It's Not Weakness. It's Not A Choice.
Therapy for the depression that quietly takes over.
It doesn't always look like crying in a dark room. Sometimes it's just flat — going through the motions, answering when spoken to, getting less and less out of the things that used to matter. The energy is gone, the sleep is off, and a quiet voice keeps telling you that you're not enough. Depression is a real medical condition, not a character flaw, and it is more than "just having the blues."
I'm David, a Licensed Psychotherapist in Pasadena, Texas. I work with adults whose depression doesn't always show on the outside — people still showing up to work and family while feeling hollow underneath. Therapy here isn't endless venting that circles the same heaviness. It's a focused, practical space to understand what's driving the low mood and build real tools to start moving again.
You don't have to wait until you can't get out of bed to take this seriously. If you want to understand the mechanics first, I wrote a plain-language guide on how depression works. And if the low mood traces back to something older, this work pairs naturally with trauma therapy.