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No! All of Me: Therapists Reflect on Identity, Perfection, and Being Seen in K-Pop Demon Hunters

We’ve been talking a lot lately at People Bloom about K-Pop Demon Hunters. Honestly? We’ve lost count of how many times we’ve all watched it.

In a bit of a departure from our usual style, several of our clinicians are sharing their reflections here. Before we dive in, a quick note: none of us identify as belonging to Korean culture. We have, however, worked with many clients with Korean roots and wanted to approach this story thoughtfully. To add more depth, we recommend these videos from a Korean teacher, which offer beautiful cultural nuances about the film.

This movie hit us differently. While it’s packed with style and supernatural stakes, what lingered for us as clinicians was the raw, human pulse underneath the spectacle. At its core is the desperate desire to be truly seen and accepted, even when the world demands we hide. That tension between protecting ourselves and being fully known is a struggle we see in our practice every day.

Ketaki on Being Seen and Heard

The Longing to Be Seen and Heard

One of the things that stood out to me in K-Pop Demon Hunters comes from the lyrics of What It Sounds Like. The song captures a longing many people have for spaces where they’re truly seen and heard. That idea shows up powerfully in Rumi’s story. When her demon side is revealed, people’s perception of her changes instantly. Yet she hasn’t actually changed. She’s always been part demon and part human. What shifts is how others see her.

“No! All of Me!”

That shift in perception is especially painful in her relationship with Celine. In many ways, Celine did the best she could with what she knew. At some point, though, it stopped working because there were other layers that hadn’t been acknowledged. Their confrontation captures this heartbreak in such a simple but powerful exchange: “Why can’t you love me?” “I do love you.” “No! All of me!” Underneath that dialogue is a longing many people carry.

We want to know that someone can see all of us and still stay.

You Are Not Broken

Watching that moment, I kept wishing for a message that so many people need to hear: You’re not broken, and you don’t need fixing. At the same time, the story also shows how easy it is to fall into the trap of ruminating and letting guilt run your life. When guilt becomes the loudest voice, it can convince you that this is who you are and what you’re allowed to become.

But it doesn’t end there.

Choosing Hope

What I appreciate about the film is that it offers another possibility. It’s a powerful shift to see yourself as you truly are, and who you are doesn’t have to define what you do next. You still have a choice. One scene in the film captures this beautifully. When the street vendor gave Rumi a free bracelet and called Jinu “hopeless,” Rumi said to him, “That’s the funny thing about hope. No one else gets to decide if you feel it. That choice belongs to you.” In this case, hope doesn’t necessarily arrive when everything’s resolved. Sometimes it shows up right in the middle of the mess.

Acceptance in Everyday Moments

The film also shows acceptance in quieter ways. There are moments of appreciating food without shame, and moments where rest looks like lying on a couch instead of constantly pushing forward. These scenes remind us that being human includes allowing ourselves space to pause and simply be.

Nuanced Support

We also see how support from others can be complex and imperfect. When HUNTR/X arrived too late to save the passengers on the train, Zoey said to Rumi, “I’ll always be on your side, but it’s really hard to understand this time.” Support doesn’t always mean complete understanding. Sometimes it means someone staying beside you while you try.

The Possibility of Becoming More

While this isn’t an actual dialogue between Rumi and Jinu, I can imagine them saying something like this to each other: “I didn’t think I could be different.” “You could be more. You don’t have to be this way.” This sentiment captures something important. Being accepted for who you are doesn’t mean you’re stuck there. When we allow ourselves to be fully seen, both human and demon, strength and vulnerability, the possibility for something new emerges.

And that’s a beautiful thing.

Sunny on Perfectionism, Safety, and Intergenerational Trauma

When Perfection Is About Safety, Not Success

(What K-Pop Demon Hunters Reveals About Trauma, Identity, and the Pressure to Perform)

We often think of perfectionism as ambition. Drive. Discipline. High standards. From the outside, it can look impressive and responsible.

But for many people, especially those raised with cultural pressure, generational sacrifice narratives, or high expectations, perfectionism isn’t really about success.

It’s about safety.

In K-Pop Demon Hunters, the idols live double lives. On stage, they are polished and flawless. Off stage, they are battling demons and hiding parts of themselves they fear others cannot see. Rumi’s struggle is especially powerful. She is both human and demon, but she believes that if her full identity is exposed, everything will fall apart. Authority figures reinforce the message: if people see the whole truth, it will “ruin everything.” Sacrifice is invoked. Reputation must be protected. Image becomes survival.

The message underneath it all is clear:

If you are perfect, you are safe.
If you are fully seen, you are a threat.

For many people, that message did not come from a fantasy world. It came from childhood.

If you grew up hearing things like, “We sacrificed so much for you,” “Don’t embarrass the family,” or “You have to work twice as hard,” your nervous system may have learned something very specific: if I do everything right, nothing falls apart. If I succeed, I belong. If I don’t make mistakes, I won’t be rejected.

Perfection becomes a protective identity. A high-functioning shield. A way to survive.

You may tell yourself, “If I can just pass this hurdle, then I can rest. If I can perfect this, then I’ll finally get what I want.” But the finish line keeps moving. There is always another stage. Another expectation. Another invisible demon to fight.

For people navigating multiple cultures, this pressure can intensify. You may carry a public identity and a private one. At work, you are composed and polished. At home, you navigate tradition and generational expectations. In social spaces, you adjust again. The emotional labor of code-switching, balancing how you present with how you actually feel, is exhausting.

You may constantly cater to one side of yourself, trying to fit into a rigid mold. In the film, the Golden Honmoon represents this kind of perfection: flawless, pure, controlled. But it is also rigid. Unforgiving. There is no room for cracks.

By the end of the movie, that gold barrier is replaced by a rainbow-colored one. Not perfect. Not singular. Many colors at once. It symbolizes growth and the acceptance of imperfection. It shows that protection does not have to mean rigidity.

This shift mirrors what healing often requires.

Perfectionism frequently develops in response to trauma, not always dramatic trauma, but relational trauma. Conditional love. High criticism. Family instability. Discrimination. The pressure of representing your community well. Sometimes shame, fear, and guilt are passed down unintentionally. Caregivers who survived hardship project their anxiety forward. “For the greater good” becomes the justification. Achievement becomes repayment.

And so you become the strong one. The reliable one. The achiever. Like Mira, you carry your dual life quietly. Like Zoey, traits that once got labeled as “too much” get repurposed into something productive. You survive by adapting.

But inside, there may be shame. Fear. Guilt. A constant sense that if you crumble, the people who depend on you will see your cracks, and everything will collapse.

Perfectionism says: protect yourself. Hide the demon. Don’t let anyone see.

Healing says something different.

In K-Pop Demon Hunters, the characters are strongest when they stop hiding and fight together. They learn they don’t have to trap their guilt alone. There’s even a small, playful moment, “Couch, couch, couch!”, that reminds us how foreign rest can feel when you’re used to always being “on.” For many high achievers, rest feels unsafe. It feels undeserved. It feels like letting down the system.

But being human includes silliness. Softness. Pauses.

Rumi’s struggle with being both human and demon reflects something deeply relatable. Many people feel split, between strength and vulnerability, tradition and individuality, ambition and exhaustion. The pressure to choose one identity over the other creates internal conflict.

But healing is not about choosing.

It’s about integration.

You can be ambitious and imperfect.
You can honor your family and set boundaries.
You can represent your culture and still be fully human.
You can be high-functioning and still need support.

Perfection paints life in gold, rigid and controlled. Integration allows the full rainbow.

If perfectionism has shaped your life, it may help to ask: When did this become necessary? What was it protecting me from? Who was I trying to keep safe?

Perfection likely helped you survive something. It kept you stable. Accepted. Needed.

But survival strategies don’t have to define your entire identity.

You are allowed to step off the stage sometimes.

You are allowed to be seen whole, not just polished.

You are allowed to rest without earning it.

You are allowed to hold multiple colors at once.

Perfection was about safety.

But worth has never required it.

Amy on Identity, Redemption, and Trust

The Pressure to Stay in Your Role

A theme that stood out to me in K-Pop Demon Hunters is the pressure each character feels to stay in a certain role. Rumi carries the weight of leadership. As the leader, there’s an expectation that she keeps up a certain image and stays strong for everyone else. That pressure leaves very little room for her own internal struggle. She’s expected to hold everything together.

At the same time, Zoe and Mira also want to be seen. They each have their own characteristics, personalities, and perspectives that they bring to the group. Yet the group dynamic sometimes limits how much they can step into those parts of themselves. When one person carries the leadership role, it can unintentionally shape how everyone else shows up as well.

Wanting to Be Seen for Who You Are

This tension between roles and identity appears throughout the film. Several characters feel pressure to present themselves in a certain way, even when their internal experience is far more complicated. Jinu’s story highlights this struggle in a particularly powerful way. He’s expected to act and show up in ways that hide his humanity, while internally he carries regret and a longing for something different.

Redemption and the Courage to Change

Jinu’s storyline also brings up the theme of redemption. We all have moments we regret. We make mistakes and sometimes carry those moments with us for a long time.

The question becomes how we face those mistakes. One path is rumination, where regret keeps repeating itself and begins to define how we see ourselves. Another path is acknowledging what happened and letting it become a learning experience.

Even though the path isn’t linear, Jinu moves toward that second path. In the end, he faces what he’s done and chooses differently. Instead of letting his past define him, he breaks free from it.

In that moment, he’s able to forgive himself.

The Risk of Trusting Someone

Another powerful part of this story is the trust that develops when someone takes a risk with another person. Trust often begins with vulnerability. It means letting someone see parts of us that we usually keep hidden.

When that risk is met with understanding or compassion, something shifts. A person begins to believe that change might actually be possible.

For me, this is one of the most meaningful aspects of the story. Growth rarely happens in isolation. It often starts when someone takes the risk to be vulnerable, and another person responds with trust.

If that isn’t healing, I don’t know what is.

Ada on Understanding Old Patterns and Healing

Carrying Patterns Across Generations

In K-Pop Demon Hunters, we see how patterns of behavior and belief can carry across generations. The way Celine teaches Rumi to hide the demon part of herself is about survival. It’s a way to preserve tradition and protect her from a world that might not accept her fully. That’s understandable. Stepping outside what we know and breaking from the familiar is always scary, even when the tradition is no longer sustainable.

Hiding Parts of Ourselves

Jinu faces a similar challenge. He has good reasons to hide parts of his truth because if he shared what really happened, he’d experience even more shame and rejection. Nobody wants more of what they’re already fighting against. Both Rumi and Jinu show how people often carry the weight of survival strategies long before they understand their impact. These choices may have made sense at the time, yet they can limit connection and healing if they go unexamined.

It’s Okay to Not Know

I often say that if we’ve never been shown how to do something, we’re not supposed to know how to do it well. It’s okay to not know, and to experience the ups and downs of figuring it out with a trusted other. Connections can be healing. I’m glad Jinu had Rumi, and Rumi had Zoey and Mira. It makes me really grateful for the support our clients have outside the therapy room.

It Does Not Change How We See You

While Golden was the song that made it big, for me, What It Sounds Like will always be my favorite. It’s hard to go through life unscathed. Whatever patterns or habits we try to hide, whatever broken pieces we try to put back together, whatever distance we put between ourselves and others so we won’t be discovered… What if we could be seen for all of who we are and still be accepted and loved? Wouldn’t our jagged edges reflect a myriad of light if we could shine together?

Our clients are brave to share parts of themselves they don’t often feel comfortable showing the world. When we see their humanity, we want to tell them: "Thank you for sharing with me. It doesn’t change how I see you one bit.”

What would it be like to really take that in?

Let’s See, Support, and Celebrate You

At People Bloom, we want to see you, support you, and celebrate you exactly as you are. And, if you’ve already nailed self-acceptance but the ruminating voices in your head won’t quit, or if you’re stuck in a pattern that’s holding you back, we’re here for that too.


Ketaki Tongaonkar is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor at People Bloom Counseling. She helps people navigating multiple cultures and identities build lives that feel more authentic and balanced. She also works with stressed-out overachievers to develop healthier relationships at work, at home, and in their communities.

Originally from India, Ketaki grew up surrounded by strong community and cultural traditions. She understands firsthand the tension that can come from honoring where you come from while also becoming your own person, and she hopes she can help you get there too.


Sunny Patel is a certified EMDR and trauma therapist at People Bloom Counseling. He believes that your past doesn’t have to define your future. He helps individuals, couples, and families "deconstruct" trauma and quiet the self-doubt that often follows difficult life transitions. As a first-generation South Asian American, Sunny is particularly passionate about helping people navigate cultural expectations and find their own unique voice.

A huge fan of superhero movies, Sunny sees the 'superpower' potential in everyone. However, he wishes films showed more of the boring recovery time, because he knows that in real life, the most heroic work happens during the slow, gritty, and often zigzagging path of healing.


Amy Lai is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor at People Bloom Counseling who is passionate about helping people grow through life’s most difficult transitions. Drawing from her own experience as an immigrant and a caregiver, she supports adults navigating cultural identity, boundary setting, and the unique challenges of the "sandwich generation." She also finds it incredibly rewarding to walk with those navigating medical conditions or caregiver burnout.

Given how eventful life can be, she often takes things with a grain of salt. However, there are no conversations too small for the therapy room. If it matters to you, it matters to her, and she is committed to helping you feel seen and heard.


Ada Pang is the proud owner of People Bloom Counseling, a psychotherapy practice in Redmond. She helps unhappy couples find safety and connection in their relationships. She also works with cancer thrivers and their caregivers as they integrate cancer into their life stories.

The only thing she’d change about the movie is the last scene where HUNTR/X give up their couch time to be with fans. After everything they’ve been through, she hopes they’d find more couch time before the sequel.

Step Into Healing: The Benefits of Walk and Talk Therapy

Sitting and Mental Health

Most of us spend much of our day sitting - at work, in class, in the car, on the couch. The average adult spends between 6-9 hours sitting each day. There are many physical health issues associated with sitting and not getting enough movement. 

What about the mental health risks related to a sedentary lifestyle? Sitting for long periods of time has been linked to an increase in anxiety and depression, reduced concentration and focus, lower energy levels, poor sleep quality, lower self-esteem, and the list goes on. 

So what if you could support your mental health and get more movement? That’s where Walk and Talk Therapy comes in. This approach has been shown to reduce anxiety and depression, boost mood and creativity, improve focus and concentration, and help clients feel more open, grounded, and connected during sessions. 

Getting “Unstuck”

Think about those moments when you feel mentally STUCK. You are staring at a screen, unable to think clearly or move forward. Your mind just feels BLANK. What often helps? Getting up, and stepping away. Sometimes, it’s stepping outside, and moving your body. Movement and fresh air can reset your mind and help ideas flow again. 

Now imagine pairing that with therapy. Picture walking side-by-side with a trusted professional who helps you process emotions, gain insight, and find new perspectives. It’s a simple yet powerful shift that can make talking about difficult things feel more natural and less intimidating. 

Why It Works

Walking stimulates both sides of the brain, a process called bilateral movement, which can improve problem solving, creativity, and emotional regulation. Being outdoors enhances these effects. Exposure to green spaces, natural light, and fresh air calms the nervous system and improves focus. 

No matter what your personal preferences are around nature and the outdoors, your brain intuitively responds to nature in a positive way. Seeing natural bodies of water or green space can trigger an immediate calming effect in your body. Pair that with other elements of nature that engage your senses like feeling the warmth of the sun or hearing waves crash, and the effects are even more pronounced. You may notice yourself thinking more clearly, feeling lighter, and connecting more deeply with your thoughts and emotions.

Combining Movement and Connection

Movement and nature already benefit our mental health, but adding meaningful conversation and connections amplifies the effects. Walking with a therapist can feel more relaxed than sitting face-to-face in an office. The rhythm of movement often helps people open up and explore their thoughts more freely. It helps explore those “stuck” thoughts and feelings and find new perspectives. It can also bring natural metaphors and insights, like noticing how taking one step at a time can mirror your own healing process. 

Taking the First Step

Walk and Talk Therapy is not for everyone, and we’ll address things like confidentiality, weather, and comfort level before beginning. We’ll start with a few office or virtual sessions to establish goals and discuss logistics. My goal as a therapist is to make you feel as comfortable as possible and address any concerns you may have. The therapeutic relationship, whether a traditional in-office or this more holistic approach, is based on collaboration and trust. We will make a plan and work together to help you reach your goals. 

If you are in the Redmond, Washington area and would like to give it a try, make an appointment with me. You may find that this simple act of pairing walking with therapy can help you move forward - literally and emotionally. If you want to learn more about a path towards healing and balance, take the first step by reaching out today. 


We’re so glad to have Kristin Calvert at People Bloom Counseling, a Redmond psychotherapy practice in WA. She helps neurodivergent teens with executive functioning. She also supports educators and adults going through burnout. She loves being in nature and did a lot of her sessions while walking and talking as a school counselor. Barring atmospheric rivers, falling branches, and dark skies at 4:28pm, she’d be open to taking sessions outside if you are!

Practical Tips for the Educator Who is Exhausted But Still Cares

The moment you step into a school, you can feel that it’s a special place. Students are learning, growing, and having those “aha” moments, and being part of that is incredibly meaningful. If you have ever worked in a school, you know how rewarding that can be. 

You also know how hard it is to be an educator. 

As a former teacher and school counselor, I get it. I have worn all the hats. And more often than not, it felt like I was failing at those various roles, while relationships, healthy habits, and my own well-being fell by the wayside. 

Between demanding workloads, tight deadlines, ever-changing policies and expectations, and a work/life balance that feels nonexistent, it feels hard to manage. This is especially true with the natural “ebb and flow” to the school year, when certain stretches of time feel more hectic than others. Some seasons feel manageable, while others feel like they’ll never end. You didn’t choose education for the paycheck, but rather to make a difference. Sometimes that sacrifice comes at the cost of your own mental health and well-being. 

Everyone gives the usual advice, like practice self-care and to “remember your why,” but I imagine you are tired of hearing that.

Let’s explore a few things that may actually help. 

Task Batching, Not Multitasking

Multitasking sounds productive, but it drains your energy quickly. Task batching is when you group similar tasks into a dedicated time block. For example, set aside 30 minutes to answer emails instead of checking them (and responding to them) throughout the day. During that task batch time, you are focused solely on that task and not distracting yourself with other tasks. 

When switching from task to task, you lose productivity, so fewer mental switches leads to less stress and more efficiency. It’s not easy to do in a school environment (where distractions are plentiful), but it’s worth a try. Look to your colleagues to help you honor this time block and discourage them from interrupting you during this dedicated time. 

Be Mindful of Your Connections

Work friends can be lifesavers, but it can also unintentionally pull you into constant negativity. Venting is normal, but when it turns into gossip or chronic complaining, it can be exhausting. Pay attention to who gives you energy and who drains your energy. Connections outside of education are also important so that work isn’t the only thing you talk about. 

Setting Boundaries, For Real

It’s okay to not bring work home with you. I know that may feel impossible, especially when you want to “do it all.” I have graded papers and sent emails at night, too. The truth is, the to-do list will still be there tomorrow. Even when you work non-stop, the list never really shrinks. Without boundaries, burnout becomes inevitable, and it sends the message that you’re always available. You are allowed to step away, and you need to step away. Consider filling your time outside of work doing things that energize you and bring you joy. 

Analog Hobbies and Limiting Screen Time

Scrolling on your phone might feel like a “relaxing” activity after a long day at work, especially when you are physically and mentally drained at the end of it. However, it keeps your brain in a constant state of overstimulation, and it leads to fatigue, poor sleep, and poor focus. Getting offline is helpful for your mind and body.

Analog hobbies, ones that don’t involve a screen, give your nervous system a much-needed break. This can include creative hobbies such as coloring, painting, crocheting, etc. It can also include brain-based activities like crossword puzzles, trivia, learning a language, etc. Lastly, physical movement like yoga, hiking, and walking can also be helpful. If movement and being outdoors appeals to you, Walk and Talk Therapy can be a great option too. 

It’s Okay to Ask for Help

You spend your days supporting others and it’s okay to need support too. It’s hard to ask for help, but there’s no shame in seeking it if you are stressed/burned out, overwhelmed, and struggling to balance it all. Talking to a mental health professional can help, especially one who understands the unique demands of being an educator. You don’t have to carry the burden alone. 

I’m here for you. 


We’re thrilled to have Kristin Calvert at People Bloom Counseling, a Redmond psychotherapy practice in WA! She helps neurodivergent teens with executive functioning. She also supports educators, parents, and adults going through burnout, and various life transitions. This year, she hopes to engage in more creative hobbies, and explore more hiking trails and parks in the area! 

New Year’s Resolutions: Rethinking the “New Year, New Me” Mindset

“New year, new me”… sounds great in theory, right? The idea of setting resolutions feels like something we should do, yet many of us have a long history of abandoned goals. The start of a new year can fill us with hope and optimism. It’s exciting to imagine a major life transformation — but it’s also unrealistic to expect ourselves to completely reinvent our lives overnight.

Quitter’s Day

The second Friday in January is known as “National Quit Day” or “Quitter’s Day” — the point when most people give up on their New Year’s resolutions. If your resolution has ever involved getting fit, you’ve probably noticed how the gym is packed in early January, only to become less crowded each week.

Why Do People Quit?

Most resolutions fail because we set goals that are too big, vague, or unrealistic. Lose twenty pounds in a month? Not healthy or sustainable. Other unrealistic goals: quit a habit like smoking overnight, cutting out all “unhealthy” foods immediately, eliminate credit card debt quickly; trying to get results too quickly and not having a plan often leads to failed resolutions. 

Instead of chasing giant goals, consider shifting your approach entirely. Think in terms of habits rather than resolutions. A subtle language shift can create a meaningful mindset shift too. Habits feel tangible and actionable.

James Clear’s concept of habit stacking, from his book Atomic Habits, is a great place to start. You build a new habit onto an existing one — for example:

  • After brushing your teeth → read for 10 minutes

  • After reading → meditate for 5 minutes

The flow builds naturally, and the habits feel less overwhelming. Also, they are more likely to stick when you are attaching them to already existing habits. 

Different Types of Habits

Even as you consider stacking habits, not all habits carry the same weight. In the book The Power of Habit Charles Duhigg talks about how keystone habits can lead to the formation of other habits and actions, called supporting habits. The author of Tiny Habits, BJ Fogg, came up with the concept that if the behavior is so small, it does not require willpower or motivation to complete it, making it more likely you’ll add it into your routine. Finally, “small wonder habits” are not a traditional habit at all, and is something I came across recently on social media. It’s all about adding small moments of joy into your life. 

Let’s lay this out:

  • Keystone habits: Foundational habits that create a ripple effect (e.g., daily movement, quality sleep).

  • Supporting habits: Smaller actions that reinforce your keystone habits (e.g., stretching, drinking plenty of water, meditation). 

  • Tiny habits: A habit so small that it’s easy to implement (e.g., doing two push-ups, flossing one tooth).

  • Small wonder habits: Flipping the script on habits and adding something fun into your day that you’ll look forward to doing (e.g., watching the sunset, taking a walk after dinner). 

Can you imagine how one type of habit can lead to another?

Think Small to Go Big

Habit stacking works because it relies on small, repeatable actions — not grand overhauls. It takes an average of 66 days to build a habit, though this varies based on complexity, consistency, and life circumstances.

So instead of trying to overhaul your entire life during the first week of January, try choosing one habit per quarter or season. That’s four meaningful, sustainable changes across a year — far more realistic than ten new habits at once.

Dream Big Anyway

Focusing on small changes doesn’t mean abandoning big dreams.

Consider choosing a misogi for your year — a big, bold challenge you don’t think you can achieve. Originating from a Japanese purification ritual, the modern misogi concept was popularized by Dr. Marcus Elliott and encourages people to take on a once-a-year challenge that feels almost impossible.

Your misogi might be:

  • Running a marathon

  • Climbing a mountain peak

  • Writing a book

These “stretch challenges” build confidence, grit, and a sense of accomplishment that lasts long beyond the goal itself.

Try a Vision Board — Or a “Becoming Board”

Traditional vision boards focus on end results — beautiful houses, dream vacations, ideal lifestyles. They’re inspiring, but they often ignore the process.

A becoming board shifts the focus. Instead of showcasing the finish line, it highlights the work that gets you there:

  • Photos of training runs instead of the marathon medal

  • A picture of you journaling rather than just the final published book

  • Meal prepping instead of the imagined physique

  • Even better: use photos from your own life instead of stock images. It makes the vision — and the journey — more personal and grounding. It also keeps you tuned in all year long as you are continuously building it. 

Bringing It All Together

If you love New Year’s resolutions, go for it. But if you’re craving a different approach this year, try this:

  • Choose four meaningful habits — one per quarter — to weave into your daily routine

  • Pick a misogi challenge to stretch your comfort zone

  • Create a becoming board to visually honor the process, not just the outcome

The truth is, long-lasting change is hard. Feeling overwhelmed in January is completely normal. If you want support in building habits, staying consistent, or navigating personal growth, the therapists at People Bloom Counseling are here to help.


We’re thrilled to have Kristin Calvert at People Bloom Counseling, a Redmond psychotherapy practice in WA! She helps neurodivergent teens with executive functioning. She also supports educators, parents, and adults going through burnout, and various life transitions. Clearly, she’s read up on the power of habits and what would help sustain them. She’d love to help you too!

Seattle’s Big Dark: How Small Shifts Can Brighten Your Winter

As a new resident of Washington state preparing for my first winter in the Pacific Northwest, I’m learning firsthand what locals call “The Big Dark.” Before I arrived, many people warned me about the early sunsets and how challenging the long stretch of cloudy, dim days can feel. Growing up in the northeast, I was familiar with Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD). The acronym SAD is very telling, but experiencing the PNW version is uniquely its own. 

Although these months can feel heavy and endless, they do not have to be defined by sadness and stagnation. With intention and support, winter can be a season of restoration, growth, and connection. 

Seek sunlight and natural light exposure

One of the most difficult aspects of “The Big Dark” is the limited daylight. When the sun sets before 5 p.m., leaving home in the dark for work/school and returning in the dark can feel “depressing.” Even without clinical depression, this can mimic depressive symptoms such as low energy, irritability, changes in appetite, sleep disruptions, and diminished motivation.

Small adjustments can create meaningful shifts. Consider incorporating brief outdoor moments into your day — take a short walk during lunch, sip your morning coffee in the fresh air, or bask in natural light whenever you can. 

Light therapy lamps can be a game-changer. And because vitamin D plays an important role in mood regulation and overall health, it’s worth chatting with your medical provider about whether a supplement or light therapy could help.

Adapt a growth-oriented winter mindset

Now let’s talk about mindset. You may be familiar with the concept of a “growth mindset,” which encourages viewing challenges as opportunities for development rather than obstacles to avoid. Instead of taking a “fixed mindset” and approaching winter as a season to endure or “hibernate through,” consider reframing it as a season to intentionally cultivate growth and resilience.

This might involve learning a new hobby, prioritizing health and wellness, spending more meaningful time with loved ones, or setting a personal goal that aligns with your values. While the shorter days require some adaptation, they also provide space for creativity, introspection, and renewed purpose. For me, this downtime includes practicing yoga, exploring new restaurants, online learning, baking, and reading. I want to soak in all that Seattle has to offer, no pun intended.

Embrace comfort and connection indoors

After many years in Florida, the land of eternal summer, I'm genuinely looking forward to cooler weather and the opportunity to enjoy cozy, indoor experiences. Winter can be an ideal time to slow down and do things that feel nourishing. I know I’ll be curling up with a warm drink, reading under a blanket, and catching up on movies.

What will you be doing?

With the holiday season approaching, consider how you want this period to feel. Intentionally carving out restful, grounding routines can help prevent stress and cultivate a greater sense of balance, supporting both mental and emotional well-being.

Seek support when needed

Meaningful connection is important in every season, but especially during winter when isolation can more easily set in. If you notice yourself feeling disconnected, overwhelmed, or persistently low, seeking support is a sign of strength — not weakness.

Here at People Bloom Counseling, we have a team of licensed, compassionate clinicians who are here to support you throughout this season and beyond. You don't have to navigate “The Big Dark” alone. Whether you’ve been in the area for decades, or you’re a recent transplant like me, let me know if I can help! 


We’re so glad to have Kristin Calvert at People Bloom Counseling, a Redmond psychotherapy practice in WA! She helps neurodivergent teens with executive functioning. She also supports educators, parents, and adults going through burnout, and various life transitions.The fall is not usually a time to move to Seattle, but she’s up for the challenge! She really tries to inhabit her writing here, and she hopes she can help you through whatever season you’re going through.

Fierce Self-Care: It is More Than you Think

Self-care isn’t a buzzword or an indulgence. It’s a necessity, a form of resistance, and for many, a radical act of survival. Before corporations marketed it as spa days and bubble baths, self-care had deep roots in Black and brown communities — especially among activists who understood that caring for themselves meant sustaining the fight against oppression. Audre Lorde, the Black feminist writer, famously said, “Caring for myself is not self-indulgence, it is self-preservation, and that is an act of political warfare.” When systems are built to wear people down, taking care of oneself becomes a way to push back, to do more than just survive. 

A legacy of giving (and overgiving)

As a giver and helper, by both trade and lived experience as an immigrant woman of color, I know the impulse to overextend myself all too well. I see it in my parents, who go above and beyond for family and friends, often at the cost of their own well-being. It’s a legacy of care, but also of sacrifice. During the pandemic, I wrote about the importance of self-care and how easy it is to overlook our own basic needs. 

But knowing this truth and living it are two different things.

Preparing to care—for both of us

Recently, I had to put this into practice in a way that felt both intentional and necessary. I was taking a family member to chemotherapy — a long day of waiting, attending, and making sure she was okay. In the past, I might have shown up with little thought to my own needs, running on fumes and a sense of service to others. But this time, I did it differently. The night before, I spent 45 minutes preparing — not just for her, but for me. I set up my kettle for hot water, packed my tea, and prepped my green tea latte for a day of hydration. I put together a big-ass salad because I knew I’d need something light and nourishing that doesn’t put me into a food coma. I packed sweet and savory snacks of various kinds. I brought my Kindle in case there was downtime. I gave myself choices, in case I had this or that need.

Honoring my own needs

I preserved energy at the clinic because I knew that waiting makes me tired. I sat, I stood up, I moved when I needed to. I reminded myself that no one can care for me like me, because I am intimately aware of what I might need on a day like this. After the long day of treatment I let myself take a nap on her couch before heading home, whereas before I might have tried to use the last of my fuel for conversations.

Writing, resting, and fierce self-care

It has been many months since I last wrote, and even waiting to write is a part of self-care. Not everything needs to be done immediately. Resting, reflecting, and allowing space for oneself are just as important as taking action.

All of this was fierce self-care. Not an afterthought, not a luxury, but a deliberate act of sustaining myself so I could sustain someone else. Because being there for others meant I also had to be there for me.

You deserve the care you give

Too often, those of us who give — whether by culture, upbringing, or profession — forget that our own well-being matters just as much as the people we serve. Taking care of ourselves allows us to keep showing up. And if we want to do more than just survive, if we want to care fiercely, we have to start with ourselves.

If you’re feeling depleted, stretched too thin, or like you’ve lost yourself in the care of others, therapy can be a way to reclaim your well-being. At People Bloom, we help people like you set boundaries, prioritize yourself, and engage in self-care as an act of resistance.

You don’t have to do it alone. Let’s get some work done. 


Ada Pang is the proud owner of People Bloom Counseling, a Redmond psychotherapy practice. She helps unhappy couples find safety and connection in their relationship. She also helps cancer thrivers and their caregivers integrate cancer into their life stories. Some days, she’s better at following her own advice than other days, but what’s most important is that she doesn’t stop trying. 

When Apologizing Becomes a Burden: How to Strike a Balance

Recently we hosted a friend and her family from college. Their family of three were traveling from the east coast. It was my first time meeting their kid, and I was looking forward to our late night conversations. Seattle weather was surprisingly cooperative for the few days they were here. 

They were wonderful and very considerate guests. In fact, a little too considerate and apologetic. 

The apology overload

You see, as with a young child, spills happen. They cleaned up quickly and there were no permanent damages, but the parents were very apologetic. Then came more apologies: They were staying out later and will be missing dinner. They were sorry for making noise in the early morning. They apologized for taking up space in our home.

At first, the constant apologies seemed polite. But soon, it became apparent that their frequent apologies were creating a subtle, but significant shift in our interactions.

As a therapist, I've often noticed how apologizing can sometimes be more than just a polite gesture. It's a complex social behavior that can, at times, place an unintended burden on the person being apologized to. When someone frequently apologizes, it often puts the onus on the other person to respond with reassurance, which can create an imbalance in the relationship.

In the case of my friend's visit, their continuous apologies began to make us feel uncomfortable. Instead of enjoying our time together, I felt compelled to constantly reassure them that everything was okay. What started as a relaxing visit evolved into something that required emotional labor on our part. 

Reflecting on the experience

One evening, after yet another apology about their child being too rowdy, I felt drained. I didn't have the energy to address the issue at that moment, so I kept quiet. It wasn't until after they had left that I reflected on the situation. This experience highlighted how continuous apologizing, even when well-intentioned, can sometimes have unintended consequences.

I found myself repeatedly saying, “Oh, it’s not a problem…” “It really wasn’t a big deal…” “No worries…” “It’s okay…” Over time, offering constant reassurance became tiring and cumbersome. 

It turned small matters into bigger issues than they needed to be.

Tips for healthier interactions

From my experience, here are a few thoughts around the use of apologies:

  1. Apologize and move on: Acknowledge the mishap with a simple apology and then move on. Over apologizing is belaboring the point, and apologizing repeatedly for different things can get old after a while. 

  2. Fix the problem if there's one to fix: If there's an actual problem, take steps to address it. The spill was cleaned up. There was nothing more to do. And if there wasn’t an actual problem to be fixed…

  3. Be okay with inconveniences: Understand that minor mishaps are a part of life. Little Darren had a nap and was as cooperative as he can be. We don’t expect any different. Let’s enjoy each other as we are. 

All that to say, while apologies are an important part of social interactions, it's crucial to strike a balance. Over-apologizing can inadvertently place a burden on others to constantly reassure, which can strain relationships. Let’s acknowledge and move on, so we can focus on what really matters: our relationship. 

Ready to navigate nuances in your relationships? 

Join other clients who are making changes in their relationships and ways of relating. Our team of clinicians are here to help! 


Ada Pang is the proud owner of People Bloom Counseling, a Redmond psychotherapy practice. She helps unhappy couples find safety and connection in their relationship. She also helps cancer thrivers and their caregivers integrate cancer into their life stories. She and her partner are getting better at hosting, and they hope to make people feel at home. There’s always something to learn…

What Keeps Teachers from Therapy

My experience as a teacher

When I was a high school teacher, I was so dang busy that I often didn’t have time to stop and think about how dang busy I was. I woke at 5:00am (ew), dressed and readied myself, quickly made up my gigantic coffee, grabbed my lunch (if I had enough energy to make it the night before), and took off on a 45 min/35 mile commute to get to school by 7:45 (ish) for an 8:15 am start.

Begin period 1. Sip coffee. Give lesson. Stand and mosey through the classroom. Ask questions. Answer questions. No, you cannot Snap me in the middle of class. Yes, you may go to the restroom—take the pass. Pass out papers. Pick up papers. Maybe assign homework. Bell rings. Next class. Repeat. And so on, either 4 block classes (~1.5 hours each) or 8 classes (~45 min each) passed until it was finally 4:00 pm.

In between grading papers and entering grades, I’d eat my lunch—that is, if I wasn’t supporting a club or tutoring students. In between classes, I might run to the restroom—if I had time. I had 6 classes, 1 conference period, and 1 planning period. I had around 150 students, give or take, depending on the semester. 150 students, 150 names, 150 grades per assignment, 150 different learners.

4:00pm hits. I stay at school, planning classes, grading papers, replying to emails, filling out paperwork. At the end of a six-week grading period, I would sometimes find myself at school until it was dark outside, working until I was way past hungry. 

Life outside of work

Monday through Friday, this was the routine. In my twenties, I found enough energy (with the help of pre-workout) to make myself go to the gym a few days a week before going home and (often) do more work for school, eat, and sleep. The hour at the gym, often 3ish times a week, was some of the little time I made for myself—that plus the occasional “retail therapy” on weekends which was more like a lot of window shopping. I got creative ballin’ on a teacher's salary.

Go to therapy, you say? When? How?

I am the type that has been busy all. my. life. When there isn’t something on the calendar, I’m not sure what to do with myself. For those first couple of summers as a new teacher I would enjoy the time off and rest at first, and then I’d start twiddling my thumbs after a month or so.

In the summer, we feel good. The sun’s out. We’re out. We take vacations. We see people more often. Commonly, we don’t go to therapy when we feel good.

However, what if good therapy can come from when we feel good? What if we’re able to sit and process—dare I say—better when we’re not in go-go-go mode? What if we have more emotional capacity to try new things, learn new skills when we’re not so burnt out we have to seek help?

Enter therapy

As a former high school teacher, I know what it’s like to hustle, to go through the day in, day out of this profession, and be thinking about the work, the students, sometimes their families and circumstances, at odd hours. If you’re having a hard time turning your mind off of work– I’m with you. 

Had I known more about therapy in my early twenties, I think I could’ve benefited. There’s something about processing direction and balance that I so enjoy working with with clients now, and I wonder, in a world that seems so fast, how we all may benefit from a lil slow down. 

Sure it may be odd to slow down after being so used to being busy. Ultimately it’s in the slowing down that we are able to appreciate and manage the busy.

Now, I advocate for the balance of busy with rest, and for a therapy that works for you in the time and space that you need it.

Can we help find that for you? If now is your time, let’s get some work done!


We’re so glad to have Rachel Keo at People Bloom Counseling, a Redmond psychotherapy practice in WA. She helps young adults and working professionals with life transitions. As a former high school teacher in TX and a Peace Corps Volunteer and Teacher in Albania, she also has a heart for working with school personnel. She’s seeing more and more clients working for the school district, and she loves what she does. She hopes to cross paths with you!

How to Renovate while Staying Sane and Without Killing your Partner

The pandemic has changed the way we view our homes. It’s a safe haven, a place where we live and work, and open up to host others. Many people engaged in DIY projects while spending an extended amount of time at home. Home Depot parking lots were full, even when other places were sparse. While it would be lovely if my partner and I were more handy, we once spent two and a half days and four trips to Home Depot just to change out an existing hood range. We also used three different drill bits and spent almost two hours putting up a pre-made blind. 

I’m not exaggerating. 

We have our strengths, but DIY projects that involve more than putting up a towel bar are not one of them. Thus, rather than spending many months half-assing DIY projects that we’d ultimately need to call contractors to come and fix, we knew we had to hire out. 

It can be really hard to write about a stressful experience when you’re still in the middle of it. That’s what happened when my partner and I spent eight weeks renovating this past fall, and I can only recount the experience a couple of months later. While we love our new home, and we packed, moved and set up without a hitch, the renovation was a different story. The stress level was a close second to other stressful events we’ve experienced apart or together.

We survived it without going bat-sh*t crazy or killing each other, but it was a long eight weeks, with many of the designs and decisions made prior to. Not-surprisingly, 12 percent of couples consider divorce while going through renovation. Part of this can be attributed to couples looking to a major life change to help save their already struggling relationship, but I can see why a home improvement project can put a strain on even a relatively good relationship.

With some lived experience under my belt, here are a few tips on how to renovate while staying sane, plus more tips for your relationship. 

Expect people to make mistakes

You don’t need to wait for the other shoe to drop, but expect that things won’t go as planned. The measurements were off, even though two contractors measured the space at two different times. Forty-six percent of the tiles arrived broken. The tiles installed in the inner kitchen corners were off-centered. Like, really off-centered. The contractor didn’t use the matching items we purchased and did their own thing. While some of these can be fixed, others are permanent. Initially frustrated, I’ve needed to learn the imperfection of it all as people tried their best to make our dreams come true.

This naturally leads me to the next point. 

Expect that you’ll also have regrets

Contractors are not the only ones who make mistakes; so can you. We thought we’d like ball catch closet doors, but now we understand why they were bifolds to begin with. I thought the tub would be too big but now it’s too small. I didn’t see how the countertop needed to be cut to accommodate not just the sink, but the matching cutting board. All this to say, we didn’t have experience to foresee these happenings but now we do. 

And that’s okay. 

Renovations always take longer

It helped that we were able to start on the demo a couple of weeks earlier than expected, but we couldn’t have accounted for the tub never arriving, the forgotten lazy Susan, or the shower door guys returning for the third time. We came right up against an out-of-town trip, so don’t do what we did! Give yourself at least a two week buffer. Try to not schedule any trips or guests immediately after the (new) planned end date. 

Enjoy your new space.

You will go over your budget

The costs of materials have gone up exponentially and contractual labor is in high demand. Renovations are just expensive. Despite your best intentions, you will go over your budget. In order to add a new sink, new pipes need to be rerouted. The kitchen will look more open if we also cut into this wall. Extra insulation was needed given what’s behind the wall. As our contractors billed by the hour, extra time and materials really added up. We made sure we saved a ballpark figure before we took the plunge, but even that was exceeded, thankfully not by too much. 

Couples often experience a renovation together, so the above tips will affect you both. But specific to your relationship, here are a few more tips:

Know your differences

It helps to know your differences going into a big renovation project. My partner cares that things function well; I care that things look good. He can imagine how something will look; I need a sketch or a picture to know what we’re dealing with. He wants to make sure there’s room to move around; I want spaces optimized. (Except for the shower niches, I wanted bigger ones or more than one, but that didn’t happen.) 

So, at the end of the day, when things don’t match or tiles don’t line up, but they’re still functional, guess who was more affected? 

It’s not a right or wrong, but it helps to know that we don’t experience the same situation the same way, nor do we have to. But we can still honor each other’s differences and how things show up for us differently. 

Let the other person lead in areas they care more about

When something bothers you, it means you care about that area more. Listen to that voice, give it air time, and ask to lead in that area. It helped that I narrowed down the design ideas and we made choices from within those limits. After all, I’m the person who cared that things looked pretty. My partner cared more about how things worked, so he took half a day to follow the electrician around so he can better understand how things were wired. That would’ve put me to sleep. 

I’m glad we complement each other in these ways. And even then, we were in constant communication. This brings me to my last point. 

Keep communicating, with contractors and with each other

For all the reasons mentioned, things will show up differently for you and your partner. I was more bothered by the aesthetics, so my poor partner heard about it more often than he’d like. And we had needed to learn that just because I’m airing my grievances to him, does not mean he needed to fix it. I only wanted him to hear me out, even if he didn’t agree. It was still up to me to communicate directly to the contractors what needs to be fixed, and to be present for the work. 

Some people really enjoy the renovation process. For us, we learned what not to do, some things about ourselves and each other, but mostly we are happy that it’s finally over. 

What about you?

Life transitions like a renovation can be very stressful. It can make the most adaptive person lose their sh*t. It can also put a strain on your relationship. We have therapists who can help you weather through these stressful situations. We want to help you grow through these life challenges, and for your relationship to come out stronger on the other side. 

Let us help! 


Ada Pang is the proud owner of People Bloom Counseling, a Redmond psychotherapy practice. She helps unhappy couples find safety and connection in their relationship. She also helps cancer thrivers and their caregivers integrate cancer into their life stories. Of the few DIY projects she and her partner did together, she has learned that there’s nothing awe-inspiring about switching out can lights. It was best to keep her mouth closed.

What I Do When I Fall in and out of Running

Not feelin’ it

I don’t like running, and I have fallen in and out of like with running for at least a decade. I suppose it’s more accurate to say I’m in a “I dislike running” phase. I first started running to get my mind off a difficult time, and I kept running when I found that I liked the meditative factor of it. Left-right-left-right, breath iiin, left-right-left-right, breath ouuut. Turns out, there’s something to it.

When we’re down in the dumps, we often want to sit in our sorrow, maybe grab a pint of ice cream and binge out in front of a light television show, or perhaps yell at a classic rom-com, “IT’S JUST NOT REAL” when the guy gets the girl. 

Just me? Yeah, I didn’t think so. 

Our body needs bilateral movement

Anyway, that’s all fine and good (in small stride) and what our bodies might also need is a little movement, a little bilateral movement. Okay, it’s going to get a bit technical here. Whether it’s walking, biking, running, swimming, what’s being activated is both sides of our brain, it’s bilateral stimulation (popular in EMDR Therapy)–that is, our brain is using both left and right hemispheres while our body is moving and taking in its surroundings.

When our brain is used in this way, we’re moving out of a “fight, flight, freeze, fawn” way of thinking into a cognitive processing way—and that’s when we are more able to feel calm, to feel relaxed. Even if it’s just a little bit, for a little time, this movement can remind our brains, and thus, our bodies, that we are okay. It’s okay. I’m okay. Over time, this reminder (even if we fake it until we make it) can help pull us out of the dumps in which we sometimes find ourselves.

Running to release 

The more I ran, the more I let go of my troubling past experience, not letting it run my mind. It wasn’t a running away from as much as it was a running through. When allowing my body to move, in a way that is calming to me, I was allowing my mind to reassess my situation, bring my awareness to the present, and be.

I’ve noticed over time, when I’m not in a “I like running” season, I’m usually focusing my movement elsewhere– like hiking, rock climbing, or dancing– and I try to remember it’s okay if I don’t stick to one activity. I have a hunch, though, that I’ll be falling back into running come autumn, the season and the season for my running stride.

What about you?

Sometimes life doesn’t go as planned, and when it doesn’t, it’s easy to forget that we may already have the tool(s) that gets us through– whether we’re currently liking it or not. Next time you find yourself at the bottom of that cookies-and-cream pint, tell yourself “It’s okay,” and then reward yourself with a little bit o’ movement, too.

Need more? 

Whether you’re needing to resume something that you know would be good for you or you’re wanting to get started on something new, I’m here for you. I know what it’s like to not feel like doing something, and to find my way back to it (time after time).

I want to help you find your way, whatever that might look like. 


Rachel Keo is our newest clinician at People Bloom Counseling, a Redmond psychotherapy practice in WA. She helps young adults and working professionals with life transitions. As a former high school teacher and a Peace Corps Volunteer and Teacher in Albania, she also has a heart for working with school personnel. When she isn’t running, she’s playing with her cattle pup, Kenji, and trekking the mountains by foot or rope. She hopes to have an opportunity to go through your life journey with you!