Cary Brown, PhD

Cary Brown, PhD Trauma therapist and author with 20+ years of experience. I help those searching for new bearings navigate healing, identity, and the work of becoming whole.

Join the conversation on Substack at Second Order Practice.

Honored to be nominated for a Bayou Buzz Award for Best Counselor for the third year in a row. Our region has some truly...
05/28/2026

Honored to be nominated for a Bayou Buzz Award for Best Counselor for the third year in a row. Our region has some truly outstanding clinicians, and I’m proud to be counted among them. If you’d like to vote for me, the link is in the comments.

Back after a couple of weeks with a new post for anyone who has ever done the hard work and still felt like a fraud on t...
05/06/2026

Back after a couple of weeks with a new post for anyone who has ever done the hard work and still felt like a fraud on the other side of it.
Which, in my experience, is most people.
You’re Not Back at Zero: On growth, shame, and the lies we tell ourselves on the frontier. Link in comments.

Nobody wants a picayune headache.A picayune headache would be a small, insignificant one. Not worth much attention. Easi...
04/15/2026

Nobody wants a picayune headache.
A picayune headache would be a small, insignificant one. Not worth much attention. Easily dismissed.
Nobody wants their pain to be small.
That’s the thing underneath most hard conversations. Not the dishes. Not the bills. Not who forgot to call the plumber. Something much older than that.
New article is on my Substack. Worth the read if you’ve ever gone to bed angry and not entirely sure why.

Link in comments.

We’ve quietly built a world designed so we never have to need anybody. DoorDash the sugar. Uber the ride. ChatGPT the ad...
04/08/2026

We’ve quietly built a world designed so we never have to need anybody.

DoorDash the sugar. Uber the ride. ChatGPT the advice. It works. But something gets lost in the transaction.

New post is up about an ice storm, a neighbor, and what community actually costs us when we trade it away one convenient app at a time.

Ya’ll! I’m a little late in posting this, but I wanted to do a shoutout to  Clélie, Zoë and the crew at Suffit—Stone Hou...
04/02/2026

Ya’ll! I’m a little late in posting this, but I wanted to do a shoutout to Clélie, Zoë and the crew at Suffit—Stone House Eats. Everything they have ever cooked for me has been truly amazing. If you need a caterer and want it done right, this is your crew. The food for our party was amazing and I’m still dreaming of the choux pastry with chocolate ganache. Thank you ladies! 🤌🏼

One of the questions I get asked most often, in the therapy room and outside of it, is some version of this: how do I kn...
04/01/2026

One of the questions I get asked most often, in the therapy room and outside of it, is some version of this: how do I know if what I experienced growing up was actually love?

It’s a harder question than it sounds. Because most of us were told that what we received was love, and we had no other frame of reference to compare it to. You believe what you’re handed until something shows you a different possibility.

And when life gets hard enough, long enough, that question can turn into something darker. Not just “was that love?” but “is love even real? Does it actually exist, or is it just something people say?”

This week’s essay is about that, and about a framework I use for thinking about how we love and what happens when the spaces inside us don’t get filled the way they were supposed to. It touches on grief, on longing, and on what the ache you carry might actually be pointing toward.

Read it at the link below, and let me know if it lands for you.

https://open.substack.com/pub/carybrownphd/p/the-rooms-we-carry?r=5ohi4f&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=true

One of the most common things I hear from people is that they’re afraid that if they start looking at the hard stuff, it...
03/30/2026

One of the most common things I hear from people is that they’re afraid that if they start looking at the hard stuff, it’s going to make everything worse.
I understand that fear. But in practice, I’ve found the opposite to be true. The looking doesn’t create the problem. The problem is already there, quietly running the show. What the looking does is give you a way out.

The fear of what you might find is almost never as bad as the weight of carrying it without knowing what it is.

If that resonates, my latest Substack post is about exactly this. The patterns beneath the surface, why we avoid them, and why curiosity is a better starting place than you might think. If you haven’t had a chance to read it, it’s worth checking out.
Link in comments.

Apparently if you order 50 copies of my book, A Crisis of Maps, Amazon will send 20 of them as singles.  I need several ...
03/29/2026

Apparently if you order 50 copies of my book, A Crisis of Maps, Amazon will send 20 of them as singles. I need several people to confirm and report back.

Have you ever felt like you keep having the same argument, making the same mistake, or ending up in the same place no ma...
03/25/2026

Have you ever felt like you keep having the same argument, making the same mistake, or ending up in the same place no matter how hard you try to do things differently?
You’re not broken or weak. You might just be carrying something beneath the surface that you haven’t had a chance to look at yet.

My latest Substack post is about what it looks like when our past is quietly running our present without our permission, and why getting curious about it is a lot more useful than trying harder.
If that sounds familiar, this one’s for you.

Link in comments.

Heads up—photo dump incoming from the launch party.  Once again shop_talk_studio killing it.
03/24/2026

Heads up—photo dump incoming from the launch party. Once again shop_talk_studio killing it.

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Monroe, LA
71201

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