refuses to fit neatly into one box? Perhaps you’ve been told you have too many interests, change directions too often, or struggle to choose just one path. This article explores the psychology of polymaths, multipotentialites, and the many ways people relate to curiosity, learning, and meaning-making. Along the way, we’ll untangle common questions about neurodivergence, examine why some minds naturally connect seemingly unrelated ideas, and introduce four original Learning Archetypes: The Cartographer, The Collector, The Specialist, and The Weaver. Whether you’re navigating identity, career questions, or simply trying to understand how your mind works, this reflective exploration offers a compassionate perspective on embracing your unique way of learning. Perhaps your life was never meant to follow a straight line. Perhaps you’ve been weaving a tapestry all along.
Tag Archives: Psychotherapy
Stories Are Not Decor: Why Storytelling Matters in Therapy at Storm Haven
People often tell us that Storm Haven doesn’t feel like a typical therapy office, and that has always been intentional. From dragons and fandom to folklore and forests, every story woven throughout our space reflects a deeper philosophy: storytelling has always helped humans make meaning of life’s storms. Discover why stories are more than décor, how storytelling in therapy can foster healing and belonging, and why Storm Haven was designed to feel like a place where your story is finally welcomed.
The Invisible Backpack: What You’ve Been Carrying That Was Never Yours
What if some of the things weighing you down were never yours to carry in the first place? In this installment of Storm Haven’s Four Arc series, we explore the invisible backpack many late diagnosed neurodivergent adults have been carrying for years, including perfectionism, people pleasing, hyper-independence, and demand avoidance. Through storytelling, nervous system insight, and compassionate reflection, this piece invites you to untangle survival strategies from identity and discover who you are beneath the weight of adaptation.
Standing in the In-Between: The Rewilding of Self in Quiet Thresholds
There comes a moment when the life you’ve built no longer fits in the way it once did. This piece explores what it means to stand in the in-between, where identity begins to shift, old patterns no longer hold, and something more aligned starts to emerge. For those navigating ADHD, burnout, or the quiet unraveling that often comes with perimenopause, this is a guide to understanding the fog, honoring the shedding, and finding your way forward without losing yourself.
In Search of Shadows
There comes a moment when the old ways stop working, but the new ones have not yet revealed themselves. You are still functioning, still showing up, and yet something inside feels quietly unfinished. In Search of Shadows explores shadow work through a Jungian lens, inviting you into the inner labyrinth where forgotten parts, hidden brilliance, and belonging begin to take shape.
When the Holidays Feel Heavy: Navigating the Shadow Side of the Season
The Holiday Glow vs. the Inner Winter There’s a certain kind of silence that settles in around the holidays. Not the peaceful kind from movie snowfalls and scented-candle commercials, but the deeper, heavier quiet that presses behind the ribs when everyone else seems to be glowing. The stillness that arrives between the first twinkle lightsContinue reading “When the Holidays Feel Heavy: Navigating the Shadow Side of the Season”
The DSM-5-TR and the Map That Forgot the Weather
The DSM-5-TR may map the mind, but it forgets the weather. Beyond its tidy criteria lives the living ecology of ADHD, autism, and AuDHD—the rhythms that shape daily life, not just diagnostic codes. This field guide steps past the manual’s margins into the real terrain of nervous systems in motion: the hummingbirds of hyperactivity, the cartographers of sensation, the phoenixes of rebirth. It’s not a list of symptoms—it’s a forecast of humanity in all its unpredictable, beautiful weather.
Inside the Brightest Light Can Also Be the Darkest Shadow: The Sentry, Suicide Awareness, and the Archetype of the Void
The Superman-With-a-Twist A Golden Boy with a Dark Core On the surface, the Sentry looks like Marvel’s golden boy — radiant hair, near-limitless power, and a moral compass that ought to make him the darling of any superhero lunch table. He’s got the whole “flying, glowing, saving the world before breakfast” package. Except, of course,Continue reading “Inside the Brightest Light Can Also Be the Darkest Shadow: The Sentry, Suicide Awareness, and the Archetype of the Void”
Unplugging Won’t Save You: Reclaiming Mental Health Without Abandoning the World
Some days it feels like the world’s on fire, and you’re just trying to make it through your morning coffee without spiraling. Navigating political anxiety with mental health support isn’t just helpful—it’s necessary. Political seasons stir up more than just headlines—they stir up hearts, histories, fears, and fatigue. For some, it’s just another cycle. ForContinue reading “Unplugging Won’t Save You: Reclaiming Mental Health Without Abandoning the World”
Are You an Innie or an Outtie? (Or Both?)
Using Internal Family Systems (IFS) and Severance to Understand the Parts Inside You—and the Strange Magick of Becoming Whole Again Welcome to Lumon Industries (a.k.a. Your Brain) Let’s be honest: if your inner world sometimes feels like it was designed by a morally ambiguous tech company with suspicious lighting and no windows… you’re not alone.Continue reading “Are You an Innie or an Outtie? (Or Both?)”
The Wellness Village: A Journey with Wren, a Platonic Soul Connection
A Fateful Meeting in the Wellness Village The first time you meet Wren, it’s not really a meeting. It’s more like remembering someone you haven’t seen in years, except… you’ve never met them before. Yet, something about them feels instantly familiar, as if this was always meant to happen. That’s the nature of a platonicContinue reading “The Wellness Village: A Journey with Wren, a Platonic Soul Connection”
Ever Wondered What Your Therapist is Really Thinking During Your Session?
Therapists Just Sit and Talk All Day? Oh, If Only… The myth that therapists just sit in a chair, nod sagely, and occasionally murmur, “How does that make you feel?” is as persistent as it is absurd. If only our workday was as leisurely as people imagine—just chatting away, sipping tea, and collecting our feesContinue reading “Ever Wondered What Your Therapist is Really Thinking During Your Session?”