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Daylogue for Mental Health

Therapists, counselors, and case managers carry stories they cannot take home.

For the people holding space for everyone else.

The reality

What this job actually costs.

Vicarious trauma

Every session leaves a residue. Clinicians are trained to hold it but rarely given a structured way to unload it.

Supervision is not enough

Weekly supervision is clinical. The human underneath the clinician needs somewhere else to land.

The helper who will not ask for help

The people best at spotting burnout in others are worst at naming it in themselves.

How Daylogue fits

A rhythm shaped around your day.

Daylogue becomes a between-session decompression. Three minutes after a hard client to name what you are carrying. Clinic directors see aggregate emotional load across the team and schedule accordingly.

What Daylogue might ask you

Questions that actually meet the day.

What did that session leave with you?

Is there a client whose story you need to put down?

What would supervision not catch this week?

What leaders see

Signal, never surveillance.

Clinic leads see clinician load, spot vicarious trauma accumulating, and adjust caseloads before someone hits sustained elevated stress and leaves the field.

Frequently asked questions

Questions about Daylogue for Mental Health.

Daylogue is a self-awareness tool. It is not a replacement for professional mental health care.

The helpers need somewhere to go, too.