2025 Best Story Awards

Readers' Choice Awards

2025 Best Story Awards

2025 Best Story Awards

This year, we published 150+ articles on just about every clinical topic under the sun, but with all the content flooding your inbox, it’s easy to miss things that matter. That’s one reason why we’re offering a curated collection of the standout Psychotherapy Networker articles from 2025. Another reason is because this collection is a powerful way to take stock of where we are as a field. How so? Because it was curated by you—our therapist readers—who know better than anyone what’s relevant, inspiring, and instructional for today’s clinical practice.

Whether you voted for stories that helped give shape to your unique struggles or provided practical tips you shared with your clients, these are the pieces you told us resonated most with you. Congratulations to the winners of the 2025 Best Story award—as well as the many deserving nominees—for sparking conversation and connection in our community.


Kory Andreas

Couples therapy was designed for neurotypical people—yet we know that neurodivergence is everywhere. How can we better identify, help, and support neurodiverse couples, including the ones you may be missing in your practice?

Illustration of a man and woman sitting beside each other, facing opposite directions

Terri Cole

Many therapists believe their intense care and concern for clients is a form of selfless love. Maybe it’s time to rethink that.

Behind a door, two figures made of yarn face each other with a tangle of yarn between them

Jayne Mattingly

In the wake of a chronic illness, a body image advocate challenges toxic narratives about what it means to have a healthy body.

Behind an archway a figure faces forward with eyes closed, surrounded by whisps of thought

Megan Cornish 

Mental health startups were supposed to democratize therapy. Instead, they’ve cut therapist pay and gutted clinical teams. How can we fight back?

On the other side of an open door, a scared woman in a suit looks at outstretched hands reaching for a bag of money

Martha Kauppi

Asking a client about sex doesn’t need to feel intimidating or awkward—but it is important for all therapists to do.

On the other side of an open door lies an unmade bed with rumpled sheets

Susan Cain & Livia Kent

“Bittersweet” invites us to better understand and celebrate the wistful, sensitive people in our lives—and in our therapy practices.

A figure stands beneath a doorway admiring a painting on the wall

Janina Fisher, Britt Rathbone, Steve Shapiro & Kirsten Lind Seal

Longtime experts in the field offer tips on how to get the conversation going when your clients have nothing to say.

A figure sits engulfed in a round chair, facing away from the viewer, with a door sketched over the image

Sarah Buino

Mental health professionals receive little support for their own personal healing and development. What will it take to revolutionize training programs in a way that centers the therapist?

A wooden figure sits, slowly being pushed down by the weight of a closing metal door

Kaytee Gillis

Here’s a five-step process for working with survivors of parental abandonment that helps mitigate self-blame and build trust with the therapist.

A faded figure is visible through a doorway as they walk forward down an empty hallway