Would you benefit from having someone to support and guide you?
For Healers Who Need Healing
Asking for Help When You Are Usually The One in the Helping Role
I have a deep appreciation for working with therapists, social workers, nurses, and caregivers.
Mental Health Professionals
For those in mental health, there can be a quiet pressure to have the answers—to feel like you should be able to navigate things on your own. We may shame ourselves for our needs and for not solving our own problems.
“I have the training. I know what to do. Why would I need to see someone?”
It’s a familiar line of thinking. It’s one I’ve known, too—and one that can shift over time.
Having someone witness, contain, and guide your experience is different from knowing how it works theoretically or practicing strategies on your own. After many years in this field, I still value my own therapeutic relationship, not because I can't figure things out, but because I’ve learned that being a therapy client makes me a healthier person and a better therapist.
Medical Professionals and Caregivers
For those in the medical or caregiving field, we may play the comparison game. “I’m so lucky compared to my patients, or loved ones who are suffering — Is it selfish to focus on me?” We may feel responsible for others healing, prioritizing their needs ahead of our own and not feeling sure how to make time and space to feel, process and cope with our own emotions and experiences.
You give so much of yourself every day. You hold other people's hardest things. You're allowed to put that weight down somewhere safe.
This could be that place.
"The helpers need help too. And they often need someone who gets exactly how hard it is to ask for it."
-Ruth
What we work on together:
Compassion fatigue and vicarious trauma
The loneliness that can come with always being the one others rely on
Acknowledging and validating your own experience and developing a healthy outlet for difficult feelings
Creating space to not be okay, and a path back to yourself
Frequently Asked Questions
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Yes. Ruth Weinberg, a Denver therapist who works with other therapists, believes this strongly and practices it herself. Having someone witness and guide your own experience is fundamentally different from knowing how the process works theoretically or using strategies on your own. After years in the field, Ruth still values her own therapeutic relationship, not because she can't figure things out, but because it makes her a healthier person and a better therapist.
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Ruth Weinberg’s therapy with therapists, social workers, nurses, and caregivers focuses on compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma, the loneliness of always being the one who is supporting others, and anything that may make asking for help feel difficult. She offers permission to not be okay and a path back to yourself. Her Denver practice also serves Colorado and South Carolina caregivers via telehealth.
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Yes, and Ruth Weinberg believes deeply about the importance of this work. The helpers need help too, and they often need someone who understands exactly how hard it is to ask for it. Ruth meets therapists and caregivers without judgment for needing to put the weight down somewhere safe. You give so much every day, this is a place where you don't have to.