The Counselor's Couch

Calvin C Williams, LPC

A podcast dedicated to exploring topics and issues that enhance the lives and relationships of listeners. Calvin Williams is a Licensed Professional Counselor with over 25 years of experience helping clients overcome difficult challenges associated with mental health, addiction, and emotional wellness. Calvin enjoys working with people and has a desire to empower clients on their road to personal growth and development. This is a personal journey of living intentionally, sharing life stories, embracing vulnerability and the universal truth that we are not alone. Calvin is not your traditional therapist. He loves to laugh and find connection with others. So pull up a cushion and make yourself comfortable on The Counselor's Couch. Live Intentionally, Love Daily and Laugh Often.

  1. 6d ago

    S4 Episode 3: The Stories We Tell Ourselves

    Let us know you care. Drop a quick text and let us know what you think. The most powerful voice shaping your life is often the one in your own head and it’s usually speaking in stories. I’m Calvin Williams, licensed professional counselor, and I’m unpacking why two people can live through similar hardships yet walk away with completely different beliefs about themselves, relationships, and what’s possible next.  Here’s the shift that changes everything: experiences alone do not create beliefs. Meanings create beliefs. We’re meaning-making creatures, and the interpretation we attach to rejection, conflict, failure, or loss becomes a blueprint we carry forward. I break down how that blueprint turns into identity through what I call the “meaning loop” (event, meaning, belief, emotion, behavior, outcome, reinforcement) and why the loop can feel like personality when it’s really a practiced narrative.  We also talk about the difference between felt truths and actual truths, why “I feel unlovable” can be emotionally real without being factually true, and why changing beliefs feels so uncomfortable. Using the electric fence metaphor, I explain how a lesson that once protected you can expand into avoidance, fear, and a life that keeps shrinking. I also share a faith-informed perspective on how Scripture often confronts the story people believe about themselves, not their worth as a person.  You’ll leave with a simple, practical exercise to identify one long-held belief, trace where it began, test the evidence, and speak to yourself the way you would speak to someone you love. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people who feel stuck in an old story can find a better one. Support the show Thanks for listening and if you have enjoyed The Counselor's Couch, then let us know.  Take a moment and leave a quick review of this episode or any episode on Apple Podcasts.  Your review really does make a difference and they help us know if we are heading in the right direction. Check us out on Facebook - The Counselor's Couch Comments, questions or topics of interest can be emailed to: thecounselorscouch@gmail.com Share an episode with a friend or family member and remember "You are not alone and You are of Value".

    18 min
  2. Jun 23

    S4 Episode 2: Finding Fellowship in Faith

    Let us know you care. Drop a quick text and let us know what you think. Faith can be intensely personal, but trying to live it alone can slowly starve something in us. We’re wired for connection, and when we don’t feel safe enough to be honest about doubts, grief, or messy questions, we start to believe we’re the only one struggling. Join Calvin as he explores his experiences as a counselor and as someone who values spiritual retreat.  Many of us have a deep hunger for authentic fellowship and the quiet relief that comes when someone looks at us and says, “You too?”   In this episode Calvin digs into why spiritual community can feel hard to find, especially if you’ve experienced church hurt, judgment, rigid thinking, or pressure to perform. He walks through what fellowship really is (and what it is not), why “matching theology” matters less than shared humanity, and how healing can begin in small, unexpected places like a simple coffee conversation, a grief support group, a recovery community, a book club, or an online space that values honesty over polish.   You’ll also get a practical roadmap for finding spiritual connection; getting clear about what you actually need; taking one brave step with one person; looking beyond traditional structures; practicing discernment without cynicism; and even becoming the kind of fellowship you’re seeking. If you’re navigating doubt, rebuilding trust after religious trauma, or craving a healthier faith journey, this will help you move forward with boundaries, courage, and hope. Support the show Thanks for listening and if you have enjoyed The Counselor's Couch, then let us know.  Take a moment and leave a quick review of this episode or any episode on Apple Podcasts.  Your review really does make a difference and they help us know if we are heading in the right direction. Check us out on Facebook - The Counselor's Couch Comments, questions or topics of interest can be emailed to: thecounselorscouch@gmail.com Share an episode with a friend or family member and remember "You are not alone and You are of Value".

    27 min
  3. Apr 30

    S4 Episode 1: ADHD-The Truth You Need To Know

    Let us know you care. Drop a quick text and let us know what you think. ADHD gets talked about like it’s a simple attention problem, but that shallow take misses what people actually live with every day. I’m breaking down the real core of ADHD: regulation. Not just regulation of focus, but regulation of emotion, motivation, and behavior. When we don’t understand that, we start calling overwhelm “defiance” and neurological fatigue “laziness” and those labels can quietly turn into shame and identity. We walk through how the diagnosis has changed over time, why modern language uses ADHD “presentations,” and what’s happening in the brain with executive functioning and dopamine. I also connect the science to real life: why boring but important tasks can feel impossible, why crisis can suddenly create clarity, and why the gap between knowing and doing is where so many adults get stuck. We talk about what ADHD can look like in kids, teenagers, and adults, including time blindness, chronic overwhelm, emotional burnout, and relationship strain. Then we get practical. I share tools that tend to work better than punishment: external structure, clear routines, one-step instructions, movement, interest-based engagement, and immediate feedback. We also address ADHD medication honestly as a tool, not a cure, and why the best approach is “pills and skills.” If you’re a parent, partner, teacher, or you’re living with ADHD yourself, you’ll leave with a clearer lens and concrete ways to respond with more understanding and better outcomes.  Support the show Thanks for listening and if you have enjoyed The Counselor's Couch, then let us know.  Take a moment and leave a quick review of this episode or any episode on Apple Podcasts.  Your review really does make a difference and they help us know if we are heading in the right direction. Check us out on Facebook - The Counselor's Couch Comments, questions or topics of interest can be emailed to: thecounselorscouch@gmail.com Share an episode with a friend or family member and remember "You are not alone and You are of Value".

    23 min
  4. 11/22/2025

    S3 Episode 18: Boldness - Courage to Create the Life You Desire

    Let us know you care. Drop a quick text and let us know what you think. Boldness doesn’t have to roar to change your life. We explore how quiet, aligned courage can move you past overthinking, shame narratives, and the fear of loss into choices that actually expand your world. Drawing from clinical practice, neuroscience, and Stoic philosophy, we break down why your brain resists uncertainty and how to work with your nervous system so you can act with clarity even when fear is loud. We start by redefining boldness as alignment with your values rather than aggression or ego. From there we dig into loss aversion, the amygdala’s alarm, and the childhood meanings that grow into adult limits like I’m too much or Success isn’t for people like me. You’ll hear how boldness plays out in real life: giving compassionate feedback as a leader, asking for what you need in love, trusting before the whole path is visible in faith, and choosing healing when hiding feels safer. Confidence is quiet and insecurity is loud becomes a guiding lens for owning your space without performing for approval. You’ll also get a practical five-step model to build a bold identity: clarify what boldness means for you now, confront the meaning behind your fear, regulate your body, take one measurable step, and reinforce a courageous self-concept. We share client stories that show how small moves—correcting an order, holding one hard conversation, telling the truth—can unlock major change. We close with five bold truths, a simple daily practice of three questions, and a weekly challenge to take one meaningful step that your future self will celebrate. If this resonated, help us cross 10,000 downloads—share with someone who needs a nudge toward courage, subscribe, and leave a review. Tell us: what bold step will you take this week? Support the show Thanks for listening and if you have enjoyed The Counselor's Couch, then let us know.  Take a moment and leave a quick review of this episode or any episode on Apple Podcasts.  Your review really does make a difference and they help us know if we are heading in the right direction. Check us out on Facebook - The Counselor's Couch Comments, questions or topics of interest can be emailed to: thecounselorscouch@gmail.com Share an episode with a friend or family member and remember "You are not alone and You are of Value".

    29 min
  5. 10/02/2025

    S3 Episode 17: Cultivating Leadership Skills

    Let us know you care. Drop a quick text and let us know what you think. Leadership isn’t a title; it’s how we show up for people, problems, and purpose. We continue our deep dive into practical leadership by pairing John Maxwell’s timeless qualities with Simon Sinek’s big-picture framework, giving you a simple way to build trust, clarify your why, and take action—no corner office required. From parenting and coaching to team projects and tough conversations, Calvin explores how character and consistency turn everyday moments into meaningful influence. We start with the core: people buy into the leader before the vision. That means integrity, courage, and commitment aren’t optional—they’re the bedrock that makes influence sustainable. You’ll learn how to align words and actions, speak the hard truth with care, and stay steady when novelty fades. Then we move into communication that connects, charisma as genuine attention, and a positive attitude that avoids toxic cheer while focusing on real solutions. Along the way, we unpack initiative (leaders go first), focus (say no to do the right yes), and problem solving that replaces reactivity with calm, curious thinking. Generosity, self-discipline, and servanthood bring it all together. We show how giving credit, investing in people, and building daily habits compound into trust you can feel. And we ground the work with a weekly challenge: choose one quality and practice it through small, consistent actions tied to your why. By blending Maxwell’s how with Sinek’s why, you’ll have a clear, repeatable path to grow your leadership right where you are—at home, at work, and in your community. Support the show Thanks for listening and if you have enjoyed The Counselor's Couch, then let us know.  Take a moment and leave a quick review of this episode or any episode on Apple Podcasts.  Your review really does make a difference and they help us know if we are heading in the right direction. Check us out on Facebook - The Counselor's Couch Comments, questions or topics of interest can be emailed to: thecounselorscouch@gmail.com Share an episode with a friend or family member and remember "You are not alone and You are of Value".

    27 min
  6. 08/15/2025

    S3 Episode 16: Quiet Desperation: The Loneliness Epidemic

    Let us know you care. Drop a quick text and let us know what you think. Loneliness has become a silent epidemic in our hyper-connected world. Despite smartphones linking us to billions and social media keeping us perpetually "in touch," the Surgeon General has declared loneliness a public health crisis with health impacts comparable to smoking 15 cigarettes daily. How can we be more digitally connected yet more emotionally isolated than ever before? This episode dives deep into what Henry David Thoreau called "lives of quiet desperation" – that subtle, persistent ache of going through the motions of connection while feeling fundamentally unseen. We explore the psychology behind loneliness, distinguishing it from simply being alone. Loneliness isn't about physical isolation but about the perceived quality of our relationships across three dimensions: intimate connections, social belonging, and collective purpose. Your attachment patterns – formed in earliest relationships – become the blueprint for how you approach connection throughout life. Whether anxious, avoidant, or disorganized, these patterns can create the very loneliness you're trying to avoid. The good news? These patterns aren't permanent. Your brain remains plastic throughout life, capable of forming new neural pathways through secure relationships. We examine how our culture of curated perfection on social media creates collective illusions that everyone else has it figured out while we alone struggle. Connection isn't built on highlight reels but on shared humanity – including our struggles, questions, and imperfections. Technology becomes problematic when it substitutes for rather than supplements face-to-face connection, where irreplaceable elements like mirror neurons, nervous system co-regulation, and nonverbal cues create deeper bonds. Breaking free from quiet desperation starts with small, intentional steps: deepening existing relationships rather than constantly seeking new ones, practicing vulnerability incrementally, building regular connection rhythms into your life, being fully present during interactions, and becoming the person who initiates contact rather than waiting for others. Remember – your longing for connection isn't weakness but evidence of your humanity. Support the show Thanks for listening and if you have enjoyed The Counselor's Couch, then let us know.  Take a moment and leave a quick review of this episode or any episode on Apple Podcasts.  Your review really does make a difference and they help us know if we are heading in the right direction. Check us out on Facebook - The Counselor's Couch Comments, questions or topics of interest can be emailed to: thecounselorscouch@gmail.com Share an episode with a friend or family member and remember "You are not alone and You are of Value".

    27 min
  7. 08/07/2025

    S3 Episode 15: Why Am I So Angry?

    Let us know you care. Drop a quick text and let us know what you think. Ever felt like you're one interruption away from completely losing it? You're not alone. That rising tide of anger—the shorter fuse, the explosive reactions—isn't a character flaw. It's a signal that something deeper needs attention. In this powerful exploration of anger, licensed counselor Calvin Williams takes us beneath the surface of our rage to discover what's really driving these intense emotions. We're living in what he calls a "pressure cooker culture"—financial stress, political divisions, health anxieties, and a news cycle designed to keep us perpetually outraged. We're carrying invisible backpacks filled with unmet expectations and unnamed grief, then wondering why we snap when someone cuts us off in traffic. The revelation at the heart of this episode? Anger itself isn't the enemy. It's what counselors call a secondary emotion—the bodyguard that shows up to protect us when we feel threatened, rejected, powerless, or grieving. Using the metaphor of an "anger iceberg," Williams helps us recognize that explosive moments are merely symptoms of deeper emotional currents running beneath the surface. When we address only the anger without exploring what's underneath, we miss the opportunity for true healing. This episode offers a transformative approach to anger management. You'll learn how your brain processes anger physiologically, why it takes about 20 minutes for stress hormones to clear your system, and how to respond with wisdom instead of reacting from wounds. You'll discover why unprocessed anger leads to depression, anxiety, health problems, and damaged relationships—and how to break these harmful patterns. Whether you're struggling with your own anger or trying to understand someone else's, this episode provides compassionate insight and actionable strategies. Listen now to transform your relationship with anger and reclaim the peace and connection you deserve. Your anger is not your identity—it's information, and you have the capacity to learn from it rather than be controlled by it. Support the show Thanks for listening and if you have enjoyed The Counselor's Couch, then let us know.  Take a moment and leave a quick review of this episode or any episode on Apple Podcasts.  Your review really does make a difference and they help us know if we are heading in the right direction. Check us out on Facebook - The Counselor's Couch Comments, questions or topics of interest can be emailed to: thecounselorscouch@gmail.com Share an episode with a friend or family member and remember "You are not alone and You are of Value".

    27 min
  8. 07/01/2025

    S3, Episode 14: Mindfulness Made Simple

    Let us know you care. Drop a quick text and let us know what you think. Have you ever felt like your brain is constantly racing, jumping between past regrets and future worries, while life rushes by unnoticed? Take a deep breath—this is where the real power of mindfulness begins. Forget the stereotypical image of cross-legged yogis on mountaintops achieving empty minds. True mindfulness is about noticing your life as it happens—the taste of toothpaste while brushing, the warmth of a coffee mug in your hands, the sensation of your feet on the floor as you walk. It's accessible to everyone, requires no special equipment, and can be practiced in as little as 10 seconds. The science behind this practice is remarkable. Studies show even brief mindfulness sessions significantly reduce stress levels, strengthen the brain's focus center, and decrease activity in our fight-or-flight response system. One review found that 6-12 weeks of mindfulness reduced stress by 60% in healthcare students. Another study revealed that mindfulness combined with cognitive behavioral therapy reduced chronic pain and decreased opiate use, with benefits lasting a full year. I share six simple techniques you can integrate into your daily routine: the 60-second breath, body scan, single-task focus, five senses check, ritualizing routine moments, and taking micro mindfulness breaks throughout your day. We also tackle common challenges like wandering thoughts (normal!), time constraints (start with just 10 seconds), and that initial awkwardness that comes with any new practice. As philosopher Seneca wrote, "True happiness is to enjoy the present without anxious dependence upon the future." You don't need to slow down the whole world to find peace—you can learn to slow down within it, creating moments of presence that restore and ground you, even in chaos. Download the free mindfulness strategies handout from the show description and take the first step toward a more present, peaceful life today. To download your copy of Mindfulness Made Simple - Six Simple Practices just click on the link below. https://mysites.therapysites.com/0062436/storage/app/media/mindfulness-made-simple.docx Support the show Thanks for listening and if you have enjoyed The Counselor's Couch, then let us know.  Take a moment and leave a quick review of this episode or any episode on Apple Podcasts.  Your review really does make a difference and they help us know if we are heading in the right direction. Check us out on Facebook - The Counselor's Couch Comments, questions or topics of interest can be emailed to: thecounselorscouch@gmail.com Share an episode with a friend or family member and remember "You are not alone and You are of Value".

    16 min
5
out of 5
30 Ratings

About

A podcast dedicated to exploring topics and issues that enhance the lives and relationships of listeners. Calvin Williams is a Licensed Professional Counselor with over 25 years of experience helping clients overcome difficult challenges associated with mental health, addiction, and emotional wellness. Calvin enjoys working with people and has a desire to empower clients on their road to personal growth and development. This is a personal journey of living intentionally, sharing life stories, embracing vulnerability and the universal truth that we are not alone. Calvin is not your traditional therapist. He loves to laugh and find connection with others. So pull up a cushion and make yourself comfortable on The Counselor's Couch. Live Intentionally, Love Daily and Laugh Often.