Episode Description
If ending therapy sessions on time feels harder than it should, you’re not imagining things. Many thoughtful, dedicated therapists struggle with this, especially when meaningful work is happening in the room or when a client brings up something important right as the session is ending. But learning how to end therapy sessions on time is a professional skill that quietly shapes your boundaries, your energy, and the sustainability of your career.
In this episode of Love, Happiness, and Success for Therapists, I’m revisiting a conversation about why ending therapy sessions on time can be surprisingly difficult for even experienced clinicians. Over years of supervising therapists and running my own practice, I’ve seen how easily session boundaries can start to drift. Most of the time it happens for compassionate reasons. We care about our clients, we want to help, and sometimes the work is just getting interesting right when the clock runs out.
But when therapy sessions consistently run over time, it can create ripple effects that many therapists don’t anticipate. Clients may begin to expect extra time. Our schedules become compressed and stressful. Breaks disappear. And over time, what feels like a small act of generosity can quietly contribute to therapist burnout, administrative overwhelm, and a sense that the workday never quite has enough breathing room.
We also talk about the real reasons therapists struggle with therapist time management and session boundaries. We explore the emotional dynamics that make it hard to wrap up sessions, including empathy, discomfort around money, imposter syndrome, and the classic “doorknob moment” when a client reveals something significant just as the session is ending. I also share practical strategies therapists can use to maintain clear therapy session boundaries without feeling abrupt or uncaring.
Because ending therapy sessions on time isn’t about being rigid. It’s about creating a professional container that supports your clients, protects your energy, and allows you to sustain this work over the long term.
Episode Breakdown:
00:00 Why ending therapy sessions on time is harder than it seems
05:40 Why empathy makes it hard for therapists to end sessions on time
11:20 The “doorknob moment” and managing last-minute disclosures
16:30 How poor session boundaries contribute to therapist burnout
22:10 Administrative stress and the importance of time between sessions
25:45 Practical strategies for ending therapy sessions on time
If you’ve been feeling isolated in your work or quietly wondering how long you can keep doing this on your own, this work was never meant to be done alone. One of the ways I support therapists beyond this podcast is through The Growth Collective for Therapists, a professional home for clinicians who want meaningful consultation, real connection, and support building a practice that feels sustainable rather than depleting. Through monthly consultation, clinical supervision, CEU trainings, and practical guidance for private practice, The Growth Collective brings together therapists who are ready to receive the same level of care they offer their clients every day. If you’ve been missing community or feeling the early edges of burnout, this space was built with you in mind.
xoxo,
Dr. Lisa Marie Bobby