Love How You Heal
We bring healing to your door. At Love How You Heal, we are dedicated to fostering a holistic approach to wellness.
From massage therapy, and mental health support to doula care , we offer compassionate, professional care designed for your health and well-being for every aspect of life. 💛 Mental Health isn’t a luxury, it’s a necessity! We believe that true healing encompasses the mind, body, and spirit. Our team of experienced professionals is committed to providing personalized care, ensuring that every individual who walks through our doors feels valued and supported.
06/17/2026
06/12/2026
✨ You don’t have to heal alone. ✨
,
At Love How You Heal, we believe true healing happens when mind, body, and spirit are cared for with love, compassion, and faith.
Whether you’re carrying the weight of trauma, need support for your child’s learning journey, or simply deserve a moment of peace, we’re here for you.
💆‍♀️ Mobile Massage Therapy
Licensed, trauma-informed healing touch that restores your body and soothes your soul.
Starts at just $85 for 60 minutes
📚 Academic Tutoring (Pre-K to 10th Grade)
Patient, personalized support in Reading, Math, Science & more.
Starts at only $18 per hour
🍼 Babysitting & Newborn Care
Loving, experienced care for your little ones, including children with ADHD, Autism, OCD, and ADD.
$60 for first 3 hours • Additional hours: $5 • Weekly rate: $110
Every service is faith-based, heart-led, and trauma-informed.
You are seen. You are safe. You are deeply loved.
Healing is not linear; it’s a necessity.
Mobile services available
đź’– Founded with love by Kiara Thomas
Ready to take the next step on your healing journey?
📲 Call or text 469-999-1533
đź“§ [email protected]
Book today; your peace is waiting. đź’•
05/28/2026
Happy belated Memorial Day to our fantastic owner and founder. Kiara Thomas we are blessed to have you as our leader and mentor!
05/27/2026
Psychoeducation | CBT & EFT: Emotions are data too
The thing is, emotions are data too.
Not distractions. Not weaknesses. Not “overreactions.” Not things to push aside so we can think more clearly or act more rationally.
Emotions are information.
Your tears are communicating something.
Your shutdown is communicating something.
Your irritability is communicating something.
Your lack of s*x drive is communicating something.
Your silence in conflict is communicating something.
Your urge to withdraw, overthink, people-please, or explode is communicating something.
The question is not “How do I stop this feeling?”
The more useful question is “What is this feeling trying to tell me?”
In Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), we begin with a shared understanding: human beings are meaning-making systems. We interpret the world, we respond emotionally to those interpretations, and then we behave in ways that attempt to protect us, connect us, or restore balance.
Nothing in that system is random.
CBT: Understanding the structure of experience
CBT helps us slow down and look at the structure of what is happening internally.
It asks:
What are you thinking?
What are you feeling?
What are you doing in response to that feeling?
What is reinforcing this pattern?
For example, if someone feels rejected in a relationship, the thought might be “I’m not important to them.” That thought creates sadness, anxiety, or anger. The behavior might become withdrawal, shutdown, defensiveness, or over-explaining. Then the partner responds to that behavior, which can unintentionally confirm the original fear.
CBT helps interrupt that cycle by bringing awareness to thoughts and behaviors that are automatic, but not always accurate or helpful.
But CBT alone is not the full picture, because understanding thoughts doesn’t always resolve emotional pain. You can logically know something and still feel deeply unsettled by it.
That’s where EFT becomes essential.
EFT: Understanding emotional needs and attachment
Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) focuses on something deeper: attachment needs.
At the core of most emotional reactions in relationships is a need to feel safe, seen, chosen, valued, and emotionally connected.
When those needs feel threatened, we don’t just “think differently”, we react emotionally.
We protest disconnection.
We shut down to protect ourselves.
We pursue reassurance.
We withdraw to avoid rejection.
We get angry to create distance or regain control.
From an EFT perspective, those reactions are not the problem. They are protective strategies.
Underneath many conflicts is not a lack of love, but a lack of emotional safety in how that love is experienced.
So when someone says, “You’re always shutting down,” EFT invites a deeper question:
“What is shutting down protecting you from feeling?”
Or when someone says, “You don’t want me anymore,” the deeper layer might be:
“I’m afraid I’m not important to you, and I don’t feel secure with you right now.”
This reframes behavior as communication rather than character flaw.
Emotions are not the enemy of logic
We live in a culture that often elevates logic as the highest form of functioning. Logic is important. It helps us solve problems, make decisions, and create structure.
But logic alone does not regulate the nervous system.
Logic does not automatically make someone feel safe in love.
Logic does not repair emotional disconnection.
Logic does not replace the need for empathy, presence, and attunement.
You can explain something perfectly and still not feel emotionally heard.
You can be “right” and still feel alone.
You can solve the practical issue and still have the emotional wound untouched.
This is often where relationships become stuck: one person is speaking from a logic/problem-solving place, and the other is speaking from an emotional/attachment place.
Both are valid, but they are speaking different languages.
Emotional shutdown is communication, not emptiness
One of the most misunderstood experiences in relationships is emotional shutdown.
Shutdown is often labeled as “not caring,” “being cold,” or “checking out.” But in most cases, shutdown is not absence, it is overload.
The nervous system has reached capacity.
Shutdown can communicate:
“I don’t feel safe enough to express this.”
“I don’t have the words for what I feel.”
“I’m afraid this will turn into conflict.”
“I’ve learned that expressing emotion doesn’t lead to understanding.”
“I need distance to regulate myself.”
When we interpret shutdown as rejection instead of protection, we often respond in ways that increase distance. But when we understand it as emotional data, we can respond with curiosity instead of escalation.
Lack of s*x drive is also communication
This is one of the most sensitive and misunderstood areas in relationships.
A lack of s*x drive is often treated as a problem to fix quickly, or a sign that something is wrong with desire itself.
But libido is deeply connected to emotional safety, stress, connection, resentment, exhaustion, identity, and nervous system regulation.
A lack of desire can communicate:
“I feel emotionally disconnected.”
“I don’t feel fully safe or relaxed in this relationship right now.”
“I am overwhelmed in other areas of life.”
“I don’t feel emotionally seen or understood.”
“I am carrying unspoken tension or unmet needs.”
This does not mean attraction is gone. It often means the emotional conditions that support desire are not fully present.
Desire thrives in safety, presence, and emotional openness, not pressure, obligation, or disconnection.
When s*x becomes a performance or a negotiation instead of a shared emotional experience, the body often responds by withdrawing.
Tears are not weakness, they are processing
Tears are one of the most direct forms of emotional communication.
They can represent grief, overwhelm, relief, frustration, or emotional release after holding things in for too long.
Culturally, tears are often misunderstood as instability. But physiologically, crying can be a form of nervous system regulation.
Tears can communicate:
“This is too much for me right now.”
“I feel deeply affected by this.”
“I need comfort or support.”
“I am processing something I could not put into words.”
When tears are met with dismissal, the message being received is often “your emotional experience is not safe here.” When they are met with presence, they can become a bridge to connection.
The role of emotional attunement
Emotional attunement is the ability to be present with another person’s emotional experience without immediately trying to fix it, correct it, or minimize it.
It sounds like:
“That makes sense.”
“I can see why you would feel that way.”
“Help me understand what that feels like for you.”
“I’m here with you in this.”
Attunement does not mean agreement. It means presence.
And for many people, being emotionally received is what creates safety, not the solution itself.
Why relationships get stuck
Many relational cycles repeat because each person is trying to solve the problem from their own framework.
One person says: “Let’s fix this logically.”
The other says: “I need to feel emotionally understood first.”
One person withdraws to avoid overwhelm.
The other pursues to avoid disconnection.
One person tries to explain.
The other tries to feel.
Without translation, both people end up feeling misunderstood.
CBT helps identify the cycle.
EFT helps understand the emotional meaning inside the cycle.
Together, they show us that the issue is rarely just behavior, it is often unmet emotional needs expressed through behavior.
Reframing emotional experience
When we shift our perspective, we stop asking:
“What’s wrong with me?”
or
“What’s wrong with you?”
And we start asking:
“What is this emotion communicating?”
“What need is underneath this reaction?”
“What is not being felt, said, or understood yet?”
This creates space for curiosity instead of judgment.
And curiosity is one of the foundations of emotional safety.
Final reflection
Emotions are not interruptions to life, they are part of how we navigate it.
They guide us toward connection, protection, boundaries, healing, and awareness.
When we treat emotions as data instead of problems, we stop fighting against ourselves and each other. We begin listening differently. We begin responding differently. And in many cases, we begin healing differently.
Because underneath most emotional reactions is not dysfunction.
It is a need to feel understood.
A need to feel safe.
A need to feel emotionally received.
And that changes everything.
05/17/2026
Long-term emotional abuse does not just affect emotions it can reshape the nervous system’s sense of safety. When someone lives in constant criticism, manipulation, fear, unpredictability, silence, rejection, or emotional invalidation, the brain and body begin adapting for survival instead of connection.
The nervous system was never designed to stay in “fight, flight, freeze, or fawn” mode for years at a time. Over time, this chronic stress can lead to hypervigilance, anxiety, emotional numbness, dissociation, difficulty trusting others, exhaustion, memory problems, and even physical symptoms within the body. What may look like “overreacting,” shutting down, people-pleasing, or emotional inconsistency is often a nervous system trying to protect itself from repeated emotional harm.
Trauma responses are adaptations.
The body learns patterns long before the mind fully understands them.
Someone who experienced long-term emotional abuse may:
• Constantly scan for danger or rejection
• Struggle to relax, even in safe environments
• Feel emotionally detached or numb
• Overthink conversations and interactions
• Have difficulty regulating emotions
• Confuse chaos with connection
• Experience chronic shame, guilt, or self-doubt
• Feel exhausted from always being “on alert”
This is why healing is not simply “moving on.” Healing often involves teaching the nervous system that safety, consistency, boundaries, rest, and healthy attachment are possible. Recovery is not about becoming who you were before the trauma it is about learning you no longer have to survive every moment as if danger is still present.
05/17/2026
Powerful
05/11/2026
One of the most grounding tools I’ve learned through CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) and mindfulness is something simple but powerful: the “cloud technique.” It’s a way of learning how to observe your thoughts without letting them take over your entire emotional world.
The idea is this imagine your thoughts as clouds moving across the sky. Some are light and harmless, some are dark and heavy, and some look like they’re about to storm. But no matter what they look like, they are still just passing through. You are the sky, not the clouds.
In real life, this can change everything about how you respond to anxiety, overthinking, emotional triggers, or even painful memories. Instead of getting stuck inside a thought like “I’m not good enough,” “I’m failing,” or “They don’t care about me,” you pause and notice it as a cloud drifting by. You don’t argue with it, feed it, or try to force it away you simply observe it.
For example, if you’re in a situation where someone doesn’t respond to your message, your mind might immediately create a storm: “They’re ignoring me,” “I did something wrong,” “I’m not important.” With the cloud technique, you learn to step back and say, “I’m noticing the thought that I am being ignored.” That small shift creates space between you and the emotion so it doesn’t immediately control your reaction.
Another example is in moments of self-doubt. Instead of spiraling into “I can’t do this,” you acknowledge it as a passing mental cloud: “I’m having the thought that I can’t do this right now.” You don’t have to agree with it. You don’t have to fight it. You just let it move through.
The goal isn’t to stop thoughts from coming that’s not realistic. The goal is to stop treating every thought like a fact. Because not every thought deserves your energy, your reaction, or your emotional collapse.
Over time, this practice builds emotional distance from mental noise. You start realizing that thoughts are temporary visitors, not permanent truths. And when you stop attaching yourself to every passing cloud, your mind becomes a much calmer place to live in.
You are not your thoughts. You are the awareness watching them pass. And sometimes, that simple shift is what brings you back to peace.
05/01/2026
✨ Introducing Dazzled by Dae ✨
Where beauty meets you exactly where you are 💅🏽💖
Dazzled by Dae is your go-to mobile manicurist service, bringing luxury nail care right to your doorstep whether you’re at home, hosting an event, or simply needing a moment of self-care. No rushing, no waiting… just relaxation and glam on your terms.
She proudly offers:
đź‘‘ Princess Spa Packages for your little ones because every princess deserves to feel special
💎 Manicures & Pedicures for Queens because self-care isn’t a luxury, it’s a necessity
We are beyond excited to share that two of our queens in training will be experiencing the Dazzled by Dae treatment tomorrow afternoon! 💕 Stay tuned for a glimpse into the magic ✨
📍 She travels to YOU
đź“… Book your experience today and let her dazzle you.
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Dallas, TX
75287
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