Starting therapy often comes with hope. You may hope to feel less anxious, understand yourself better, improve relationships, recover from trauma, or finally shift patterns that have been difficult for years. So when therapy does not seem to be helping, it can feel disappointing, confusing or even shameful.
But feeling stuck in therapy does not automatically mean you have failed, that therapy cannot work for you, or that your difficulties are too complex. More often, it means the therapy needs to be reviewed properly.
There are many reasons therapy can lose direction. Sometimes the goals are too vague. Sometimes sessions become supportive conversations without a clear treatment plan. Sometimes the therapy approach does not fit the main difficulty. For example, obsessive compulsive disorder, trauma-related symptoms, recurrent depression, relationship patterns and emotional regulation difficulties may each need different forms of psychological work.
Therapy also depends on more than whether the therapist is kind. A warm relationship matters, but therapy usually needs a shared understanding of the problem, agreed goals, a suitable method, and some way of reviewing progress. If these are missing, a person may attend sessions regularly but still feel unsure what is changing.
A useful first step is to name the concern directly. This does not have to be confrontational. You might say: “I’m not sure therapy is helping at the moment. Could we review what we are working on, what approach we are using, and how we will know whether it is working?”
A good therapist should be able to have that conversation with you. They may suggest clarifying goals, changing the focus, adapting the pace, using questionnaires or outcome measures, or reviewing the formulation. A formulation is a shared map of what may have contributed to the problem, what keeps it going now, and what might help.
It is also important to distinguish between therapy feeling difficult and therapy being unhelpful. Therapy can sometimes bring up painful feelings, especially when working with grief, trauma, shame, avoidance or long-standing relational patterns. Discomfort is not always a bad sign. However, the discomfort should have a purpose, and you should understand why the work is being done.
Warning signs include repeatedly leaving sessions overwhelmed without a plan, feeling blamed or dismissed, not understanding the purpose of therapy, or noticing that risk, distress or functioning are worsening without proper review. In these situations, it is reasonable to ask for a clear discussion about safety, goals and whether the current approach is appropriate.
Sometimes, changing therapist or therapy model is the right decision. That does not mean the previous therapy was worthless. It may have helped you understand what you now need more clearly. The next step may be a more structured assessment, a different therapeutic approach, or a clinician with more specific experience in your main difficulty.
For a fuller guide, Stronger Minds has written about when therapy is not helping, including what it may mean and what to do next.
Therapy should not always feel easy, but it should usually feel purposeful. If you feel stuck, the most helpful question is not “What is wrong with me?” but “What needs to be reviewed?”

