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499: Live Work with Hiral, Part 2 of 2

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

Release Date: 04/27/2026

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More Episodes

Inside the Therapy Room:

A Live TEAM CBT Session with Hiral--
The Exciting Conclusion!

Part 2 of 2

Overview

What an incredible day. David and I had the privilege of working with Hiral, a young mother from India who was drowning in perfectionism, self-criticism, and the crushing weight of trying to be everything to everyone. Over the course of about two hours, we watched her transform from someone scoring 100% on depression, anxiety, guilt, shame, and hopelessness to feeling peaceful, relaxed, and genuinely joyful—with most scores dropping to zero.

This wasn't magic. It was TEAM-CBT done systematically, with measurement, genuine empathy, paradoxical agenda setting, and powerful cognitive techniques. And yes, Hiral did most of the heavy lifting herself once we got out of her way.

For those of you who attended or are reading this summary, I want to walk you through what happened—not just what we did, but why it worked. Because here's the thing: this will look deceptively simple. That's the trap. TEAM-CBT is among the hardest therapeutic approaches to master, precisely because each step exists on multiple levels and requires you to change before your patients can change.

Let's dig in.

The Setup: Who Was Hiral?

Hiral is a mother of an almost-four-year-old son, living in a joint family in Gujarat, India, with her husband and in-laws. She's also studying to become a TEAM-CBT therapist herself, preparing for her Level 3 certification exam.

But beneath these roles, Hiral was suffering:

  • Feeling like a failure as a mother
  • Constant self-criticism and perfectionism
  • Trapped in a rigid family environment with little emotional support
  • Isolated from friends, her own parents, and the vibrant life she once had
  • Plagued by guilt, shame, anxiety, and hopelessness—all at 100%

Sound familiar? I'll bet many of you have worked with someone like Hiral. Or maybe you've been Hiral at some point in your life. I know I have.

T = Testing: The Emotional X-Ray

Before we even said hello to Hiral, she completed the Brief Mood Survey—David's ultra-reliable, ultra-short measures of depression, anxiety, anger, happiness, and relationship satisfaction right now, in this moment.

Her scores were staggering:

  • Depression: 11/20 (moderate, with "sad," "down," and "hopeless" all elevated)
  • Anxiety: 14/20 (moderate to severe)
  • Anger: 14/20 (same intensity as anxiety)
  • Happiness: 8/20 (very low)
  • Relationship Satisfaction: 10/30 (significant dissatisfaction with her husband)

Why this matters: Most therapists never measure how their patients feel. They think they know, but research shows therapist accuracy is around 3-10% on depression, suicidality, anxiety, and anger. Zero percent on suicidal urges. Think about that.

Without measurement, you're flying blind. With it, you have an emotional X-ray that shows you exactly where the patient is hurting—and later, exactly how much you've helped (or haven't).

TEAM-CBT Pearl: Testing isn't optional. It's the foundation. Measure at the start of every session, and measure again at the end. If you're scared to see the results, that's your ego talking.

E = Empathy: The Zero Technique

For the first 30-40 minutes, David and I did... nothing. Well, not nothing—we listened. We used the Five Secrets of Effective Communication:

  1. Disarming Technique: Finding truth in what Hiral said
  2. Thought Empathy: Paraphrasing her thoughts
  3. Feeling Empathy: Acknowledging her emotions
  4. Inquiry: Asking gentle questions to help her open up
  5. Stroking: Conveying warmth and respect

But here's the key: we gave her nothing. No advice. No cheerleading. No problem-solving. We call this the Zero Technique—giving the patient nothing is actually giving them everything, because what they want most is to feel understood.

The Empathy Pitfall: DO NOT PREACH

Early in empathy, it's tempting to:

  • Problem-solve
  • Rescue
  • Educate
  • Advise
  • Cheerlead
  • Help

Resist. Your job is to go with your patient to the gates of hell and just be with them there.

Checking Our Empathy

After about 30 minutes, we asked Hiral to grade us on three dimensions (A, B, C, D, or F):

  1. Thought Empathy: How well did we understand her negative thoughts?
  2. Feeling Empathy: How well did we acknowledge her emotions?
  3. Warmth & Acceptance: Did she feel cared about and accepted?

She gave us two A's and hesitated on the third. Why? She didn't feel we could truly understand her cultural context—the joint family system, the rigid in-laws, the isolation from her friends and parents. She felt alone even with us.

This was gold.

Instead of getting defensive, we leaned in. David shared his own experience living near in-laws with vastly different values. I shared my own struggles with perfectionism and parenting anxiety. Hiral started to cry—not from sadness, but from finally feeling seen.

TEAM-CBT Pearl: When you get a failing grade on empathy, celebrate. It's your chance to deepen the connection. Process the failure with your patient, and watch the breakthrough happen.