Home
Search Filters
  • Articles
    • Addiction, Self-Harm & Suicidality
    • Ethics & Career Development
    • Popular Therapy Approaches
    • Aging
    • Grief & Loss
    • Popular Culture & Current Events
    • Anxiety & Depression
    • History & Evolution of the Field
    • Race, Ethnicity & Gender
    • Body-Based Healing & Physical Health
    • Mindfulness & Brain Science
    • Spirituality & Religion
    • Children, Parents & Families
    • Narcissism & Narcissistic Abuse
    • Therapist Growth & Honing Your Craft
    • Couples, Relationships & Sex
    • Neurodivergence
    • Trauma
  • Magazine
    • View Latest Issue
    • View Past Issues
    • Archives
    • Subscribe
    • Magazine Quizzes
    • Audio Issues
    • Digital Magazines
    • Editor’s Notes
  • CE Training
    • Online Courses
    • Digital Seminars
    • Live Events
    • Free Practice Tools
  • Symposium
  • Sign In
  • Subscribe to the Magazine
  • Newsletter
  • About Us
  • FAQs
  • Customer Care
  • Contact Us
BACK
Close
Psychotherapy Networker
  • Articles
    • Addiction, Self-Harm & Suicidality
    • Ethics & Career Development
    • Popular Therapy Approaches
    • Aging
    • Grief & Loss
    • Popular Culture & Current Events
    • Anxiety & Depression
    • History & Evolution of the Field
    • Race, Ethnicity & Gender
    • Body-Based Healing & Physical Health
    • Mindfulness & Brain Science
    • Spirituality & Religion
    • Children, Parents & Families
    • Narcissism & Narcissistic Abuse
    • Therapist Growth & Honing Your Craft
    • Couples, Relationships & Sex
    • Neurodivergence
    • Trauma
  • Magazine
    • View Latest Issue
    • View Past Issues
    • Archives
    • Subscribe
    • Magazine Quizzes
    • Audio Issues
    • Digital Magazines
    • Editor’s Notes
  • CE Training
    • Online Courses
    • Digital Seminars
    • Live Events
    • Free Practice Tools
  • Symposium
  • More
    • A large red heart on a soft grey background being unzipped down the middle May/June 2026 View Latest Issue
      • Subscribe
      • Newsletter
      • Latest Articles
      • Past Issues
      • Videos
      • Series
      • Contributors
      • Submission Guidelines
      • Books
      Follow PN
Subscribe to the Magazine Sign In
Search Filters

VIDEO: Michael Alcée on Doing Therapy with Introverts

What Works and What Doesn't

Michael Alcée&Lauren Dockett
Share

There’s a bright light shining these days on the third to half of Americans who are introverts. Psychologist Michael Alcee counsels them in practice and runs a group where introverts come together and celebrate their unique gifts with one another. Here, he tells us why therapists should help introvert’s reimagine the positives of a temperament that’s often undervalued in our extraverted culture. 

Michael Alcee

Michael Alcée

Michael Alcée, PhD, is a clinical psychologist and author of the forthcoming book The Upside of OCD: Flip the Script to Reclaim Your Life.

 

Lauren Dockett

Lauren Dockett

Lauren Dockett, MS, is the senior writer at Psychotherapy Networker. A longtime journalist, journalism lecturer, and book and magazine editor, she’s also a former caseworker taken with the complexity of mental health, who finds the ongoing evolution of the therapy field and its broadening reach an engrossing story. Prior to the Networker, she contributed to many outlets, including The Washington Post, NPR, and Salon. Her books include Facing 30, Sex Talk, and The Deepest Blue. Visit her website at laurendockett.com.

Share

Send us your thoughts

Online Courses

Essentials of Trauma Treatment: Certified Clinical Trauma Professional (CCTP) Training Course
View All Courses

Recent Issues

View All Issues

Related Articles

A woman singing into a hairbrush

To Interrupt Anxiety, Try Singing

Margaret Wehrenberg
Placeholder Image for psychotherapynetworker.org

Depth-Oriented Brief Therapy and Panic Attack Treatment

Bruce Ecker
A young girl hides under her covers

A Simple Practice for Finding Light in the Dark

Susan Pollak
An empty therapist office with an off white couch and brown chair facing each other

I’m Funny and I Faint

Lynn Lyons
Placeholder Image for psychotherapynetworker.org

The Anxiety Game

Reid Wilson
Psychotherapy Networker
  • Advertise With PN
  • About Us
  • Contributors
  • Subscribe
  • Submission Guidelines
  • Customer Service
  • FAQs
  • Newsletter
  • Find a therapist
  • Symposium
  • © 2026 Psychotherapy Networker. All Rights Reserved.
  • Terms of Use
  • Event Terms
  • Privacy Notice
  • Your Privacy Choices
  • Cookie Notice
  • Cookie Preferences
Back to Top