Navigating Family Dynamics: Strategies for Maintaining Healthy Boundaries

Navigating Family Dynamics: Strategies for Maintaining Healthy Boundaries

Navigate family dynamics with confidence using strategies for healthy boundaries. Prioritize your well-being during gatherings and create positive interactions. Learn more at Intentional Therapy, PLLC

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Communication Across Cultures: How to Stop Talking Past Each Other

Communication Across Cultures: How to Stop Talking Past Each Other

Ever feel like you and the person you love are speaking two completely different languages—even when you technically share one? For many South Asian, Black, Muslim, Hindu, Bengali, bicultural, and interfaith or interracial couples, cross-cultural communication becomes a daily tightrope walk. This post dives into why that happens, how culture shapes the way we talk (and don’t talk), and what healthier communication can look like without abandoning your roots.

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Why South Asian Families Avoid Therapy

Why South Asian Families Avoid Therapy

Growing up South Asian in Texas usually came with three rules: don’t waste food, don’t talk back to elders, and definitely don’t tell strangers your “personal business.” Now you’re an adult in or around Dallas, quietly juggling anxiety, family expectations, and cultural guilt—while still hearing, “We didn’t need therapy. We just worked hard and prayed.” This post unpacks why so many South Asian families avoid therapy and what it can look like to seek support without abandoning your culture.

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Parentification in Daughters: Therapy for Women in Indiana

Parentification in Daughters: Therapy for Women in Indiana

You were the translator, the mediator, the little adult who took care of everyone else. Parentification didn't feel like trauma at the time—it felt like love, duty, survival. But now, as an adult, you're exhausted from always being the strong one.

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How Comparison Creates Trauma

How Comparison Creates Trauma

Navigating help and self-improvement within a South Asian family can be difficult because you can’t just “do you”. But you can start within yourself to address core issues. Although fair warning, this does take a lot of self-restraint - meaning you can’t always speak up on internal changes to match your external environment.

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