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How does one know if they have the tenacity and grit to become a marriage and family therapist?
I am going to study psychology next year in college and would like some advice on this career path. #Spring26
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3 answers
Updated
Samuel’s Answer
Hi Samantha,
A very real way to approach this is to say that you don’t need to have all the “grit and tenacity” figured out right now.
Those qualities are actually built over time through experience, not something you either have or don’t have from the start. What matters more at this stage is whether you’re genuinely curious about people, willing to sit with others through uncomfortable emotions, and open to learning about yourself as much as others.
As you go through your psychology degree, you should pay attention to how you respond to listening, helping, and handling emotionally heavy conversations, and try to get practical exposure through volunteering, internships, or shadowing therapists. That’s where you'll start to see if this path fits you.
It’s also important to know that being a marriage and family therapist requires emotional resilience, patience, and ongoing self-work, but those are things you grow into,so the focus now should be on exploring, gaining experience, and being honest with yourself about what you learn along the way.
A very real way to approach this is to say that you don’t need to have all the “grit and tenacity” figured out right now.
Those qualities are actually built over time through experience, not something you either have or don’t have from the start. What matters more at this stage is whether you’re genuinely curious about people, willing to sit with others through uncomfortable emotions, and open to learning about yourself as much as others.
As you go through your psychology degree, you should pay attention to how you respond to listening, helping, and handling emotionally heavy conversations, and try to get practical exposure through volunteering, internships, or shadowing therapists. That’s where you'll start to see if this path fits you.
It’s also important to know that being a marriage and family therapist requires emotional resilience, patience, and ongoing self-work, but those are things you grow into,so the focus now should be on exploring, gaining experience, and being honest with yourself about what you learn along the way.
Updated
Samuel’s Answer
Hi Samantha,
A very real way to approach this is to say that you don’t need to have all the “grit and tenacity” figured out right now.
Those qualities are actually built over time through experience, not something you either have or don’t have from the start. What matters more at this stage is whether you’re genuinely curious about people, willing to sit with others through uncomfortable emotions, and open to learning about yourself as much as others.
As you go through your psychology degree, you should pay attention to how you respond to listening, helping, and handling emotionally heavy conversations, and try to get practical exposure through volunteering, internships, or shadowing therapists. That’s where you'll start to see if this path fits you.
It’s also important to know that being a marriage and family therapist requires emotional resilience, patience, and ongoing self-work, but those are things you grow into,so the focus now should be on exploring, gaining experience, and being honest with yourself about what you learn along the way.
Best Regards 💐✨
A very real way to approach this is to say that you don’t need to have all the “grit and tenacity” figured out right now.
Those qualities are actually built over time through experience, not something you either have or don’t have from the start. What matters more at this stage is whether you’re genuinely curious about people, willing to sit with others through uncomfortable emotions, and open to learning about yourself as much as others.
As you go through your psychology degree, you should pay attention to how you respond to listening, helping, and handling emotionally heavy conversations, and try to get practical exposure through volunteering, internships, or shadowing therapists. That’s where you'll start to see if this path fits you.
It’s also important to know that being a marriage and family therapist requires emotional resilience, patience, and ongoing self-work, but those are things you grow into,so the focus now should be on exploring, gaining experience, and being honest with yourself about what you learn along the way.
Best Regards 💐✨
Chinyere Okafor
Educationist and Counseling Psychologist
1376
Answers
Port Harcourt, Rivers, Nigeria
Updated
Chinyere’s Answer
Hi Samantha,
This is a powerful question, and the fact that you’re asking it already shows a level of self-awareness that’s essential for this path.
Here’s the truth: you don’t need to already have perfect “grit” or “tenacity” to become a marriage and family therapist. Those qualities are developed through the process, not required at the start. A better way to assess your fit is to look for a few key signals:
First, can you stay present with people even when things are uncomfortable? Therapy often involves sitting with conflict, pain, or silence. If you’re willing to lean into that (even if it’s hard), that’s a strong foundation.
Second, do you have a genuine curiosity about people, not just a desire to “help”? The work isn’t about fixing others; it’s about understanding patterns, emotions, and relationships over time.
Third, are you open to working on yourself? This career will challenge you to reflect on your own beliefs, triggers, and communication style. Growth on this path is very personal.
Now, about grit specifically, it shows up as:
- Showing up consistently, even when you feel emotionally tired
- Managing boundaries so you don’t carry everything home
- Continuing to learn, even when progress feels slow
And here’s the key insight: you don’t figure this out by thinking; you figure it out by testing yourself in real environments. So a practical next step would be to:
- Volunteer or work in people-centered spaces (hotlines, youth programs, peer support, etc.)
- Take introductory psychology or counseling-related courses
- Reflect on how you feel after these experiences (energized, drained, fulfilled?)
That feedback will tell you far more than any personality test.
Also, it’s okay if you discover along the way that it’s not the right fit; that’s not failure, that’s alignment. You don’t need certainty right now. You need exposure, reflection, and willingness to grow. If those are in place, grit will follow.
Best wishes!
This is a powerful question, and the fact that you’re asking it already shows a level of self-awareness that’s essential for this path.
Here’s the truth: you don’t need to already have perfect “grit” or “tenacity” to become a marriage and family therapist. Those qualities are developed through the process, not required at the start. A better way to assess your fit is to look for a few key signals:
First, can you stay present with people even when things are uncomfortable? Therapy often involves sitting with conflict, pain, or silence. If you’re willing to lean into that (even if it’s hard), that’s a strong foundation.
Second, do you have a genuine curiosity about people, not just a desire to “help”? The work isn’t about fixing others; it’s about understanding patterns, emotions, and relationships over time.
Third, are you open to working on yourself? This career will challenge you to reflect on your own beliefs, triggers, and communication style. Growth on this path is very personal.
Now, about grit specifically, it shows up as:
- Showing up consistently, even when you feel emotionally tired
- Managing boundaries so you don’t carry everything home
- Continuing to learn, even when progress feels slow
And here’s the key insight: you don’t figure this out by thinking; you figure it out by testing yourself in real environments. So a practical next step would be to:
- Volunteer or work in people-centered spaces (hotlines, youth programs, peer support, etc.)
- Take introductory psychology or counseling-related courses
- Reflect on how you feel after these experiences (energized, drained, fulfilled?)
That feedback will tell you far more than any personality test.
Also, it’s okay if you discover along the way that it’s not the right fit; that’s not failure, that’s alignment. You don’t need certainty right now. You need exposure, reflection, and willingness to grow. If those are in place, grit will follow.
Best wishes!