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AI to support therapy
by Nicole KnutsonMarch 23, 2026Currently In Therapy Therapy3 Min Read

Using AI Between Therapy Sessions – In a Healthy Way

Therapy usually happens once a week, but the situations you’re working through don’t follow that schedule.

Between sessions, people often look for ways to sort through what’s coming up.

  • Sometimes by journaling
  • Sometimes by talking it through with someone they trust
  • Sometimes by just sitting with it and trying to make sense of it on their own.


More recently, some clients have started using AI in a similar way.

When it’s used thoughtfully, it can help organize your thoughts, highlight patterns, and make it easier to walk into your next session knowing what you want to talk about.

“AI isn’t a replacement for therapy, but it can help you stay connected to the work between sessions.”
Keep Reading ↓

Therapy can be a consistent and meaningful place to work through things, but it doesn’t cover everything that happens in between.

Life keeps unfolding. Something happens, you react to it, and by the time your next session arrives, it can be difficult to retrace exactly what you felt or why it mattered in the moment.

For a long time, people have used journaling to bridge that gap. Writing things down helps slow thoughts down and gives you something to come back to later.
[Related Article: Processing Between Sessions]

Some clients are now using AI in a similar way—not as therapy, but as a structured way to think through what’s happening in real time.

Used carefully, it can help put words to something that feels unclear, sort through a situation that didn’t sit right, or identify patterns that might not be obvious at first. It can also make it easier to prepare for a session, especially if you’ve been holding onto something you’re not sure how to bring up.

At the same time, it’s important to stay clear about what AI is and what it isn’t.

It doesn’t replace professional care, and it doesn’t take responsibility for your well-being. It isn’t able to fully understand context, and it shouldn’t be relied on for diagnosis or major decisions. The role it can play is much more limited—and much more practical.

“It’s a tool for reflection—not something that directs your care.”

When it’s used that way, it can actually strengthen the work you’re already doing in therapy.

You might use it to walk through a conversation that stayed with you longer than expected, or to make sense of a reaction that didn’t quite match the situation. You might write out what you want to talk about before your next session, or practice putting something into words that feels difficult to say out loud.

Then you bring that into your session.

You might say, “I wrote some things down this week because I didn’t want to lose track of it,” or “I tried to organize my thoughts before coming in today.”

Most therapists will recognize that as engagement. It usually leads to more focused, productive sessions because you’re not starting from scratch each session.

And if a therapist has a strong negative reaction to you using a neutral reflection tool, that’s something worth noticing.
[Related Article: When Something Feels Off in Therapy]

Therapy should support your ability to think clearly and independently, not limit it.

AI isn’t a replacement for therapy, and it isn’t meant to be.

But when it’s used with clear boundaries, it can help you stay connected to the work you’re doing—even when you’re not in your session.

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