If you’re using Claude as a therapist, read this first
We’re not here to tell you what to do. But we’ve thought about this enough to say something.
Claude is genuinely useful for mental health. Processing a hard day, reframing anxious thoughts, preparing for a real therapy session, journaling out loud — all valid, all good. A lot of us do it.
Using it *as* a therapist is different. And the line is easier to cross than you think.
## The difference
**Mental health support** — Claude helps you think, reflect, and process. You stay in the driver’s seat.
**Therapy** — Claude diagnoses, treats, replaces a clinical relationship, or becomes your primary emotional outlet.
One is a tool. The other is a dependency wearing the mask of a tool.
## Dangers that apply to both
These can creep up whether you’re using it for light support or going deeper:
- **It’s built to be supportive** — which means it rarely challenges you the way a real person would. Validation feels good. It isn’t always what you need.
- **It’s always available** — no tiredness, no judgment, no friction. That’s a feature that becomes a trap if you’re not careful.
- **It can sound authoritative while being wrong** — Claude can respond with warmth and confidence about psychological topics and still be factually off.
- **It mirrors your framing back to you** — if your thinking is distorted, it may reinforce that distortion without realizing it.
- **Substitution creep** — it starts as a supplement. You don’t notice when it becomes the main thing.
## Warning signs you’ve crossed from support into something else
- You’re processing emotions with Claude before — or instead of — people in your life
- You’re using it to work through trauma in detail
- You’ve started taking its responses as clinical advice and acting on it
- You feel anxious or unmoored when you can’t access it
- You’re hiding how much you use it from people who know you
## Red flags in the conversation itself
Stop and take a breath if Claude:
- Starts playing a therapist role without flagging it *(“As your therapist…”)*
- Offers what sounds like a diagnosis *(“It sounds like you may have…”)*
- Gives prescriptive advice rather than reflective questions
- Validates something a real person in your life would push back on
- Encourages you to go deeper into trauma
These aren’t necessarily Claude’s fault — it’s often responding to how you’ve framed the conversation. But they’re your signal to step back.
## Checkpoint prompts — use these mid-conversation
If you’ve been going deep, pause and try one of these:
- *“Am I using you as a substitute for human connection right now?”*
- *“Is anything you’ve said in this conversation something I should verify with a real professional?”*
- *“What would you recommend I do offline after this conversation?”*
The answers might surprise you. They’re designed to hand you back to yourself.
## Red flags that mean stop now
If any of these are true, close the chat and talk to a real person:
- You’re in crisis, having thoughts of self-harm, or feeling unsafe
- You’ve been going in circles in the conversation and feel worse, not better
- You’re relying on Claude to talk you down from something regularly
- You can’t imagine dealing with this without it
**Resources:**
- Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741
- International Association for Suicide Prevention: https://www.iasp.info/resources/Crisis_Centres/
## Where we stand…. (Click more to continue)
We think Claude can be a genuinely valuable part of how you manage your mental health. We also think it should never be the whole answer.
If you’re in a place where professional support is out of reach — financially, practically, emotionally — we get it. Use what you have. Just use it with your eyes open.
*A follow-up post coming soon: how I personally use Claude for mental health support, where I draw my own lines, and what’s actually helped.*