Mental Health & Therapy Companion journal lying on a sunlit table with coffee and eucalyptus — morning journaling ritual
Wellside Press · Mental Health

Why Do I Forget Everything Between Therapy Sessions? (And How to Fix It)

By Wellside Press · 9 min read

Short answer: Therapy activates your emotional brain, which interferes with memory formation. You're not broken — this happens to almost everyone. The fix: write down key points immediately after each session and keep a daily journal between appointments. Five minutes of writing preserves what an hour of therapy taught you.

It's Thursday at 2am. You're lying in bed replaying the argument with your partner, and you think: THIS is what I need to talk about in therapy.

Tuesday arrives. You sit down across from your therapist. They ask: "What's been on your mind?"

And you say: "Honestly? I can't remember. I know there was something, but..."

Sound familiar? You're not alone. This is one of the most common frustrations people have with therapy — and it has a neuroscience explanation.

The Science: Why Your Brain Drops Therapy

Two things are happening simultaneously:

1. Emotional processing competes with memory encoding

Therapy conversations activate your amygdala — the part of your brain that processes emotions. When the amygdala is highly active, it can interfere with the hippocampus, which is responsible for forming new explicit memories.

Translation: the more emotionally important a session is, the harder it is to remember the specifics afterward. The irony is brutal — the breakthroughs are the most forgettable.

2. State-dependent memory

You access memories more easily when you're in the same emotional and physical state you were in when the memory was formed. In your therapist's calm office, you can access the insights that emerged there. But at home, in your normal emotional state, those insights become harder to retrieve.

This is why the revelations you had on the couch at 4pm Tuesday feel distant by Wednesday morning. You're not in the same state anymore.

What Gets Lost (and Why It Matters)

Research on information retention shows we forget 40-60% of new information within one hour, and up to 70% within 24 hours (Ebbinghaus forgetting curve). Therapy content is even more vulnerable because:

What this means practically: by your next session, you've lost most of the nuance from the previous one. Your therapist is building on ground that keeps washing away.

The Fix: External Memory (Your Journal)

The solution isn't better recall. It's better capture. You need a system that holds the information your brain won't:

Immediately After Every Session (5 minutes)

Before you start your car or leave the building, write down:

  1. Main topic: What did we talk about? (one sentence)
  2. Key insight: What shifted in my thinking? (one sentence)
  3. Homework: What did my therapist suggest I try?
  4. Feeling: How do I feel right now? (one word)
  5. For next time: Anything that came up that we didn't get to?

Between Sessions (2 minutes daily)

Every evening, capture:

  1. Mood: One word
  2. Trigger: What affected that mood?
  3. Flag: Anything to bring up next session?

Before Your Next Session (5 minutes)

  1. Review your post-session notes from last time
  2. Scan your daily entries — what patterns stand out?
  3. Pick 2-3 things to discuss
  4. Write your top priority for the session

This 12-minutes-per-week system transforms therapy from a series of disconnected conversations into a continuous thread. Your therapist builds on solid ground instead of starting over every Tuesday.

Why Writing Works Better Than Thinking

You might think: "I can just think about this stuff. I don't need to write it down."

You can't. Here's why:

Mental Health & Therapy Companion Journal by Wellside Press

Mental Health & Therapy Companion — Wellside Press

Built for the forgetting problem. Daily mood tracking, post-session capture pages, pre-session prep, and guided prompts. The bridge between the 1 hour with your therapist and the 167 without.

View on Amazon →
Wellside Press creates medical tracking journals for people navigating treatment. Every journal is designed with input from patients and caregivers who've been through it.

Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for general informational and educational purposes only and is not intended as, nor should it be considered, medical advice. This content does not replace professional medical consultation, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.