From oversharing to boundaries: A reflection

For as long as I can remember, I’ve been an open book, free for anyone to read.

I was the little girl who shared secrets that weren’t hers.
The teenager who spoke every thought aloud, hoping it would help her make sense of the chaos.
The young adult, cracked open by grief, leaking words at the seams.

I believed in the power of words, their ability to connect, to heal, to transform.
And I still do.

But now, I also understand how words can wound.
How they can expose, misplace, or distort.
How they can change things for the worse.

As I write this, I am not the same girl who spilled her soul onto the internet for anyone to witness. Over the years, through hard personal lessons and through deep immersion in the field of psychology, I started asking myself a different question:
Why?

Why did I feel the need to share so much, so often, with so many?

When I was younger, I think it was my way of asking for help with the only tools I had. Life was falling apart, and my openness became a kind of lifeline. Later, when people praised my vulnerability, called me strong, brave, resilient, I came to rely on that validation. I liked being the girl who could talk about the hard stuff.

But looking back, I see how much of that openness came from pain, not peace. From searching for identity outside of myself. From wanting to be understood more than I wanted to be whole.

And here’s the irony:
Even as a therapist-in-training (future psychologist), even with everything I know now about boundaries and healing, it still took me a long time to realize this truth:

Not everyone deserves to know you.

That might sound harsh. But I mean it gently, with love.

Not everyone needs access to every corner of your pain, your healing, your story.
We get to choose who sees the sacred parts.

That is not secrecy. It is self-respect.
That is not withholding. It is discernment.

Now, just months away from earning my doctorate in psychology (PsyD), I see healing differently, not just in theory but in practice, in my own bones. These last five years have changed me. I have walked alongside people learning to navigate their inner worlds with grace and grit. I have witnessed the courage it takes to ask for help. I have studied boundaries, trauma, identity, connection, and I have lived inside those questions too.

I have learned that healing is not always loud.
Sometimes (often times), the most meaningful work happens quietly, in the background.
Safe spaces matter.
Boundaries can be holy.
Vulnerability is powerful, but only when it is rooted in trust.

This blog is my attempt to hold that kind of space.
Somewhere between personal and professional.
Somewhere tender and thoughtful.

A space for educational content, stories, reflection, and gentle truths.
For learning out loud.
For honoring both the voice that longs to speak, and the wisdom that knows when to stay quiet.

Thanks for being here.

Disclaimer:
The content shared here is for educational and reflective purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional therapy, counseling, or psychological services.As a psychology doctoral intern, I am committed to ethical guidelines around boundaries and confidentiality. If you are a current or former client and encounter this page, please know that I will not engage publicly in ways that reveal or acknowledge our therapeutic relationship.

Thank you for respecting the space where education, reflection, and personal growth meet.

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I’m Cara

pronounced

(Care-Uh)

Image of Cara, author of blog.

Welcome to Learning Out Loud, a blog ran by myself @carascammon and my sister, Kayla (@kazemiandco).

A space where education, reflection and real-life experience meet. Written by Cara, a psychology doctoral intern (and lifelong lover of people, Taylor Swift, and connection), this blog blends evidence-based insights with personal storytelling. Here, we honor the journey of growth. The messy, beautiful, human parts — and explore mental health with heart, humor, and honesty. You’ll also hear from guest writers, mostly Kayla, sharing their own sacred stories.

Thanks for being here. We’re learning out loud, together.

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