Essay 28 Apr 2026 6 min read

The things we avoid saying out loud

Why the conversations we postpone the longest are usually the ones we most need to have — and what makes a room feel safe enough to start.

People don't usually arrive in therapy because of the thing they end up talking about. They arrive because of something easier — sleep, work, a row about loading the dishwasher. The harder thing surfaces later, often in a sentence that begins, "I've never told anyone this, but…"

It's worth pausing on that phrase. "I've never told anyone this." We carry these unsaid things around for years, sometimes decades. The cost of carrying them is rarely obvious, because they don't announce themselves. They show up in the periphery — as a flatness, a tightness in the chest, a habit of changing the subject when a particular memory drifts close.

Why we avoid

We avoid for good reasons. Saying something out loud makes it real in a way that thinking it doesn't. It commits us. It puts the other person in the position of having to respond, and we have already, somewhere in the back of our mind, rehearsed the responses we are afraid of: dismissal, shock, judgement, the silence that says I don't know what to do with this.

So we hold back. We tell ourselves we'll bring it up "when the time is right". The time, of course, is never right. Time doesn't supply rightness. We do.

The conversations we postpone are not difficult because of what they contain. They are difficult because of what they would change.

What a safe enough room looks like

One of the quieter jobs of therapy is making the room safe enough that the unsaid thing can finally be said. "Safe enough" is doing a lot of work in that sentence. It doesn't mean comfortable. Saying it will probably not be comfortable. It means something more like: predictable, unhurried, and held by someone who will not flinch.

In practice, a room feels safe enough when:

The relief of being heard

The first time a client says the thing they have been avoiding, something shifts. Not always immediately. Sometimes the sentence comes out and then the client laughs, or apologises, or changes the subject. That's normal. What matters is that the sentence has been said, and the room did not break.

From that point on, the thing is no longer entirely theirs. It exists between two people. That is, in the simplest terms, what therapy does. It moves things from the inside to the in-between, where they can finally be looked at.

If you're carrying something you've never said out loud, you don't need to bring it on the first day. You don't need to bring it on the tenth. But it can help to know that the room is built for it whenever you're ready.

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