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Medical Trauma: When Healthcare Experiences Leave Emotional Scars
Most people think of trauma as something that happens during combat, abuse, natural disasters, or serious accidents. However, trauma can also occur in places designed to help us: hospitals, doctors' offices, emergency rooms, and medical treatment centers. Medical trauma refers to the emotional, psychological, and physiological distress that can result from frightening, painful, invasive, or life-threatening healthcare experiences. While medical interventions may save lives, t
Noah Carroll
5 days ago4 min read


A Day to Slow Down, Reset, and Reconnect: Introducing the InSight Autumn Retreat
As life becomes increasingly fast, overstimulating, and disconnected, many people find themselves longing for something simple but deeply meaningful: space to breathe, reconnect, and feel grounded again. This September, InSight Therapy is hosting a one-day immersive outdoor retreat in beautiful Chester Springs designed to offer exactly that. Set among trees, open sky, and a peaceful flowing creek, the retreat blends experiential wellness practices, emotionally meaningful conn
Noah Carroll
May 93 min read


Hidden Terrain: Unique Challenges Faced by Survivors of Sexual Assault
Surviving sexual assault is not a single event—it is an ongoing, layered experience that unfolds across emotional, physical, social, and institutional domains. While the trauma itself is profound, many survivors find that what follows—the systems meant to protect, validate, and deliver justice—can introduce additional burdens that are often invisible to those outside the experience. The Psychological Aftermath Meets Institutional Reality Survivors often experience symptoms co
Noah Carroll
May 15 min read


Leveling Up Therapy: Why Modern Psychotherapists Need to Understand Video Games and Gamer Culture
In today’s clinical landscape, psychotherapy is no longer confined to traditional narratives of work stress, family dynamics, or internal cognition. Increasingly, clients—children, adolescents, and adults alike—are bringing digital worlds into the therapy room. For many, video games are not just a pastime; they are a primary space for identity formation, social connection, achievement, and emotional regulation. For the modern psychotherapist, understanding video games and gam
Noah Carroll
Mar 244 min read


A Natural Integration: Psychedelic-Assisted Psychotherapy & Internal Family Systems (IFS):
In recent years, renewed research into psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy has sparked growing interest among clinicians, researchers, and patients seeking deeper healing from trauma, depression, anxiety, and existential distress. Substances such as Psilocybin, MDMA, and Ketamine are being studied in clinical settings at institutions like Johns Hopkins Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research and MAPS. At the same time, many therapists are discovering that psychedelic
Noah Carroll
Mar 164 min read


Biofeedback in Psychotherapy: How Your Body Becomes a Partner in Healing
Psychotherapy is evolving. While traditional talk therapy remains foundational, clinicians are increasingly integrating biofeedback —a science-based method that turns your body’s physiological signals into real-time therapeutic tools. Through sensors that track heart rate, muscle tension, breathing patterns, or brainwaves, biofeedback helps the patient see stress responses as they happen, giving them immediate insight into the mind-body connection. At its core, biofeedback t
Noah Carroll
Feb 243 min read


Rebound Anxiety & Benzodiazepines: Understanding the Hidden Cycle
Benzodiazepines such as alprazolam, lorazepam, clonazepam, and diazepam are commonly prescribed for anxiety and panic because they work quickly and effectively—at least in the short term. What many people aren’t warned about is rebound anxiety , a phenomenon where anxiety returns more intensely after a dose wears off. This can happen even when someone is taking their medication exactly as prescribed, and it often leads individuals to believe their anxiety disorder is worseni
Noah Carroll
Feb 42 min read


Living a Life That Matters: Core Values and ACT
Core Values in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) places core values at the center of psychological healing and personal growth. Many people enter therapy feeling stuck, disconnected, or uncertain about why life feels unfulfilling, even when external circumstances appear stable. ACT approaches this experience not as a problem to eliminate, but as a signal that a person may be living out of alignment with what truly matters to them.
Noah Carroll
Dec 29, 20253 min read


Holiday Coping Strategies
Caring for Your Mental Health During a Demanding Season The holidays are often portrayed as joyful, cozy, and full of connection—but for many people, this season brings stress, grief, family tension, financial pressure, and emotional exhaustion. Expectations can feel higher, boundaries can feel thinner, and old patterns often resurface when families gather. If the holidays feel hard, that doesn’t mean you’re doing them wrong—it means you’re human. Supporting mental health dur
Noah Carroll
Dec 17, 20253 min read
Embracing Experiential Therapy: A Path to Healing
The Shift in Therapeutic Approaches This past July 4th, I sat around a shaded table, poolside. I watched my son and his friends swim while talking with a handful of other adults. There was another therapist there as well. When therapists attend social events, we often get asked many questions. With two of us present, the conversation was dominated by matters of human existence. At one point, a man in his mid-50s said, "I like seeing my therapist. I see her maybe once a month
Noah Carroll
Jul 21, 20254 min read


EMDR: Therapy Without all the Talk
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is a form of psychotherapy developed by psychologist Dr. Francine Shapiro in the...
Noah Carroll
May 21, 20253 min read
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