently.