Depression, Mental & Emotional Health, Mental Health & Support, Relationships & Family Life, The Well, Trauma

Between Sessions: Therapy Tools to Support Healing and Save Money

When you’re juggling grief, financial stress, and overwhelming emotions, therapy can feel like both a lifeline and a luxury. At Barksdale Missions, we know healing takes time—but we also know that progress doesn’t only happen in the therapy room. Whether you’re spacing out sessions to save money or simply trying to stay grounded during a hard week, here are some therapist-approved tools to support your emotional wellness between visits.


For Grief: Honor the Loss, Hold the Love

Grief doesn’t follow a schedule. It comes in waves, sometimes gentle and sometimes crashing. These exercises can be tools used to ride the wave:

1. Write to Your Person
Grab a notebook or voice memo app and talk to the person you lost. Say the things left unsaid. Share what’s hard. Share what’s beautiful.

2. Make a Memory Box or Grief Jar
Fill it with pictures, favorite quotes, small keepsakes, or notes about moments you shared. Pull something out when the ache is strong.

3. Create a Daily Anchor
Light a candle. Take a walk. Listen to a song. One small daily ritual that says, “I carry you with me.”


For Financial Stress: Ground Yourself in What Matters

Financial strain adds layers of pressure and shame that can cloud everything. Instead of spiraling, try these tools:

1. Set a “Worry Time”
Spend 10–15 minutes each day writing down your money worries. Outside that window, gently redirect your brain. This prevents all-day anxiety loops.

2. Practice Values-Based Budgeting
Write down what truly matters to you—then align spending with those values. Free printable budget templates can help clarify needs vs. wants.

3. Celebrate Low-Cost Wins
Joy doesn’t have to come with a price tag. Plan a free activity each week that brings you peace: library visits, journaling, nature walks, calling someone you love.


For Emotion Regulation: Skills That Actually Work

When emotions feel too big, these tools can help you stay present:

1. TIPP Skills (Quick Relief from Emotional Storms)

  • Temperature: Splash cold water on your face
  • Intense movement: Do 20 jumping jacks or a brisk walk
  • Paced breathing: Inhale for 4, exhale for 6
  • Paired muscle relaxation: Tense and release muscle groups slowly

2. Name It to Tame It
Say what you’re feeling out loud: “This is grief. This is fear. This is anger.” Naming emotions helps your brain process them instead of being hijacked by them.

3. Keep a Thought Journal
Notice when your thoughts spiral: What triggered it? What story are you telling yourself? Then challenge it. “Is this true? Is there another way to see it?”


Bonus: Tools You Can Start Today


Final Word

You are not alone. Therapy is one tool, but healing happens every day—in how you breathe, how you reflect, how you care for yourself in quiet moments.

If you’re ready to take the next step, we’re here for you.
But even between sessions, your growth is real.