“Why don’t you take a seat?” He references one of two plush chairs facing the desk in his office. She glanced around the room. His office was typical—quaint, furnished with light yellow paint, wooden accents, and several abstract art pieces. Sitting directly behind his mahogany desk was a large square window looking out over a not-so-special section of downtown Rochester, Minnesota. 

They say sunlight is supposed to help those sorts of encounters, but on that day the overcast gray skies tossed colorless leaves on the streets. The neutral light from the window spilled over the paisley patterned carpet with each design on leading into the next. 

On his desk sat three picture frames, each facing away from her, towards the window. Likely a family, judging from the wedding band on his left hand and the wrinkles sewn deeply into his face. Wrinkles that betrayed the years of time he had spent working to fix people. On the wall, perpendicular to his desk, hung a large mahogany clock. She began to sit down on the chair that was furthest away from the stranger in front of her, while focusing on the minute hand that was moving in slow motion past the 12. She was suddenly pulled back into the reality of the meeting about to take place. 

This initial meeting was the worst but the most important. One wrong word, a wrong move, and he would label, and file her away in a category he thought he knew all too well: Anxious, Depressed, Crazy, Bipolar. The first visit was the only one where she would have any control at all, so she relished in the little power and autonomy that still remained on her side of the mahogany desk. During this visit, she too would judge him, and decide how much of her history, how much truth, and how much trust she might share with her new mental health practitioner. In all honesty, she was still deciding how much this overweight middle-aged man might be able to help her at all. She pictured his life as privileged: a plush home, perfect wife, and three kids. She wondered if his money had bought him happiness, or if this—too—might be fake. 

He was looking over the series of questions she had answered in the waiting room—all of which had given him a simplistic clinical picture of her history. The answers were only an accumulation of events that happened to her, and they did not account for the pain, story, or triumph behind each one. As she sat, she reminded herself to keep her physical body in check so as not to attract any unwanted stereotypes. She sat properly, with her back straight, legs crossed, and hands in her lap, waiting for his eyes to meet hers. 

For a moment, she took in his persona. He looked just under 6 feet tall, with light silver hair waving over the sides of his spectacles, which were secured over his soft brown eyes. He looked kind but had an air of aloofness about him. Maybe he was a friend of your grandfather you never knew or a distant relative that had been estranged. He was a simple, soft-looking man, even still, he held all of the power. She dared his eyes to meet hers instead of staying fixed on the medical and psychological questions he had in his lap.

Do you have any history of chemical abuse? 

Yes 

Did you experience any abuse as a child in your home (physical, verbal, emotional or sexual) or outside your home? 

Yes

Have you experienced any abuse in your adult life (physical, verbal, emotional or sexual)?

Yes

Briefly describe the problem for which you are seeking to have counseling for? 

I need help. The noise in my head is too loud. My thoughts are too quick. I need help.

The patient questionnaire she filled out was likely looking grim in the hands of the professional sitting across from her. In that moment she wondered what he was thinking as he scanned over the endless questions that recounted some of the most intimate and negatively defining moments of her life. Could he understand that behind each qualifier there was a broken piece of her puzzle? Did he think of her as a case or a person? Was his attention on her at all? Maybe he feels sorry for me, she thought. Worst of all, she mustered, he was human and he felt empathy for her—she too was taking pieces away from him to be sitting there in front of his desk, across from his clipboard, separated by those pieces of paper. She wondered if he even read all of the questions or each option on those pieces of paper that she had meticulously worked to fill out.

SymptomNoneMildModerateSevere
Abandonment IssuesModerate
Aggressive Physical BehaviorNone
Aggressive Verbal BehaviorNone
Alcohol AbuseModerate
Anger IssuesModerate
Anxiety/TensionSevere
Binge EatingModerate
Childhood IssuesModerate
Cognitive ProblemsModerate
Compulsive GamblingNone
Concentration IssuesSevere
Conduct ProblemsNone
Decreased AppetiteModerate
DelusionsNone
Diet Pill MisuseModerate
Difficulty with sleepModerate
FatigueModerate
Feelings of guilt/shameSevere
Feelings of helplessnessSevere
Feelings of hopelessnessSevere
Feelings of worthlessnessSevere
Financial IssuesSevere
Food ConcernsSevere
PhobiasModerate
Prescription Drug UseModerate
Relationship IssuesModerate
School ProblemsModerate
Self Induced VomitingSevere
Gender Identity IssueNone
Grief/LossModerate
HallucinationsNone
Health ConcernsModerate
Homicidal ThoughtsNone
HostilityNone
HyperactiveModerate
ImpulsiveModerate
Illegal Drug UseModerate
Impulsive SpendingModerate
Increased AppetiteSevere
IrritabilitySevere
Laxative AbuseModerate
Legal ProblemsNone
ManiaModerate
Marital ProblemsNone
Mood SwingsModerate
Obsessions/CompulsionsModerate
PainModerate
Panic AttacksSevere
ParanoiaSevere
Parent-Child ConflictModerate
Peer Relationship ConflictModerate
Self-HarmModerate
Sexual ProblemsModerate
Social IsolationSevere
Weight ChangesModerate
Psychiatric Patient Intake Questionnaire

She knew it was a lot. A lot had happened for her to be sitting across from this man. A lot has to happen for someone to get to the point where they think paying to talk it out with a stranger will help them put the pieces of their life back together. 

Finally, his eyes locked with hers. In that moment, with his eyes locked on hers, there was a mutual understanding—they were no longer strangers. At least she was no longer a stranger to him. She handed her life’s secrets to a stranger who would remain a stranger, yet he gained the privilege to the most intimate pieces of her life. 

It was ironic, actually, how much went into this moment. In fact, irony would not do justice to the sheer paradox; that she was sitting in this chair, at this time, wearing the clothes that she was, looking into his eyes. She knew what would happen next. Next he would ask her what it was that brought her in—why she was sitting in front of him, what needed fixing, even though he already knew. In fact, the last thing she wished he would ask at that moment was why she was here because she knew what he was holding in his hands. 

There would be the intake questionnaire, The Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7 (GAD7) survey, the Patient Health Questionnaire 9 (PHQ9), and her general health information. Those who had ever been to a counseling appt., had a baby, or seen a psychiatrist know exactly what those are. The PHQ9 and GAD7 are short surveys that help decide on the amount of help a patient might need—they were one way to assess where she was at mentally, while sitting in his office. The PHQ7 was usually where it started for her. It assessed her anxiety, while the PHQ9 assessed her depressive thoughts and feelings. Again, her mind trailed toward the questions and answers he was glancing through. 

By now she had most of the questions memorized down to her score, and what the score told the clinician about her current state. She thought first to the GAD7- Over the last 2 weeks, how often have you been bothered by the following problems? Feelings of nervousness, annoyance, fear, worry, restlessness, etc. From the GAD7 her mind jumped to the PHQ9- Over the last 2 weeks how often have you been bothered by the following problems? Feeling down, depressed, hopeless, little interest or pleasure in doing things, etc. The highest you could score on the anxiety questionnaire was a 21, while you could get up to a whopping 27 on the Depression Ranking.

The numbers would give him a sense of where she was at, and a quick mental tally based on what she’d filled out in the lobby that day had her around an 18 in the GAD7, and a 22 on the PHQ-9— high scores. These scores landed her in the categories of having severe anxiety as well as being severely depressed, both sharp reminders that she was in fact not doing well.  This inner dialogue was getting louder as she waited for him to say something. 

The noise in her head was making it hard for her to show up to work, much less to focus on doing the rocket science her job required of her in genetic research at the clinic. The sound of her thoughts got louder and louder as she tried to pull herself out of bed, into the athletic gear, and onto the running trails to prepare for the marathon coming up in November. The happenings of her buzzing mind were making it difficult for her to answer her younger siblings’ calls with excitement in her voice as though the pieces of her world weren’t imploding. The lack of control had her fantasizing about throwing up her food again, just to feel an ounce of control in this fucked up world—this world where real people with real problems are labeled and tucked away in a filing cabinet in a mahogany desk. 

At that moment, sitting across from him, the noise was particularly loud. It screamed of her parents’ divorce after 35 years of marriage and four kids, of cheating, of bad sex, of alcoholism, porn, post traumatic stress disorder, love, and secrets. Her mind screamed with secrets. Small pieces that she had filed away beneath her deep seeded hatred for herself. 

“Fake it till you make it” her mother would tell her, and she had done just that. After so much fake, though, she sometimes wondered what was real and what was not. Recognizing where her thoughts were headed she attempted to pull herself back, once more, and glanced at the clock that had allowed only three quarters of an agonizing minute to pass.

Despite her best efforts to focus, her mind continued to race through her history faster than he could possibly review on those pages. She was wondering if he would forgive her for hoping that he wouldn’t ask her why she was there. She was not sure what she could possibly tell him and had no idea where to start except for the 18 and the 22, the “yeses,” and the “severes” he had read on the pages he was holding. She imagined what he saw now as he looked across his office at her and judged her.

Despite having little to no order in her head, no words to say aloud, nor a plan to get better, she had dragged her ass out of bed, showered for the first time in a week, and skipped breakfast just to be sure she wouldn’t give in to the temptation to throw up. All of this, all this fake, so that she could tell him when he asked her that she was doing better today. She had waited to show up until her hair dried, put real pants on (jeans), and even threw on a little mascara in a feeble attempt to make him see her and not the numbers on those papers. Getting to his office had not been easy for her, but she managed to get there while drifting between the offer for hope she might get at the office, and an endless fantastical loop of escape. 

 I am here, she thought, because what is going on in my head is starting to make me feel crazy. There are so many thoughts, so much noise, so many secrets, so much faking, so many thoughts… The minute hand finally reached the 12, just as he finished flipping through the pages in front of him. As he began to speak, she willed her thoughts slower constraining the maze of her mind to simplicity. Forcing her mind and body to focus on his face while he opened his mouth he spoke—

“So, tell me what brought you in today?”

-Just your friendly neighborhood scientist,

Lauren Nellie Anderson

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9 Comments

Mary Beth Sancomb-Moran · April 9, 2021 at 12:07 pm

Powerful and well-written essay!

    Devon Peck · April 9, 2021 at 1:21 pm

    Wow. This really took me back to my first time. I forgot how terrifying and awkward those first encounters were. I guess I have just been doing them for so long now that I got desensitized to it all. I mean I had to do it 7 times to find a good therapist and 3 more times to find a good psychiatrist. And honestly, I think the thought of having to start over and redo that first encounter all over with a different stranger was one of the reasons I didn’t want to switch therapists even though I knew it wasn’t working out for me. I get that it gives a more accurate reading to do all these questionnaires since at least for me, it was easier to be honest on a piece of paper than it was to a complete stranger. But I agree that the 1st sessions shouldn’t be just doing paperwork and repeating yourself again. I also think the question should change from “what brought you here today” to something more conversational and welcoming like “where would you like to start today?” That way the patient can firstly feel like they have more control over this anxiety inducing situation, and secondly that they aren’t being asked to repeat themselves a third time in a short amount of time. It still gets a conversation started about what exactly is troubling you, but also doesn’t feel so cold and distant. Tell me if I’m wrong, but that’s just what I believe.

      Lauren Nellie · April 9, 2021 at 2:36 pm

      I completely agree 🙂 Thank you for sharing some of your experience in the chat as well! I don’t think many people realize how crazy it can be..s as we try to “Shop” for the right therapist! Starting over is the hardest part in my opinion, square one with a stranger is super tough. Sending light your way Dev :), thanks for the comments on this super important topic!

Bryn Shank · April 9, 2021 at 10:57 pm

This piece is definitely not what I expected but I did enjoy it. I thought it’d be more about the over medication of America or the seemingly ever increasing number of mental disorders in the DSM. This article does a great job of describing the vulnerability it takes to go see a psychiatrist. It also shows how much is experienced and felt through non verbal communication.

Below I highlighted some quotes that stuck out/resonated with me.

“By now she had most of the questions memorized down to her score, and what the score told the clinician about her current state”

– What struck me here was the memorization aspect of it. Once you start to fill out these questionnaires multiple times it can become rote. As a previous commenter alluded to you most likely will need to “shop” which requires many GAD’S and PHQ’s. When you start to fill them out a lot it can start to be difficult to separate your actual emotions/reality and your perceptions about emotions/reality. Your past answers and scores start to bias your future answers and results. It’d be nice if you could just fill out one and be done but alas emotions/feelings are not static but ever-changing so your survey results can become outdated quickly. Also don’t even get me started on having to deal with the nightmare that is trying to request health records or having them transferred over to a new provider. The hassle alone beats any small gains you’d get by having a more accurate, detailed, and through record of your results/progress so its just easier to try and remember what you’ve said or marked down before.

“Could he understand that behind each qualifier there was a broken piece of her puzzle”

– This is ultimately the battle between psychology and psychiatry. Are your symptoms a natural reaction to your life/the world or is there truly just not enough dopamine and serotonin in your brain? It is no accident that typical counseling session are 50mins-1 hour while a psychiatry appointment in my experience has never been longer 20-30mins. Context takes time. Life is complicated. I have often found myself getting frustrated and then hopeless after filling out the GAD-7 or PHQ-9 because you know these simple questions do not give enough justice to all the complexities and variables that brought you to making that appointment but you also realize nothing else has worked. These surveys basically try to make the subjective and unique aspects of your life objective and standardized which is impossible task and yet you do it anyway.

“At least she was no longer a stranger to him. She handed her life’s secrets to a stranger who would remain a stranger, yet he gained the privilege to the most intimate pieces of her life.”

– Its impossible not to wonder about who the psychiatrist is a person. The relationship is so foreign in its one sidedness. Your Psychiatrist will never go to a family funeral, graduation, or wedding when its very possible that they may know more about you than many of the “close” people that have been invited. It easy to become resentful and bitter of this power dynamic as I know I have.

In the end though is Psychiatry failing us? The end of the article is only the start of the appointment in earnest so we don’t know the end result. How would you know it has failed or that the opposite that it has succeeded? None of the problems that brought in there in the first place ever permanently vanish. In my experience the best psychiatrists recognize that there are no cures or silver bullets only trying and growing and trying again. There are no certainties or timetable. I have joked before that the psychiatric/therapy process is like going to the grocery store to buy ingredients to bake an apple pie except you don’t know what an apple pie is, what the ingredients are, or how to bake it. The metaphor being that feeling better or “fixed” is a baked apple pie and that the ingredients and baking instructions are the steps/medications/conversations it takes to get there. Eventually you just gotta buy what you think an “apple” is and hope you don’t burn the house down. Hopefully the metaphor worked and made sense since I know its kind of a stretch.

    Lauren Nellie · April 10, 2021 at 6:30 am

    Bryn, Thank you so much for this super valuable insight! I agree, you don’t know in this story, if psychiatry is failing as a whole. Also, for this patient, as you said, this is just the beginning :). I liked the analogy about the apple pie. At the end of the day you do just need to get the apple and go for it, because life is convoluted and hard for everyone, yet you still have to show up. Plus, when you do find an awesome psychologist or psychiatrist, it is totally worth it!

Kimberly Anderson · April 10, 2021 at 3:51 pm

Lauren,
This is a very well written article! You are a very talented writer with such great descriptions of the room, the appointment and the thoughts going through her head. My first thought as the reader is that she’s on the road to becoming more mentally healthy just by showing up at the appointment. It takes grit to work on ourselves and she’s got that! My second thought is that it does take sometimes several, or maybe many appointments with different mental health providers to find a good fit. My third thought is that in the spirit of honesty and not subscribing to the “fake it till you make it” ideology, what if she just came out and said “Please don’t have your first question be, what brought you in here…Please look this over and ask me something other than that.” My fourth thought is that working on our mental health is a constant state of affairs like diet and exercise. She shouldn’t become discouraged. The vast majority of people walking around this world have less inner peace then they personify. My next thought is, having spent my entire career in pharmaceutical sales, there are many wonderful medications that can help anxiety and depression and they all work a little bit differently in everybody. There’s got to be one that is the best fit for her. I can’t help but think of our mothers and grandmothers era when women could be put away forever in state hospitals, taken away from their children, given lobotomies, etc. if one person in their life, usually their husband, said they were crazy. Where would they be with just a small or moderate dose of a modern day anti-anxiolytic or antidepressant. Maybe it was the husband that was more crazy, drunk, abusive, etc. and she was trying to cope.

My closing thoughts as your mother is that I love you deeply, I’m so proud of you… you are smart and beautiful inside and out, and very talented in many ways. I admire you for trying to make sense of your own past and forge a path of B+mental health and peace in the future. Notice I didn’t say A+. That should never be the goal as we are all human and life, different seasons of life, are hard for everybody in different respects. Don’t ever be ashamed of your past as all you have is the future. God forgives even when people don’t, the sun will come up tomorrow and there are always better days ahead. Great article! Love, Mom

Bonnie Ellingboe · April 10, 2021 at 6:30 pm

Great article about starting out — with a mental health professional. The first time leaves a lasting impression. I have been a Licensed Psychologist for 30 years. I try my best to make the client feel comfortable and at ease immediately. I often say, today let’s just talk so I can get to know you. I have an assessment form but we will get to it later. I want to hear how I might help you work on what is most troubling to you first. Most of my clients come back to see me., some for years. They say, you seemed different than other therapists..I am glad I found you. ( All the forms filled out and boxes checked are never as important as a caring conversation)

    Lauren Nellie · April 11, 2021 at 9:09 am

    Bonnie, I completely agree! Thank you for your comment 🙂 It is good to know that there are great Psychologists like you out there. When the relationship is the center of the conversation I have seen great results! Keep doing the great work you are doing!

Gabby · April 19, 2021 at 8:54 pm

This article really highlights that first time in an office and the very real fear and frustration people experience when seeking out mental health help. To even get to the point of setting up an appointment and going can be a monumental task. Many people who are relatively mentally healthy don’t understand the mental head game you have to play just to get yourself to do something. I think the phrase “Don’t judge a book by its’ cover” was illustrated really well within this article. What you see on the surface may not always be a reflection of what’s going on internally. Overall, a well-written article with clear and concise explanations, and told an intricate story which highlighted facets of mental health not every gets to see.

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