Do I need therapy or is talking to a friend enough?

Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Consultant Psychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-05-05

Short answer

Friends are essential. They are not a substitute for therapy when distress is persistent (2+ weeks), interfering with function, or being kept secret from them. A clinician brings structure, training and a different kind of attention that friendship is not designed for.

I will not pretend therapy beats good friendship — it does not. Strong relationships are protective for mental health in ways no clinician can replicate. But they are not interchangeable with treatment, and treating them as such delays care.

When friends are enough

When the distress is proportionate to a recent event, time-limited, and you can speak about it openly with people who can listen without trying to fix it. That combination, plus sleep and time, resolves most ordinary suffering.

When you need a clinician

When the distress has been present for two weeks or more. When it is interfering with sleep, work or relationships. When you have started to keep it secret from the people who would normally help. When you have caught yourself thinking the world would be easier without you. Any one of these is reason enough to take a screener and talk to a professional.

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