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Depression Therapy · Individual Sessions

Depression isn't sadness.
It's the absence of
your own life.

Depression is often quieter than people expect. It's not always visible crying or inability to get out of bed. It's going through the motions. Doing everything you're supposed to do and feeling nothing in return. The flatness where feeling used to be.

The work isn't just about symptom management. It's about understanding what's underneath the flatness — and rebuilding a relationship with your own life that doesn't require constant effort just to maintain.

Start the Conversation → What this looks like
The Reality

What depression actually
looks like in real life

The clinical description of depression — persistent sadness, loss of interest, sleep changes — captures part of it. What it misses is how depression often shows up in high-functioning people: as irritability, as busyness that goes nowhere, as the faint sense that nothing really matters even when things are fine on paper.

You can be functional and depressed. You can have reasons to be grateful and still be depressed. Depression isn't proportional to your circumstances — it's a state that has its own logic, and understanding that logic is the starting point for changing it.

You don't have to be in crisis to come. Depression that's subclinical, situational, or high-functioning still warrants real support.

We look at what's underneath. Depression is often a response to something — grief, stagnation, relational pain, unprocessed loss. We find what that is.

Therapy works for depression. It is one of the most well-supported applications of therapy. The evidence is strong.

You won't feel worse for naming it. Saying it out loud in a safe space usually brings some relief, not more weight.

How Depression Presents

The less obvious signs
of depression worth naming

These don't always get recognized as depression — but they often are.

Emotional Flatness

Not sad exactly — just nothing. The absence of engagement with your own life.

Irritability

Especially in men, depression often shows up as frustration and anger more than visible sadness.

Withdrawal

Pulling back from people, activities, things that used to matter. Isolation that feels like preference.

Loss of Motivation

Difficulty starting things. The gap between knowing what you should do and being able to do it.

Anhedonia

Things that used to bring pleasure just don't anymore. Hobbies, relationships, accomplishments — all flat.

Going Through the Motions

Performing fine for everyone while internally running on empty.

"Depression isn't a character
flaw. It's a state.
States can change."
— Myke Cooper, LCSW
Atlanta, GA · Online Across Six States

Ready to work on
what's actually underneath this?

In-person in Atlanta. Online across Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, New York, Colorado, and Nevada.

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