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Maybe You Should Talk to Someone: A Therapist, Her Therapist, and Our Lives Revealed cover
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Maybe You Should Talk to Someone: A Therapist, Her Therapist, and Our Lives Revealed

Lori Gottlieb (2019)

Genre

Psychology / Biography / Memoir / Health

Reading Time

480 min

Key Themes

See below

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When a therapist suddenly finds herself on the other side of the couch, she discovers that the universal struggles of her diverse patients mirror her own journey through love, loss, and the messy, humorous business of being human.

Core Idea

Lori Gottlieb's "Maybe You Should Talk to Someone" says that we often seek therapy to fix specific problems or change others, but the real power of therapy is confronting our shared human condition: our mortality, our isolation, our search for meaning, and our freedom. Through her own therapy journey and those of her patients, Gottlieb shows that individual struggles often reflect universal human anxieties. Healing comes not from finding answers or perfect control, but from developing self-compassion, accepting vulnerability, and living in the present with more awareness and empathy. The book suggests that understanding our internal stories and the unseen forces shaping our lives helps us find peace and connection.
Reading time
480 min
Difficulty
Medium
✓ Read this if...
You're curious about the inner workings of therapy, enjoy deeply personal memoirs, or are looking for insights into the universal human experiences of grief, love, loss, and change.
✗ Skip this if...
You prefer highly academic or clinical psychology texts, or are uncomfortable with raw emotional honesty and detailed personal accounts of mental health struggles.

Core idea

The central argument and framework that powers the entire book.

Lori Gottlieb's "Maybe You Should Talk to Someone" says that we often seek therapy to fix specific problems or change others, but the real power of therapy is confronting our shared human condition: our mortality, our isolation, our search for meaning, and our freedom. Through her own therapy journey and those of her patients, Gottlieb shows that individual struggles often reflect universal human anxieties. Healing comes not from finding answers or perfect control, but from developing self-compassion, accepting vulnerability, and living in the present with more awareness and empathy. The book suggests that understanding our internal stories and the unseen forces shaping our lives helps us find peace and connection.

At a glance

Reading time

480 min

Difficulty

Medium

Read this if...

You're curious about the inner workings of therapy, enjoy deeply personal memoirs, or are looking for insights into the universal human experiences of grief, love, loss, and change.

Skip this if...

You prefer highly academic or clinical psychology texts, or are uncomfortable with raw emotional honesty and detailed personal accounts of mental health struggles.

Key Takeaways

1

The Universal 'We'

Therapists are not immune to the human condition; they are just further along in processing it.

Quote

We are all just walking each other home.

Gottlieb shows that therapists face the same struggles, anxieties, and questions as their patients. This makes the therapy process normal and shows that seeking help is a basic part of being human, not a sign of weakness. By sharing her own vulnerabilities, Gottlieb creates a strong sense of shared experience, making therapy accessible and understandable. It shows that self-awareness is an ongoing process, not something only a few people achieve.

Supporting evidence

Gottlieb's entire narrative structure, where she interweaves her own sessions with Wendell with those of her patients (Rita, John, Julie, Charlotte), demonstrating parallel struggles like fear of loss, meaning, and connection.

Apply this

Approach personal challenges with a therapist not as someone who has all the answers, but as a skilled guide who understands the terrain because they've walked (and are still walking) similar paths. This perspective fosters trust and reduces shame.

therapist-vulnerabilityuniversal-human-experienceempathy-in-therapy
2

The Power of Story

We are the unreliable narrators of our own lives, and therapy helps us revise the script.

Quote

We all have a story that we tell ourselves about ourselves. We need to be careful with that story, because it's the one that will determine how we live our lives.

Gottlieb says that much of our suffering comes from the stories we tell ourselves about our lives. These stories often have unexamined assumptions, beliefs that limit us, and things we conveniently leave out. Therapy is a process of taking apart and rebuilding these stories. It challenges old ideas to show new perspectives and possibilities. It is about asking why we do and believe things, not just what we do. This means finding the missing parts, the flaws (real and imagined), and the emotional truths we have removed, to create a mor...

Supporting evidence

John, the Hollywood producer, initially frames himself as a victim of others' incompetence, but through therapy, he begins to see his own role in his relationship breakdowns and professional frustrations. Rita, the elderly woman, clings to a narrative of being unloved, which therapy helps her re-evaluate.

Apply this

Pay close attention to the stories you tell yourself about your past, your relationships, and your capabilities. Ask yourself: Is this story serving me? What parts might I be overlooking? Try to reframe negative self-talk into more compassionate or neutral observations.

narrative-therapyself-limiting-beliefscognitive-restructuring
3

The Illusion of Control

Much of our anxiety stems from a desperate, often futile, attempt to control the uncontrollable.

Quote

Sometimes the biggest thing we're trying to control is the fact that we can't control everything.

A common challenge for Gottlieb's patients, and for her, is dealing with life's unpredictability. From Julie's terminal illness diagnosis to Gottlieb's unexpected breakup, the book shows how trying to control outcomes, other people, or even our emotions often causes more stress. Therapy helps us tell the difference between what we can influence and what we cannot. It encourages acceptance and adjustment instead of rigid resistance. It is a journey from trying to 'fix' everything to learning to live with uncertainty and finding agency ...

Supporting evidence

Julie's struggle to come to terms with her terminal illness, initially trying to control every aspect of her remaining life, eventually finding peace in acceptance and focusing on her legacy. Gottlieb's own shock and attempts to 'fix' her relationship after her partner leaves.

Apply this

Identify areas in your life where you're expending significant energy trying to control external circumstances or others' behaviors. Practice letting go and focusing instead on your reactions, attitudes, and choices within those circumstances. Embrace radical acceptance.

acceptance-commitment-therapyanxiety-managementlocus-of-control
4

The Power of the Present

While the past informs us and the future beckons, true change and peace reside in the now.

Quote

The only way out is through, and the only 'through' is the present moment.

Gottlieb says that while therapy often looks at past experiences to understand their impact, its main goal is to help patients live more fully and truly in the present. Many of her patients are stuck in past regrets or future worries, which stops them from feeling joy, connection, or even pain in the present. Wendell, Gottlieb's therapist, always brings her and her patients back to their current feelings and experiences. This shows that change happens by feeling and acting in the present, not just by thinking about things. This focus ...

Supporting evidence

Charlotte, the young woman who constantly dates 'wrong' men, is encouraged to examine her present patterns and feelings rather than just recounting past failed relationships. Gottlieb herself is often brought back to her immediate emotions by Wendell when she tries to intellectualize her pain.

Apply this

Practice mindfulness regularly. When you find yourself dwelling on the past or worrying about the future, gently bring your attention back to your breath, your senses, or the task at hand. Engage fully in conversations and activities.

mindfulnesspresent-moment-awarenesscognitive-behavioral-therapy
5

The Nature of Empathy

True empathy isn't about relating to specific events, but to the underlying human emotions.

Quote

We are all more alike than we are different. The specifics of our stories vary, but the underlying emotions are universal.

Gottlieb clearly shows that despite the very different lives of her patients—a terminally ill newlywed, a lonely senior, a narcissistic producer—their main emotional needs and fears are very similar. These include the fear of being alone, the desire for love, the search for meaning, and dealing with mortality. Her role as a therapist, and Wendell's role for her, is not to have experienced the exact same events, but to connect with the universal feelings of grief, fear, joy, and hope. This shows that empathy goes beyond specific storie...

Supporting evidence

Gottlieb finds herself relating to John's fear of abandonment, Julie's search for legacy, and Rita's loneliness, even though their life paths are entirely different from her own. Her own experience with abandonment after her breakup makes her more attuned to these feelings in her patients.

Apply this

When trying to understand others, shift your focus from judging or comparing their specific situations to recognizing the universal human emotions they might be experiencing. Ask yourself: What might it feel like to be in their shoes, emotionally?

emotional-intelligenceinterpersonal-connectionshared-humanity
6

The Gift of the End

Endings, though painful, often provide the impetus for profound growth and a deeper appreciation of life.

Quote

It's in the endings that we learn to begin again, often with a clarity and urgency we didn't have before.

The book explores different kinds of endings: the end of a relationship, the end of life, the end of a perceived identity. Gottlieb says that these endings, though often devastating, make us face what really matters. Julie's terminal illness makes her focus strongly on her legacy and love. Rita's thoughts of ending her life push her to seek connection. Gottlieb's own breakup makes her re-evaluate her independence and desires. Endings remove superficial things, revealing core values and starting a strong drive for change and a more int...

Supporting evidence

Julie's transformation from a woman focused on her wedding to one deeply contemplating her legacy and the impact she wants to leave. Rita's decision to seek therapy after planning to end her life on her birthday, leading to new friendships and a renewed sense of purpose.

Apply this

When facing an ending, instead of solely focusing on the loss, try to identify what new opportunities for growth, self-discovery, or re-prioritization this ending might present. Embrace the discomfort as a signpost for change.

grief-processingresiliencepost-traumatic-growth
7

The Illusion of Choice

Sometimes, the biggest obstacle to happiness is our refusal to choose.

Quote

We often think we have no choice, when in fact, we're simply choosing not to choose.

Gottlieb observes that many people stay in unsatisfying situations because they think they lack power or options. Charlotte, for example, repeatedly chooses partners who are 'wrong' for her but struggles to change the pattern. The 'choice' is not always clear or easy, but acknowledging one's ability to choose—even if it is choosing to stay and work on something, or choosing to leave—is empowering. Therapy helps show these hidden choices, making individuals responsible for their inaction as much as their action. This changes the story ...

Supporting evidence

Charlotte's pattern of dating unavailable men and her resistance to truly examine her own role in these dynamics. John's initial belief that his career struggles were solely due to external factors, rather than his own choices in how he interacts with colleagues.

Apply this

Identify an area in your life where you feel stuck. List all the options, even the uncomfortable ones. Acknowledge that even 'doing nothing' is a choice. Empower yourself by consciously making a decision, even if it's to gather more information first.

personal-agencydecision-makingself-responsibility
8

The Unseen Architects of Our Lives

Our past relationships and unresolved issues continue to shape our present and future interactions.

Quote

The past isn't dead. It's not even past.

Gottlieb clearly shows how early relationships, especially with parents, create patterns for how we interact with the world and others. John's distant relationship with his father, Charlotte's complicated dynamic with her mother, and Gottlieb's own struggles with her mother's expectations all affect their adult lives, impacting their romantic relationships, careers, and self-worth. Therapy is not about blaming the past, but understanding its influence to avoid unconsciously repeating old patterns. It is about recognizing the 'ghosts' ...

Supporting evidence

John's 'King Midas in reverse' syndrome, where he alienates people, is traced back to an emotionally distant father and a need for control. Charlotte's pattern of choosing unavailable men is linked to her relationship with her overbearing mother.

Apply this

Reflect on your significant past relationships, especially with primary caregivers. Identify recurring themes or patterns in your current relationships and consider how they might be connected to these earlier experiences. This awareness is the first step toward conscious change.

attachment-theoryintergenerational-traumapsychodynamic-therapy
9

The Search for Meaning

Beyond happiness, humans crave purpose and significance.

Quote

The search for meaning is not about finding 'the answer' but about living the question.

While many patients first come to therapy looking for 'happiness' or to be 'fixed,' Gottlieb shows that the deeper, often unstated, desire is for meaning. Julie's confrontation with mortality makes her define her legacy. Rita, thinking about suicide, seeks a reason to live. Gottlieb herself, after her breakup, questions her life's direction. The book suggests that meaning is not a static thing to find, but an active process of creation through relationships, contributions, and how we choose to live. It is a basic human need that, when...

Supporting evidence

Julie's journey from focusing on her wedding to deeply considering what she wants her life to mean to her child and husband. Rita's transformation from suicidal ideation to forming new friendships and finding joy in small acts of connection.

Apply this

Regularly reflect on what truly gives your life purpose. This could be through your work, relationships, hobbies, or acts of service. Consider how your daily actions align with your deepest values and contribute to a sense of meaning.

existential-therapypurpose-in-lifelogotherapy
10

The Art of Asking for Help

Vulnerability in seeking help is a profound act of courage, not weakness.

Quote

The people who come to therapy aren't 'sick'; they're stuck. And seeking help is the first step in getting unstuck.

Gottlieb's personal journey into therapy, even though she is a therapist, makes asking for help normal and less shameful. She openly shares her initial reluctance, her desire to 'fix herself,' and the relief and insight she gets from Wendell. The book says that admitting one's limits and seeking outside guidance takes courage and self-awareness. It is a proactive step toward growth, showing a commitment to self-improvement rather than giving in to problems. This openness leads to insights that are often impossible to get alone.

Supporting evidence

Gottlieb's internal monologue and initial hesitation to see Wendell, despite her professional background. Her eventual breakthroughs and personal growth directly attributed to her sessions with him, mirroring the progress of her own patients.

Apply this

If you're struggling, consider reaching out to a therapist, coach, or trusted mentor. Frame it not as admitting defeat, but as investing in your well-being and actively pursuing solutions. Be open to the process and the insights it might offer.

stigma-of-therapyvulnerabilityself-compassion

Critical analysis

Notable Quotes

Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.

Lori reflects on a foundational psychological concept, emphasizing personal agency in therapy.

We can't have change without loss, which is why so often people say they want change but nonetheless stay exactly the same.

Discussing the paradox of change and the fear of loss that holds people back.

The opposite of depression isn't happiness, it's vitality.

A therapist's insight shared with Lori, redefining mental health beyond simple emotions.

We are all unreliable narrators of our own lives.

Lori notes how clients (and herself) often distort their stories in therapy.

Therapy is about understanding the self that you are. But part of getting to know yourself is to unknow yourself—to let go of the limiting stories you've told yourself about who you are so that you aren't trapped by them.

Explaining the transformative goal of therapy beyond surface-level fixes.

People often mistake numbness for nothingness, but numbness isn't the absence of feelings; it's a response to being overwhelmed by too many feelings.

A nuanced observation about emotional avoidance and its roots.

The most painful tears are not the ones that fall from your eyes and cover your face. It's the ones that fall from your heart and cover your soul.

Lori describes deep emotional pain experienced by a client or herself.

We edit our memories to fit our narratives, and our narratives to fit our memories.

Reflecting on how people reconstruct their pasts to maintain coherence.

Therapy isn't about solving problems; it's about learning to live with them.

Challenging the misconception that therapy provides quick fixes.

Sometimes we need to be seen more than we need to be fixed.

Highlighting the therapeutic value of empathy and validation.

We are all just walking each other home.

A poetic line about shared human vulnerability and support.

The stories we tell ourselves about our lives become our lives.

Emphasizing the power of narrative in shaping reality and identity.

Grief is love with nowhere to go.

A succinct definition of grief shared in the context of loss.

The goal isn't to be happy all the time. The goal is to be present.

Rejecting unrealistic expectations of constant happiness in favor of mindfulness.

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It's a memoir by therapist Lori Gottlieb that explores therapy from both clinician and patient perspectives, following her own crisis and therapy with Wendell while detailing her patients' struggles with love, mortality, and change.

About the author