Agathe Gabriel Agathe Gabriel

When Politics Feels Personal: A Therapist’s Perspective on Navigating the Emotional Toll of U.S. Politics

In recent years, many people have shared a similar sentiment in therapy sessions: “I feel exhausted by politics.” For some, it’s anger. For others, anxiety, grief, fear, or deep frustration. In the United States, politics has become more than policy debates or election cycles—it has seeped into our relationships, identities, and sense of safety in the world.

As a therapist, I see firsthand how political stress impacts emotional well-being.

Why Politics Feels So Personal

Politics touches on issues that are deeply connected to our values and lived experiences—healthcare, family rights, economic stability, safety, and cultural identity. When policies or political rhetoric affect the things that matter most to us, our brains interpret those changes as potential threats.

From a psychological perspective, this activates the body’s stress response. News headlines, social media debates, and constant exposure to conflict can trigger feelings of helplessness, anger, or anxiety. For some people, especially those from marginalized communities, political developments can feel like a direct threat to their dignity or security.

The Impact on Mental Health

Political stress can show up in many ways:

  • Constant worry or doom-scrolling through news

  • Difficulty sleeping or concentrating

  • Strained relationships with friends or family who hold different views

  • Feelings of hopelessness about the future

  • Emotional burnout

For people already coping with trauma, chronic stress, or mental health conditions, the intensity of political discourse can amplify existing struggles.

When Politics Strains Relationships

One of the most painful ways political tension shows up is within families and friendships. In therapy, I often hear people say, “I don’t even recognize my family member anymore.”

Politics can create identity-based divisions where disagreement feels like rejection. It’s important to remember that our brains are wired to seek belonging. When political differences threaten that sense of connection, emotions can run high.

Healthy boundaries are sometimes necessary. It’s okay to decide that certain topics are off-limits at family gatherings, or to step back from conversations that feel harmful rather than productive.

Protecting Your Mental Health

While it’s important to stay informed, it’s equally important to protect your emotional well-being. Some helpful strategies include:

Limit media consumption.
Set boundaries around how often you check the news or social media.

Focus on what you can control.
Voting, community engagement, volunteering, or advocacy can help transform helplessness into meaningful action.

Practice emotional regulation.
Grounding exercises, mindfulness, and time in nature can help calm the nervous system when political stress becomes overwhelming.

Maintain connection.
Even when disagreements exist, finding shared values—kindness, family, community—can help maintain relationships.

Take breaks.
Stepping away from the noise of political discourse is not apathy; it’s self-care.

Remembering Our Shared Humanity

One thing therapy continually reminds me is that beneath our beliefs, most people are motivated by similar core needs: safety, belonging, fairness, and hope for the future.

Politics may divide us in conversation, but our emotional needs are remarkably alike.

When we slow down, listen with curiosity, and care for our own mental health, we create space for something that often gets lost in political discourse—our shared humanity.

In times of uncertainty and division, compassion—for ourselves and for one another—may be one of the most powerful tools we have.

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Agathe Gabriel Agathe Gabriel

It’s not too late…

  • for healing

  • to start over

  • to focus on yourself

  • to find your voice

  • to create new dreams

  • to learn something new

  • to go back to school

  • to be who you always wanted to be

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Agathe Gabriel Agathe Gabriel

It all begins with an idea

It all begins with an idea.

Every great achievement, every innovation, and every meaningful change starts with a simple spark: an idea. Ideas are the seeds of possibility. They’re whispers of imagination that ask, “What if?” or “Why not?”

It’s easy to dismiss ideas, to tell ourselves they’re too small, too risky, or too far-fetched. But ideas don’t need to be perfect from the start—they just need to exist. They need someone willing to nurture them, explore them, and act on them.

Think about some of the world’s most transformative moments: the first light bulb, the first airplane, the first step on the moon. None of them happened without someone daring to imagine the possibility. It all begins in the mind, in a quiet moment of curiosity or inspiration.

Ideas are also deeply personal. They reflect your experiences, your dreams, and your desire to create something meaningful. Some ideas will remain just that—ideas—but others can grow into projects, movements, businesses, or works of art that touch countless lives.

The key is to honor your ideas. Write them down. Talk about them. Sketch them, test them, and allow them room to breathe. Protect them from the self-doubt that can quickly extinguish their light. Even if an idea doesn’t turn into reality immediately, it shapes your thinking, guides your actions, and prepares you for the next spark.

So, start today. Embrace the idea stirring inside you. Feed it with curiosity, courage, and persistence. Because every revolution, every masterpiece, every personal breakthrough—it all begins with an idea.

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