Maybe you're the family member who always gets called difficult or dramatic, and things go wrong and somehow land on you. Your side of the story gets waved off, and every argument traces back to your name. If that feels familiar, there's a word for it. Scapegoating is when a family unfairly blames one person for problems they didn't cause. It often starts in childhood, long before you're old enough to question it, and over time it can shape how you see yourself.
Gray Rock Method: How to Handle a Narcissist You Can't Avoid
If you are stuck dealing with a narcissist you cannot simply walk away from, you already know how draining every interaction can be. Maybe it is a co-parent, a boss, a coworker, or a family member, and going no contact is not an option right now. You may have searched for the gray rock method because you heard it can help you protect your peace when you have to keep showing up. The gray rock method is a way of becoming so calm, plain, and unreactive that a manipulative person loses interest in trying to get a rise out of you.
In this post, we’ll explain what the gray rock method is, why it works on people who feed off your reactions, and how to use it step by step. We’ll also be honest about its limits, including when it is not safe to use and what to do instead. At Anchor Therapy, we help people navigate narcissistic and toxic relationships every day, and you don’t have to figure this out alone.
The Silent Treatment: Why It Hurts So Much and How to Respond
If someone you love has gone quiet on you, shutting down and refusing to speak, you already know how confusing and painful it feels. Maybe you’ve been searching for the psychology of the silent treatment because you want to understand what’s really happening and why it cuts so deep. You’re not alone, and your reaction isn’t an overreaction. The silent treatment is the deliberate refusal to talk to or acknowledge another person as a way to express anger, gain control, or punish them.
In this post, we’ll walk through why people use the silent treatment, what it does to your brain and body, and when this pattern crosses the line into emotional abuse. We’ll also look at how to tell the silent treatment apart from a healthy need for space, and what you can do to respond. At Anchor Therapy, we help people untangle these dynamics every day, and we are with you every step of the way.
10 Type A Personality Traits That Drive Success
What Causes Narcissistic Collapse: The Triggers, the Signs, and What Comes Next
You've watched someone in your life hold everything together with unsettling control. Nothing cracks the surface. Then something shifts. Maybe they didn't get the promotion. Maybe a relationship ended on someone else's terms. Maybe they were called out publicly, and the person who seemed bulletproof suddenly isn't.
What you're witnessing may be a narcissistic collapse, which is the psychological breakdown that happens when a narcissist's inflated self-image can no longer be sustained.
This post focuses specifically on what causes it. If you've already read our overview of what narcissistic collapse is and how long it lasts, this goes one layer deeper: the specific events and dynamics that actually trigger the breakdown. Understanding the triggers can help you make sense of a reaction that feels completely disproportionate. It can also help you recognize when someone around you is close to collapsing, and if needed, prepare yourself accordingly.
How to Calm Your Fear of Confrontation and Difficult Conversations
You have been rehearsing the same conversation in your head for three days. Maybe it is asking your boss for a raise, telling a friend they hurt you, or finally bringing up something with your partner that you have been avoiding for weeks. Your stomach knots, your heart picks up speed, and a quiet voice insists that it would just be easier to say nothing at all. If that sounds familiar, you are dealing with something very common and very treatable.
Communication anxiety is the intense fear or dread you feel before, during, or after important conversations, especially serious ones that carry the risk of conflict or disappointment. For many people, this shows up most strongly as a fear of difficult conversations, the kind where the stakes feel high and the outcome feels uncertain. In this blog, you will learn what communication anxiety is, why your brain treats hard talks like a threat, what keeps the fear going, and how therapy can help you speak up without spiraling.
What The Fawn Trauma Response Is and How to Heal
Someone in the next room raises their voice, and before you have even registered what is happening, you are already softening yours. You apologize for something that was not your fault. You agree with an opinion you do not actually hold, and you feel a small wave of relief when the tension finally drops. If this feels familiar, you are not imagining it, and you are not weak.
What you may be experiencing is something therapists call the fawn trauma response. The fawn trauma response is a survival pattern where you automatically try to please, appease, or accommodate other people to feel safe, usually at the expense of your own needs and feelings. It often gets mistaken for being kind, easygoing, or "low maintenance" which is part of why it can go unnoticed for years. In this blog, you will learn what the fawn response is, where it comes from, how to spot it in your daily life, and how trauma therapy can help you find your way back to yourself.
What Is A Narcissistic Collapse?
You've been walking on eggshells for weeks, and then something shifts. The person who usually projects total confidence suddenly can't get out of bed, or explodes at something that would have barely registered before. Maybe they're playing the victim in ways that feel completely disconnected from reality, or they've gone completely silent. You don't know what triggered it, and you're not sure what's coming next.
A narcissistic collapse is the psychological breakdown that occurs when a person with narcissistic traits or Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) can no longer maintain the inflated self-image they depend on for emotional stability. It's triggered by anything that threatens their carefully constructed sense of superiority, and it can look dramatically different depending on the person. This blog breaks down what a narcissistic collapse actually is, what it looks like, and what you can do to protect yourself when you're in close proximity to one.
Disenfranchised Grief: How to Mourn a Complicated Relationship
Maybe you hadn't spoken in years. Maybe you had, but every conversation left you drained, hurt, or angry. Maybe you loved them deeply and resented them in equal measure, and now that they're gone, you don't know what you're supposed to feel. The death of someone you had a complicated relationship with is one of the most disorienting forms of grief there is, and one of the least talked about.
Disenfranchised grief is grief that society doesn't openly acknowledge or validate. It's the kind of grief that comes from losing someone you had a complicated relationship with, where the people around you may not understand why you're struggling or may expect you to feel only relieved.
Tell Me Lies and Toxic Relationships: What the Show Gets Right
If you've watched Tell Me Lies and found yourself unable to look away, even while knowing that everything about Stephen and Lucy's relationship was wrong, you're not alone. There's something deeply uncomfortable about how recognizable it all feels.
The way charm can make you second-guess your own instincts. The way someone can make you feel chosen and disposable in the same breath. The way you can see the damage happening and still not be able to walk away.
Tell Me Lies is a Hulu drama series that follows college student Lucy Albright as she becomes entangled with Stephen DeMarco, a manipulative and emotionally destructive partner whose behavior spirals across three seasons into one of the most clinically accurate portrayals of a toxic relationship on television. This blog breaks down what the show gets right about manipulation, why Stephen and Lucy's dynamic is so hard to leave, and what it looks like to actually heal from a relationship like theirs.
Financial Infidelity: What It Is and How to Rebuild Trust
It starts as a conversation about a credit card statement and ends with both of you in separate rooms, not speaking. Or one of you makes a purchase the other didn't know about, and suddenly you're not just talking about money anymore. You're talking about trust, control, and whether you're actually on the same team. Sound familiar?
Financial stress in relationships is the tension, conflict, and emotional distance that arises when partners have different money habits, values, or communication styles around finances. It is one of the most common and least talked-about sources of relationship strain, and it affects couples at every income level. This blog breaks down why money fights happen, what's really going on underneath them, and what you and your partner can do to get on the same page.
Mental Health TikTok: Helpful Insight or Anxiety Trap?
You open TikTok to decompress for a few minutes and, forty-five minutes later, you've watched seventeen videos about attachment styles, taken a mental quiz about whether you have ADHD, and learned the name of a trauma response you've apparently been experiencing your whole life. You close the app feeling more informed, but also somehow more worried than you were before. Sound familiar?
TikTok anxiety is the psychological tension that builds when short-form video content, especially mental health content, triggers self-comparison, overstimulation, or compulsive scrolling in ways that leave you feeling worse rather than better. This blog explores both sides of the TikTok mental health conversation: the ways it can genuinely increase self-awareness, the ways it quietly fuels anxiety, and how to tell the difference in your own life.
What Is Pure O OCD? Understanding Mental Obsessions and Intrusive Thoughts
If you've ever had a thought pop into your head that horrified you, one you'd never act on, one that felt completely out of character, and then spent hours trying to push it out, you know how disorienting that experience can be. For people with OCD, that's not an occasional moment. It's a cycle that can take over large chunks of the day. OCD obsession is an unwanted, repetitive thought, image, or urge that triggers intense anxiety and pulls the mind into a loop of trying to neutralize or escape it.
Most people picture OCD as someone checking the stove or washing their hands. But for many people with OCD, the disorder lives almost entirely in their head, as a flood of unwanted, disturbing intrusive thoughts they’d never act on but can’t stop having. This subtype is often called Pure O OCD, and it’s one of the most misunderstood and underdiagnosed forms of the disorder. This post explains what Pure O looks like, why intrusive thoughts feel so threatening in this kind of OCD, and what genuinely helps.
Growing Up With Conditional Love in a Dysfunctional Family System
If love in your home growing up always felt like something you had to earn, you already know how exhausting that is to carry. Maybe you learned early that affection came with conditions: be good enough, stay quiet enough, achieve enough, and you'd be okay. Step out of line, and the warmth disappeared. Conditional love is when a parent's affection, approval, or emotional availability depends on a child meeting certain expectations rather than being offered freely and consistently. That kind of environment shapes you in ways that don't just stay in childhood.
Growing up with conditional love in a dysfunctional family system can affect how you see yourself, how you relate to others, and how you move through the world as an adult, often without realizing where those patterns came from. This blog will walk you through what conditional love actually looks like, how it affects adult relationships and self-worth, and what healing can look like with the right support.
Are Empaths Real?
Have you ever walked into a room and immediately felt the emotional temperature shift? Maybe you picked up on a friend's sadness before they said a single word, or you left a party feeling completely drained by emotions that weren't even yours. If that sounds familiar, you've probably wondered whether you're an empath, and whether empaths are even real.
An empath is a person with an extraordinary sensitivity to the emotions, energy, and moods of the people around them, experiencing those feelings as if they were their own. It's a term that gets used a lot on social media and in wellness communities, but the question of whether empaths are real is worth answering honestly. The science turns out to be more interesting than either the skeptics or the true believers tend to admit.
In this blog, we'll look at what the research says, how psychology understands high emotional sensitivity, and what it all means for your mental health and relationships.
Anxiety After Job Loss: Why It Happens and How to Get Through It
Losing a job can pull the floor out from under you. One day you have a routine, a paycheck, a place to be every morning. The next, all of that is gone, and the anxiety that moves in can feel impossible to shake. If you've been lying awake running the numbers, second-guessing every decision that led here, or dreading the question "so, what do you do?", you're not overreacting.
Anxiety after job loss is one of the most common and least talked-about mental health challenges adults face. This blog will walk you through why it hits so hard, how long it typically lasts, what actually helps, and when working with an anxiety therapist at Anchor Therapy can make a real difference in how quickly you get back on your feet.
How to Cope With a Breakup as a Man (And Why It's Harder Than Anyone Tells You)
You're doing fine until you're not. Maybe it hits you in the car on the way to work, or at 11pm when you reach for your phone and remember there's no one to text. The relationship is over, and even if part of you saw it coming, nothing quite prepares you for the weight of it.
If you've landed here searching for how to cope with a breakup as a man, you're probably not someone who talks about this stuff easily, and that's exactly why it tends to hit so hard. Men are rarely given the tools to process emotional pain, let alone permission to feel it. This blog is going to walk you through what's actually happening when a breakup wrecks you, why the things you're feeling make complete sense, and what can genuinely help, including how working with a male therapist at Anchor Therapy can change the way you move forward.
What Is The #1 Thing That Destroys Marriages?
The #1 thing that destroys marriages is not always dramatic as it is often something that quietly erodes the bond over time: a breakdown in communication. When couples stop truly talking and listening to each other, small misunderstandings turn into major resentments. Conversations become arguments, emotional distance grows, and partners begin to feel unheard or unloved. Without open, honest, and empathetic communication, even the strongest relationships can start to crumble.
Healthy communication is the heartbeat of every successful marriage. It is what allows couples to navigate conflict, share dreams, express needs, and maintain emotional intimacy. When that connection fades, partners can drift apart, not because they stopped loving each other, but because they stopped understanding each other. Recognizing the signs of poor communication and making intentional efforts to rebuild it can mean the difference between a relationship that merely survives and one that truly thrives.
Why Do I Keep Attracting Narcissistic Partners?
You look back at your relationships and notice a pattern that is hard to ignore. At first, things often feel exciting, intense, and deeply connecting, but over time something shifts. You start feeling confused, second-guessing yourself, and wondering how things that felt so good in the beginning can end up feeling so draining or painful. If you have ever asked yourself why this keeps happening with the people you choose, you are not alone.
Wondering “why do I keep attracting narcissistic partners?” usually comes from a place of frustration and self-reflection, not blame. The truth is, this pattern is rarely about one single type of person or a conscious choice you are making. It is often shaped by emotional experiences, attachment patterns, and what feels familiar to your nervous system. In this blog, we will explore why this pattern happens, what may be drawing you into these dynamics, and how you can begin to break the cycle over time.
8 Tips for Dealing With A Narcissist
You're walking on eggshells in your own home. Conversations that should be simple turn into something you have to brace yourself for, and the moment you push back on anything, the script flips and somehow you're the bad one. You've started Googling words like "narcissist" and "manipulation" at 11pm because you don't know what to call what's happening, but you know something is wrong. You searched for how to deal with a narcissist, and you landed here. This post walks through what actually counts as narcissistic behavior versus everyday self-centeredness, what to watch for in your own relationship, and 8 specific strategies our therapists at Anchor Therapy use with clients who can't, or aren't ready to, leave the relationship.
The first step to determine your dynamic with someone who you think is a narcissist is to know the difference between someone with narcissistic tendencies and someone with Narcissistic Personality Disorder.























