The Digital Disconnect: How Technology Creates Distance in Relationships
Technology and social media can impact intimate relationships in a myriad of ways: some good, some bad. Read more to learn how to use technology to enhance your intimacy.
Technology and social media can impact intimate relationships in a myriad of ways: some good, some bad. Read more to learn how to use technology to enhance your intimacy.
Valentine’s Day is our designated holiday to celebrate love in all forms but most typically the romantic love between two people. However, behind every social media post of roses, chocolates, and candles with “#couplegoals” in the caption, there is a real couple in a real relationship that encounter real challenges at times. Individuals are complex and pairing them together enhances this complexity. A satisfying relationship typically requires ongoing commitment, investment, and effort from each partner to maintain its longevity. In a word, relationships are work. But, for most individuals who desire an intimate relationship with another, the love and connection their union provides is worth the effort.
Are sleep problems a symptom or an independent disorder? They can be both! Sleep challenges are a component of many disorders. Indeed, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-5th addition (DSM-V) lists disturbed sleep as a symptom of depression, anxiety, and PTSD. Although sleep problems are not an explicit symptom of disorders such as OCD, ADHD, and autism, clients with these diagnoses frequently report that their sleep is poor. If low-quality sleep is a symptom, will treating depression, anxiety, or PTSD also fix sleep? In many cases, sleep problems persist even after other symptoms have been successfully relieved. Does it make sense to start with addressing sleep or addressing the other disorder?
The gold-standard therapy approach for clients who want to learn to manage their ADHD symptoms is Executive Functioning Coaching. Sometimes people think that this term means that only individuals who are professionals in executive-level jobs are appropriate for this therapy. That is a common misunderstanding. Executive Functioning in this instance actually refers to the specific parts of the brain and the tasks associated with them that the therapy addresses. ADHD generally involves abilities that are grouped together under the title Executive Functioning, which is a fancy way of referring to the following types of tasks: sustaining attention and avoiding distraction, committing day-to-day information to memory and being able to recall it later, organizing and following through with assignments and projects, regulating intense emotions, and fitting in socially with peers and colleagues.