The 7 Red Flags Every Therapy Patient Must Know (That Could Save Your Life)
How to spot professional predators before they destroy you
Your therapist is supposed to be the one person you can trust completely. You pour out your deepest wounds, your most shameful secrets, your childhood traumas. They’re trained to handle that trust responsibly.
Most do.
But some don’t.
Some therapists are predators who use your vulnerabilities as weapons against you. They exploit the power dynamic, manipulate your desperation for healing, and destroy lives while hiding behind professional credentials.
Last year, I discovered my therapist had been systematically exploiting me for five years. She extracted over $126,000, controlled every aspect of my life, and nearly drove me to suicide. She’s still practicing today.
But here’s what I learned: Professional predators follow patterns. They use the same psychological manipulation tactics because they work. The warning signs aren’t subtle if you know what to look for.
I missed seven massive red flags that should have made me run immediately. I’m sharing them because your life might depend on recognizing them.
Red Flag #1: They Strike When You’re Most Desperate
Predatory therapists are like vultures. They circle when you’re wounded, waiting for the perfect moment to swoop in.
Lost your job? Going through a divorce? Death in the family? Major health crisis? These moments of vulnerability aren’t just when you need help most. They’re when predators see opportunity.
“Ethical therapists provide stability during your crisis. Predators exploit your desperation to create dependency.”
When you’re drowning, you’ll grab any hand extended to you. You won’t inspect it for weapons. Predators know this. They position themselves as your savior during your darkest hour, making you grateful instead of cautious.
What to watch for: A therapist who becomes intensely involved in your crisis, offers solutions that seem too good to be true, or presents themselves as uniquely qualified to save you from your situation.
What healthy looks like: Professional support that helps you develop your own coping strategies and connects you with appropriate resources.
Red Flag #2: The Boundaries Disappear Gradually
Professional boundaries exist for one reason: to protect you. When those boundaries start dissolving, you’re in danger.
It never happens all at once. First, maybe sessions run long “because you need extra support.” Then they suggest meeting at a coffee shop “just this once.” Maybe they share personal details about their own life to “build connection.”
Each boundary violation seems small, caring, special. You feel chosen. Like your relationship is different from their other patients.
“Boundary erosion is like boiling a frog. By the time you realize what’s happening, you’re already trapped.”
The moment your therapist suggests your relationship should exist outside professional settings, you’re being groomed. No exceptions.
What to watch for: Therapy moving to personal spaces, excessive personal disclosure from your therapist, suggestions that normal rules don’t apply to your “special” relationship.
What healthy looks like: Consistent professional boundaries that never waver, regardless of circumstances.
Red Flag #3: You Become Their Project
Healthy therapists guide you to become your own healer. Predatory therapists position themselves as the only one who can fix you.
They don’t teach you coping skills. They become your coping mechanism. They don’t help you build support systems. They replace your support systems. They don’t empower you to make decisions. They make decisions for you.
The language changes. Instead of “What do you think would help?” it becomes “I know what you need.” Instead of “How did that make you feel?” it becomes “Let me tell you how you should feel about that.”
What to watch for: A therapist who claims special insight into your condition, suggests they’re uniquely qualified to help you, or discourages you from seeking other perspectives or support.
What healthy looks like: A therapist who consistently empowers you to develop your own insights and coping strategies.
Red Flag #4: They Know Too Much About Your Outside Life
Your therapist should know what you tell them in session. That’s it.
If they start demonstrating knowledge about your life that you didn’t share, that’s a massive red flag. Knowledge about your friends, your family, your work situation, your relationships that goes beyond what you’ve disclosed.
Sometimes this presents as “concern.” They might warn you about people in your life, claim to have insights about your relationships, or suggest they’ve learned troubling information about someone you know.
“Your therapist’s knowledge should come from you, not from investigating your life outside the therapy room.”
What to watch for: A therapist who seems to know details about your life you didn’t share, who warns you about specific people without clear reasons, or who claims to have information about your relationships from outside sources.
What healthy looks like: A therapist whose understanding of your life comes entirely from what you choose to share in session.
Red Flag #5: Your Support System Becomes the Enemy
One of the most insidious tactics predatory therapists use is isolating you from everyone who might question their methods or support you independently.
It starts subtly. Maybe they question whether certain friends are “good for your healing.” They might suggest your family doesn’t understand your trauma. They could claim your romantic relationships are “toxic patterns” you need to break.
Gradually, everyone in your life becomes problematic except your therapist. You find yourself cutting off friends, reducing contact with family, ending romantic relationships because your therapist convinced you they’re harmful.
What to watch for: A therapist who consistently finds problems with your relationships, encourages you to cut contact with people who care about you, or positions themselves as your primary support system.
What healthy looks like: A therapist who helps you build stronger, healthier relationships and maintain connections with supportive people in your life.
Red Flag #6: Money Becomes Part of the “Treatment”
Legitimate therapy costs are straightforward: session fees, potentially testing fees, maybe workbooks or materials. That’s it.
Predatory therapists find ways to extract additional money by making financial control part of your “healing process.” Maybe they suggest you need special services only they can provide. Maybe they claim external threats require expensive solutions. Maybe they present financial arrangements as therapeutic contracts.
“Your healing should never require you to go into debt or financial crisis.”
The most dangerous version is when they structure payments to avoid detection. Multiple smaller payments instead of larger ones. Payments for vague “services” that can’t be verified. Cash transactions without proper receipts.
What to watch for: Requests for money beyond standard session fees, payment structures that seem designed to avoid detection, or claims that expensive external services are necessary for your treatment.
What healthy looks like: Transparent, standard fee structures with clear documentation of what you’re paying for.
Red Flag #7: You Can’t Question Them
In healthy therapy, you should be able to question anything. Your diagnosis, their methods, their suggestions, their interpretations. Doubt and questioning are part of the healing process.
Predatory therapists shut down questioning immediately. They might claim you’re “resisting treatment” if you disagree. They could suggest that questioning them proves you’re not ready for healing. They might use your own diagnoses against you, claiming your doubt is a symptom of your condition.
You find yourself walking on eggshells, afraid to voice concerns or disagreements. You start accepting their version of reality even when it conflicts with your own experience.
What to watch for: A therapist who becomes defensive when questioned, who pathologizes your doubts, or who claims that trusting them completely is necessary for treatment.
What healthy looks like: A therapist who welcomes questions, explains their methods clearly, and respects your right to disagree or seek second opinions.
The Universal Truth About Professional Predators
These patterns exist across all helping professions. Doctors, therapists, clergy, teachers, coaches. Predators are drawn to roles that give them access to vulnerable people and inherent authority.
The psychology is always the same:
Target vulnerability
Create dependency
Isolate from support
Exploit trust for personal gain
Use professional authority to silence objections
“Predators don’t just abuse their power. They use your healing journey as the weapon against you.”
What Real Healing Looks Like
After surviving professional abuse, I found legitimate therapy with someone who specializes in therapist abuse. Here’s the difference:
Real therapists:
Maintain consistent boundaries no matter what
Empower you to make your own decisions
Support your outside relationships
Explain their methods clearly
Welcome questions and concerns
Charge standard, transparent fees
Help you become independent, not dependent
Predators:
Blur boundaries “for your benefit”
Make decisions for you “because they know best”
Isolate you from others “who don’t understand”
Use mysterious methods “that only they understand”
Shut down questions “because you’re not ready”
Create complex financial arrangements “for special services”
Make you increasingly dependent on them
Trust Your Gut
Here’s what nobody tells you about professional abuse: your gut knows. That uncomfortable feeling when they cross a boundary. The confusion when their version of events doesn’t match your memory. The anxiety about disappointing them. The fear of what happens if you question their methods.
Your instincts are trying to save your life. Listen to them.
“The same vulnerability that makes you a target for predators also makes you incredibly sensitive to danger. Trust that sensitivity.”
If This Sounds Familiar
If you recognize these patterns in your own therapeutic relationship:
Document everything. Save all texts, emails, session notes, receipts. Print everything and store copies in multiple places.
Tell someone you trust. Professional abusers rely on shame and secrecy. Speaking up breaks their power.
Report to your state licensing board. Even if you’re not sure, file a complaint. They investigate, you don’t have to prove anything yourself.
Find a therapist who specializes in professional abuse. Yes, this is a real specialty. They understand what you’re going through.
Remember: It’s not your fault. Predators are skilled manipulators who target vulnerability. Being victimized doesn’t make you weak or stupid. It makes you human.
The Bottom Line
Most therapists are ethical professionals who genuinely want to help you heal. But some are predators who will use your deepest wounds as weapons against you.
The difference between the two isn’t subtle once you know what to look for. Trust your instincts. Maintain your support systems. Question everything. And remember that real healing empowers you to become independent, not more dependent.
Your vulnerability is not a weakness to be exploited. It’s a strength that deserves protection.
Don’t let anyone convince you otherwise.
— Cody Taymore
Kill The Silence
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This is valuable information. Even therapists that aren't all-out predatory can undermine us with therapy that isn't effective. There are bad ones. How they handle questions shows a lot. We are not to be made to doubt ourselves. We should not end up feeling worse instead of better. Thank you for getting this out there.
Amazing that this therapist is still in practice even after being reported to her licensing board! What she did constitutes gross malpractice!