Writing

Field Notes

Search-friendly writing that still sounds like a real person: geek therapy, queer identity, neurodivergence, masking, relationships, fandom, and shame.

Purpose

Useful for clients, useful for Google, still honest.

This page is a scaffold for future posts that can answer the questions people are already searching for: What is geek therapy? Is couples therapy queer affirming? What does neurodivergent-affirming therapy actually mean?

The goal is to make the site easier to find without flattening the voice into generic wellness copy.

Content Direction

Write like the reader is trying to decide if they are safe here.

Posts can be practical, funny, angry when appropriate, gentle when needed, and specific enough that queer and neurodivergent readers feel recognized rather than marketed to.

  • Plain-language answers before jargon.
  • Pop-culture references when they clarify, not when they perform.
  • Clear CTAs back to the booking page.

Topic Clusters

Future posts can live under these search paths.

Each topic can become a short, useful article that links back to the relevant service or consultation page.

Geek Therapy

What geek therapy is, who it helps, and how games, anime, and fandom can become therapy language.

Service page

Neurodivergence

Masking, burnout, sensory needs, late diagnosis, executive function, and therapy that does not treat difference as failure.

Book consult

Queer Identity

Chosen family, coming out, staying in, grief, anger, joy, safety, and what affirming therapy should actually feel like.

Book consult

Couples Therapy

Communication loops, repair, resentment, co-op metaphors, neurodivergent partnerships, and conflict that keeps respawning.

Service page

Starter Post Ideas

A few search-friendly titles to grow into.

  • What Is Geek Therapy, and Do I Have to Be a Gamer to Try It?
  • Neurodivergent-Affirming Therapy: What It Means Beyond Being "Nice."
  • Queer-Affirming Couples Therapy in Washington State.
  • Why Talking About Your Favorite Character Can Matter in Therapy.
  • Masking, Burnout, and the Exhaustion of Sounding Normal.