Preparing for your first psychology session

Preparation Prior to Your First Psychology Session

Brandon Kayat

Registered Clinical Psychologists

Durban, South Africa

Medically reviewed by TherapyRoute
It is helpful to prepare for your first session with your new psychologist. Here are some ideas on what to do.

It is compulsory, but it is helpful to consider your first psychology session with your new psychologist and prepare before your session. For those anxious about it, here are some ideas on what can be done before your first psychology session. It is, however, fully acceptable to go to sessions as is and go through the process without any prior preparation.

Consider what your main problem or reason for coming to therapy is

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Understanding and comprehending the reason for your choice to start therapy might sound like an easy step, but it can sometimes lead to going in circles during sessions trying to describe what is going on accurately.

It is a great idea to comprehend why you are choosing therapy now, what has happened recently to add to this decision and what other factors are affecting it. This is an excellent form of preparation.

Consider other things you would like to get off your chest or deal with

Some clients will remember only after the psychology session that there was important information that they really wanted to discuss but now have to wait until the next psychotherapy session to bring it up.

You may even find yourself in between sessions thinking: “Wow, I should discuss this with my therapist” when something significant happens. It is a good practice to note all of these things in preparation so you do not forget.

Even if the psychology session is not long enough for all the concerns, the psychologist may find valuable clues from this or create space in the next session to discuss these.

Journaling

For those who like this medium, journaling can be a valuable tool to record your thoughts and feelings. You may note that something upset you or find yourself thinking over and over again about particular topics.

These are valuable clues in your journey through therapy. In preparation, you can sum up the findings of this journal and bring the most important or valuable information through to therapy.

Mood Journaling

It is very helpful when dealing with mental health conditions to track moods daily. Just recording what mood you woke up in and what mood you went to bed in can give many valuable clues about mental state shifts, their triggers, their durations and their frequencies.

This is invaluable information for understanding mood, depression, trauma and anxiety disorders. Many useful apps, such as Daylio or How We Feel , can assist with such preparation.

Dream Journaling

Keeping highly detailed records of your dreams immediately after you wake up and while you remember them is an amazing way to communicate with the unconscious (see my blog on Dream Interpretation) and engage in preparation before your psychology session. Write down the date and the dream, recalling people, events, emotions and other important details as specifically as possible.

Some clients even benefit from stating what was happening in their lives at the time of the dream. This is very useful information in therapy- especially within psychoanalytic approaches.

Conclusion

These are just some of the ways preparation can be done before the psychology session to maximise the effectiveness of your therapy. Even if you do not want to do it or forget, trust the therapy process- the combination of your unconscious energy, your conscious participation and your therapist’s engagement will work together to make every psychology session valuable.

Important: TherapyRoute does not provide medical advice. All content is for informational purposes and cannot replace consulting a healthcare professional. If you face an emergency, please contact a local emergency service. For immediate emotional support, consider contacting a local helpline.

About The Author

Brandon

Brandon Kayat

Registered Clinical Psychologists

Monmouthshire, United Kingdom

Have you been experiencing a stuck point in your life? Are you ready to claim the life you deserve and know is waiting for you? Whether it is anxiety, trauma, men's mental health, couples counselling or group therapy (among others), let me help you transform.

Brandon Kayat is a qualified Registered Clinical Psychologists, based in , Monmouthshire, United Kingdom. With a commitment to mental health, Brandon provides services in , including ACT (Acceptance & Commitment Therapy), Dream Analysis, Relationship Counseling, Online Therapy, Psychoanalysis, Counseling, CBT, Group Therapy, Individual Therapy, Stress Management and Schema Therapy. Brandon has expertise in .