For the strong friend who's been holding everyone up.
You're the one everyone calls when things fall apart. But no one checks on you. The strong friend. The calm one. The listener. The person who always knows what to say, quietly, competently, endlessly, while carrying a kind of exhaustion that sleep doesn't fix.
The Untrained Therapist is for the people who became emotional caretakers without ever choosing the role. You've been doing therapist-level emotional labor your whole life, without training, boundaries, or support. And it's costing you more than you realize.
Inside: why being the strong one is usually a survival role rather than a personality trait; how family systems and culture quietly trained you to manage everyone else's emotions; the difference between helping and carrying, and why crossing that line becomes burnout; why setting a limit can feel like abandonment, and how to set one anyway; how to receive support without guilt, shame, or the urge to immediately pay it back.
Not a textbook. Not pop psychology. Not a prescription to become colder or less caring. A book about learning to stop disappearing while you help. You can be strong and still be held. You can care deeply and still have limits. You've been the untrained therapist long enough.