What Happens When You Stop Fighting Your Feelings

By Katie — Greenlake Wellness Group

When people come to therapy, they often arrive with a list of things they want to change — thoughts they wish they didn’t have, feelings they’re tired of carrying, patterns they can’t seem to break. Wanting change is natural. But sometimes, the path to real relief begins in a different place than expected.

As Katie shares:

“When clients come to me wanting to change things about themselves, an element of reducing suffering is often a level of compassionate acceptance of what is.”

Compassionate acceptance isn’t the same as giving up. It’s not approval, and it’s not passivity. It’s the moment we stop fighting ourselves and start listening to what’s actually happening inside.


The Cost of Resisting Our Emotions

Most of us learn to avoid uncomfortable feelings — to push them aside, rationalize them, or “stay strong.” But avoiding emotions doesn’t make them go away. It often intensifies them.

Trying to suppress emotions is like holding a beach ball underwater: the harder you push, the stronger it pops back up.

Compassionate acceptance creates space. Space creates breath. And breath creates clarity.


How Compassionate Acceptance Shows Up in Therapy

Katie works with clients to gently slow down and reconnect with the present moment. This might look like:

· Noticing tension in the body
· Naming emotions as they arise
· Observing thoughts without judgment
· Sitting with feelings rather than pushing them away

Katie describes this process as helping clients:

“…validate their own experience — but not try to push against those, but rather make space for them.”

By making room for what we feel, compassionate acceptance can create the conditions for genuine, sustainable change. This approach can support healing from:

· Anxiety
· Depression
· Low self-esteem
· Grief and loss
· Life transitions
· Stress and overwhelm

Compassionate acceptance can become a foundation for emotional clarity and self-compassion.


Compassionate Acceptance in Couples Therapy

Compassionate acceptance is also essential for couples. Many partners arrive in therapy hoping the other person will change. But connection grows when each partner can meet the other exactly where they are.

Katie explains that compassionate acceptance often plays an essential role in couples therapy — accepting, rather than trying to fix or fundamentally change, your partner.

This approach helps couples:

· Improve communication
· Interrupt reactive cycles
· Understand each other’s inner world
· Build emotional safety and teamwork

Compassionate acceptance doesn’t mean overlooking problems — it means creating the emotional environment where real change can happen.


Compassionate Acceptance Isn’t the End — It’s the Beginning

People often assume acceptance comes at the end of the healing journey. But in therapy, compassionate acceptance is usually one of the first steps.

With compassionate acceptance:

· The nervous system softens
· The mind becomes clearer
· Self-compassion increases
· Emotional overwhelm decreases
· Change becomes more natural and less forced

Compassionate acceptance opens the door to growth.


Work With Katie

If you’re ready to stop resisting your emotions and start understanding them, Katie offers a calm, grounded space where compassionate acceptance becomes a foundation for healing and connection.

Book an appointment with Katie today.