FAQs
FAQs
Answers to common questions about mindfulness-based, existential, and Buddhist-informed counseling.
“Suffering doesn’t mean something is wrong with you. It means something is asking to be understood.”
“Suffering doesn’t mean something is wrong with you. It means something is asking to be understood.”
The end of personal suffering in the mind-body state of Nirvana (Enlightenment) is a gradual process that takes years of dedicated practice. You can expect to see, hear and feel more happiness and resilience right away if you follow your teacher. Meditation adds spiritual flavor to life and can make psychotherapy more effective.
This is a more direct statement of the law of cause and effect. Dependent Origination says your success in any endeavor is dependent on the strength and clarity of your original intent. It’s like “get serious or get lost”.
- More compassion for yourself and others.
- Insight into impermanence.
- Interest in personal individuation.
- Distaste for mind-altering chemicals.
- Increased work/play satisfaction in the present moment.
- Increased concentration, clarity and equanimity.
Buddhist mindfulness meditation has shown more effective than traditional psychotherapy for relieving anxiety and depression. It’s more accessible, costs less and addresses students’ mental states and mood patterns more directly than intellectual analysis of problems. Meditation cultivates quiet awareness and understanding of mental processes to help people recognize and manage their feelings and behavior. Mindfulness meditation can also make people more resilient over time, even during times of increased stress.
While outcomes vary, many clients report:
• Greater emotional balance and clarity
• Reduced reactivity to stress and cravings
• Improved concentration and decision-making
• A healthier relationship with thoughts and emotions
• Increased sense of meaning, curiosity, and engagement with life
The goal is not perfection, but freedom through understanding.
This work is especially helpful for individuals experiencing:
• Anxiety and chronic worry
• Depression and emotional numbness
• Addiction and compulsive behaviors
• Existential crisis or loss of meaning
• Difficulty with identity, purpose, or self-judgment
Rather than focusing solely on symptoms, the work addresses the underlying patterns that sustain suffering.
Yes. Many clients work with Sober Buddha Counseling alongside licensed psychotherapy or medication. This approach does not replace medical or psychiatric care, but can complement it by helping you understand how thoughts, emotions, and behaviors arise and how to work with them skillfully.
The approach is spiritually informed but not religious. While it draws from Buddhist psychology and ancient wisdom traditions, the emphasis is on universal human experience—attention, emotion, meaning, and suffering—rather than belief or worship.
Clients are never asked to adopt spiritual views. Practices are experiential, secular, and grounded in psychology and neuroscience.
No. Meditation is taught step by step in a practical, accessible way. No spiritual background, belief system, or previous experience is required. The focus is on direct observation and lived experience—not religious doctrine.
Mental health diagnoses come from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) and are tools used by clinicians to describe patterns of thoughts and behaviors—not identities.
A diagnosis such as Borderline Personality Disorder is not who you are. It may or may not fully capture your lived experience. From a mindfulness and
existential perspective, labels describe temporary patterns, not the totality of an evolving human being. Insight and awareness can change patterns that once felt permanent.
Secular psychotherapy typically focuses on diagnosing and treating mental health disorders using evidence-based methods such as:
• Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT): Challenging distorted beliefs
• Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT): Observing thoughts without identifying with them
• Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT): Allowing cravings without acting on them
• Addiction treatment: Avoiding triggers and stabilizing the reward system
These approaches are often structured around weekly 50-minute sessions and are shaped by insurance requirements and diagnostic criteria.
Buddhist and existential counseling, by contrast, focuses less on diagnosis and more on insight, meaning, and awareness. Sessions are collaboratively structured and may include meditation training, philosophical inquiry, and experiential practices designed to explore impermanence, suffering, purpose, and personal responsibility.
Meditation helps by changing your relationship to thoughts and emotions rather than trying to eliminate them.
Through mindfulness and insight (vipassana) meditation, you learn to observe craving, fear, and discomfort as they arise in the body, emotions, and mind. Over time, this direct experience reveals an important truth: all thoughts and feelings are impermanent. They arise, pass, and lose intensity when they are not resisted or acted upon.
As the mind stabilizes through meditative absorption (samadhi), habitual urges soften, clarity increases, and insight replaces compulsion. Many people experience “aha” moments—sudden clarity, energy, or emotional release—that support lasting change without force.
