The Art of Vulnerability: How to Build Trust with Your Therapist, Family, + Friends
In this episode, Ashana sits down with licensed mental health counselor Maya Nelson for a real, layered conversation around mental health, trauma, and the patterns we don’t always realize we’re living inside of.
They explore how early experiences shape the way we relate to ourselves, to others, and to conflict, especially when safety, consistency, or emotional support felt unstable growing up. This shows up in subtle ways… the way we shut down, overextend, question ourselves, or feel overwhelmed in moments that seem small on the surface.
Maya shares what it looks like to work with trauma in a way that honors both the individual and the larger systems they’re part of, especially within marginalized communities. The conversation also moves into empathy in therapy, the emotional weight it can carry, and the kind of self-awareness and self-care that’s required to hold space for others without losing yourself.
They talk about agency in a way that feels real, not forced or performative, and how growth often looks like noticing your patterns and choosing something slightly different, one moment at a time.
This episode brings together mental health, trauma healing, self-awareness, and personal growth in a way that feels honest, practical, and grounded in real life.
Takeaways:
-Patterns formed early in life often shape how you respond to stress, conflict, and connection.
-Trauma can influence your sense of safety, even in everyday situations.
-Agency grows through small, intentional choices over time.
-Conflict can become a space for clarity and deeper understanding.
-Empathy in therapy requires boundaries, awareness, and care for self.
-Self-care supports both healing and sustainability.
-Recognizing your patterns creates space for change.
-Vulnerability allows for deeper connection and growth.
-Healing happens in small, consistent moments of awareness and choice.
About Maya:
Maya Nelson is a licensed mental health counselor who helps people understand their emotional patterns, process trauma, and reconnect with their sense of agency. Her work centers marginalized communities and focuses on creating spaces where people feel seen, supported, and able to move toward real, sustainable change. She brings a mix of empathy, honesty, and creativity into her work, helping clients build self-awareness and trust in themselves over time.
Resources mentioned in this episode:
Maya's website: silentsychetherapy.com [http://silentsychetherapy.com]
sovereign circle (free group) [https://www.meetup.com/sovereign-collective/events/311803417/]
Join the community and support the show:
Ashana's weekly women's circle [http://wayhomewellness.com/womenscircle] 💛 for those who want deeper connection and live coaching while healing from emotional overwhelm and relational harm.
If this episode resonated, share it with someone who’s been trying to make sense of their patterns or their healing. You can also leave a rating or a review, it helps more people find these conversations.
Post-production editing by Rachel Easterly. Buy my editor a coffee. [http://buymeacoffee.com/thereclamationroom]
Thanks for being here. 💛
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