06/19/2026
Have you ever looked at your schedule for the week and thought:
"How did I end up here?"
Not because you don't enjoy being a therapist.
Not because you don't care about your clients.
But because the practice you're working in today doesn't quite feel like the practice you were hoping to build.
Maybe your referrals feel random.
One week you're seeing a couple, an adolescent, a trauma client, a parenting case, and someone seeking EMDR.
Maybe when someone asks who you work with, your answer feels like a list of every presenting concern imaginable.
Maybe you've updated your website, rewritten your Psychology Today profile, and still feel like it doesn't really capture who you are or the work you do best.
Or maybe you're fully booked, but still find yourself wondering why the work feels more draining than it used to.
None of these things automatically mean something is wrong.
But they can be signs that your caseload is no longer aligned with the practice you're trying to build.
One of the biggest shifts I see therapists make is moving from asking:
"How do I get more clients?"
to asking:
"Who do I actually want to work with?"
That question often changes everything.
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Building stronger practices with stronger presence.
www.bradleysolutionsllc.com
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