An Empowering Kind of Forgiveness

by Nathan Chua

As we live in a predominantly Christian country, forgiveness can take on a lot of meanings.  You and I have heard numerous recommendations from well-meaning friends, relatives, clergy, and even mental health practitioners about the necessity of forgiveness in order for us to live richer, more purposeful lives.  The edict to forgive at all times however, has the unintended consequence of pouring guilt on the victim for not being ready to forgive.  Not only is it hard to forgive people who have caused us great harm through abuse, neglect, or abandonment, people around us make quick judgments on our choices.

Having received my education from Roman Catholic and protestant institutions, I have had my share of confusion and guilt over such matters.  Does it mean I have to forgive everyone at all times?  Am I going against my own values for not wanting to forgive?  Is it inimical to my own peace of mind if I refuse to offer forgiveness?  Is forgiveness about forgetting also?  I know, cliche!  However, they linger and perhaps for some, even haunting!

It was a long search, but I believe I have finally found something that corresponds to my personal experience with forgiveness.  The ACT (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy) take on forgiveness stems from the etymology of the word, “forgive.”  To forgive means to give ourselves what came before.  Using this perspective, it is easy to see how we can liberate ourselves from our own resentments about past hurts.  Playing the blame game for how our lives are, can be distressing and disempowering.  Forgiveness is a gift we give to ourselves.  We can be who we were before the harm was done even as we hold our offenders accountable.  

There is more good news!  I know many of you reading this have some interest in the subject because you have yet to forgive at least one person in your life.  As yet, there is no science that indicates forgiving our offenders is beneficial to our psychological well-being.  Forgiving someone who has deeply wronged us is not a precursor to living a meaningful and values-based life.    

I hope this helps especially those who have suffered terribly in the hands of an abuser.  It is liberating and it protects us from the victim-blaming culture that pervades.  You are not alone. 

Did you like you in your moments?

by Nathan Chua

Most people come to therapy with goals that have to do with being in control of their emotions and also hoping to get some assurance from an old and wise person that they are doing the “right” thing.  Some of these goals are like, “I want to feel more confident.”  “I want to get rid of this depression so I can do things that I have been wanting to do but can’t.”  “I want to know if I am making the right decisions with regard to my relationships.”  Unfortunately, all of these are not within our control and the more we try to do so, the more ineffectual and undesirable we feel about ourselves.

You are not alone.  I had long thought that psychotherapy and counseling were about achieving the goals mentioned above.  After all, who wouldn’t want to make all the right decisions all the time?  Who wants to feel anxious and have the people around them see their trembling hands?  Who wouldn’t want to feel happy once they figured all of these out?  I am the problem that should be fixed!  Who wouldn’t want to be the smiling faces you see in the billboard ads?

Unfortunately, that is a difficult if not impossible task.  No one alive can control emotions, thoughts, and outcomes.  Only the dead can shut out feelings and thoughts and inevitably get the same results…nothing.  Moreover, unless you suffer a major head injury, your mind is going to work up those thoughts and feelings multiple times every day.  No matter how hard we try we can’t control our thoughts and emotions; and we most certainly cannot control the results of our efforts.  

Here’s a paraphrase of Darin Cairns’ words, a therapist from Australia working with a client who has resorted to avoiding difficult thoughts and feelings by not engaging with others.  He said this as he made his client realize the futility of his control agenda.

“I am not gonna promise you this [moving towards relationships] is not gonna hurt.  In fact, I am gonna promise you it will hurt.  I have no intention of making you happy.  I’d like to help you have a meaningful life so that you can have all the feelings you want, because I don’t know about you but that sounds like an awesome outcome, compared to just being happy.  If you want to be happy all the time, first of all you can’t do it, but if you do achieve something like it, we call it mania and we’d lock you up.”

Not everything that makes our lives purposeful and meaningful is about pursuing happiness and avoiding difficult feelings.  Additionally, if we only did the things that we knew would have guaranteed results, think about how many of the things you would love to do, just does not present such outcomes.  

I loved playing basketball when I was younger and I still love it now as a fan.  Playing the game is not all fun.  In fact, there will be anxious moments, times when you don’t like what your teammates are doing, and boring practices.  It’s a microcosm of life.  We play the game of life knowing we will come across anxious moments in the pursuit of what we want.  We won’t be smiling all the time, but it sure beats watching funny movies all day just to feel happy.  Like it or not, we enjoy doing hard stuff, not just happy stuff!  

Many times our thoughts and feelings get in the way of us pursuing the things that we know will make our lives more meaningful.  That job you’ve always wanted, that business you’ve dreamed of starting for so long, that date you always wanted to have with this person you met at your local fellowship group, and many more, are some examples of what can be scary but ultimately life-giving.  Like a basketball player, you don’t know if you’d one day become a champion or just win the neighborhood pick up game.  You don’t know if that date will say yes or no.  You don’t know if you will get the job or that the business will succeed.  But can you take all that uncertainty and anxiety with you in pursuit of something that’s truly important to you?

So the question is, will you take whatever these feelings are and still pursue what you want?  Are these hopes and dreams worth the anxious moments, the sweaty palms, and racing heart rates?  Are you willing to feel everything that comes with going for your best hopes for your life?  Are you going to play the game regardless of the possibility that you would lose?  

I learned this from Darin Cairns.  It is not really about what the other people think about what you did or how well you did in the pursuit of something important, but how much you liked yourself as you did them.  Did you like you in those moments as you pursued being you?  You’d probably be surprised, because you’ll see from hindsight, that the times when you were most proud of yourself, weren’t really the happiest times at all.  In fact, they were the most difficult and trying of times; and you probably liked the way you went through them.  You liked you in those moments…and that was all that mattered, regardless of what you felt and what results you might have or have not gotten!

The Chess Game In Our Heads

by Nathan Chua

One of the awesome features of ACT (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy)  is the use of metaphors that makes counseling work more experiential and interesting.  One that has recently become my favorite is how an ACT therapist, Chris McCurry, uses the chess metaphor so effectively.  Here’s how I remember some of the ways he describes the chess game and how it is similar to the way our minds work.

Our minds have different thoughts with varying degrees of importance and likeability.  Some are quite important while others are part of our mundane thoughts, like our plans to go grocery-shopping for the day.  The important ones can refer to our sense of meaning and purpose, our thoughts about how we can face life’s tragic aspects, or our important relationships that require our attention.  Now, as chess is a game of two sides of a battle, one side can represent our more positive thoughts while the other will be our negative ones.  In McCurry’s illustration, he says that even if we feel like the positive side may have the upper hand at any given moment, there will always be at least one piece of the negative side that remains.  We can attest to this fact simply by checking in with our personal experiences.  How many times have we enjoyed a vacation and said we don’t have any single negative thought in mind?  Probably not!  If you are married, did you do so with nary a negative thought?  On the other hand, how many times have you been caught up in negative thoughts and still have that little tiny voice inside you that says: You’re alright, don’t worry!  As you can see, neither one can totally eliminate the other.  

In Russ Harris’ version of the chess metaphor for the mind, he shares that each white piece actually generates a black piece and vice versa.  Positive thoughts remind us of our negative ones!  You can test this with your own experience.  See what you sense if someone like me told you that you are the nicest kindest person on the planet!  See what your mind does with that information.  I can also start with a negative judgment.  You are the worst most unlikeable person on the planet!  See what you mind does with that too.  

Did you sense that in the former your mind tells you:  Hogwash!  I am a kind person but certainly not all the time or not compared to everyone else?  On the other hand, did your mind do the same opposite-thinking while hearing me tell you that you are the worst person on the living earth!  Your mind may say something that goes like this:  Yeah, you’re right, sometimes I do feel that way, but that can’t be right all the time!

As you can see in these illustrations that there are no winners in this game that we play in our minds.  It is unwinnable as McCurry describes it.  So it is hopeless trying to be the positive pieces in this war in our heads.  The negative pieces just aren’t leaving for as long as we are alive and with our nervous systems functioning as they are as I write and as you read this post.

The question now is:  Then who could we be in this chess game so that we can get out of this war and move on with our lives?  The answer is the chessboard!  We are the containers of these thoughts but we are not them!  And being the containers, we don’t really need to care who wins or loses in this game.  We can remain as witnesses to this war!  

If you are able to write down your thoughts, then this is a practice in metacognition!  Noticing your thoughts and noticing that you are noticing them!  That’s a part of you that notices everything that goes on in your life!  And with this capacity, we can then choose the particular course of action that is most effective for what is unfolding in front of us!

Furthermore, I love that Chris McCurry also uses the chess game to illustrate life and its tragic elements.  As we play the game, we will eventually lose pieces as we go through it.  The object of the game is to keep playing with the pieces you have left.  This is a bigger metaphor actually of not just our minds but of life itself.  If we live long enough, we will experience the bitter sweetness that life presents.  As Steven Hayes, the developer of ACT writes in his best-selling book, 

“You have only so much time on this earth, and you don’t know how much.  The question “Are you going to live, knowing you will die?” is not fundamentally different than these questions:  “Are you going to love, knowing you will be hurt?” Or, “Are you going to commit to living a valued life knowing you will sometimes not meet your commitments?” Or, “Will you reach for success knowing you will sometimes fail.”  The potential for pain and the sense of vitality you gain from these experiences go together.  If your life is truly going to be about something, it helps to look at it from the perspective of what you would want the path your life leaves behind to mean.”    

Life gives us but one chance and it doesn’t come without moments when we have to say goodbye to our youth, old friends, and loved ones.  Like the game of chess, let’s make the most of what we have at present and live our One Life Only as well as we can. 

Why do we end up fighting over my requests for change?

by Nathan Chua

You will never be like our friend Joe.  He knows how to make Valentine’s day special for his wife.  I clean your closet for you and you never even try!  I need you to change or else I will never be happy in this relationship.  I have done so much for this relationship so why can’t you do the same for me?      

These are just some examples of how couples end up escalating their fights.  They end up not just fighting about the issue at hand, but also the way they fight about it.  In the following article I will be writing about a few common requests that couples make that usually backfire.  Here is a short list of some of these ineffective petitions for change that couples use:

Did you notice how sweet Joe is to his wife?  Why can’t you be more like that?  

The problem with this type of request is that it immediately makes your partner defensive.  Your partner, just like everyone else will then make comparisons to other people who are less thoughtful to their partners than him or herself.  We all have the ability to make both upward and downward comparisons.  Comparisons usually make way for even more comparisons that will defend your partner’s position and invalidate yours.

After all of the work I have done to keep this household clean, you can’t even pick up after yourself!  When will you learn not to dump the dirty dishes in the sink and leave them there for hours? 

The problem with this demand is that you turn your partner’s differences into defects.  It may not take you much to clean up, but it can take quite a bit of effort for your partner.  What may seem easy and logical for you, may not be as evident to your partner.  

There are quite a few more of these, but I will now turn to ways in which you can make your requests more likely to be granted.  Please note that I don’t claim certainty here.  But at least these types of requests will be less likely to compound the issues by turning your fights into fights about the way you fight.  You might be surprised at its simplicity.

Make simple requests for no other reasons but for the fact that such changes will make you happy!  Most, if not all of us, go into a pair-bonding relationship for the simple reason that we want to make our partners happy.  It gives us pleasure to know that we have done something that makes our partners smile.  

In some cases though, you may find it hard to talk about these requests for change without ending up in a major altercation.  In such instances, you might have to be a bit more creative.  Do something different in the way you make your requests, like handwriting an open letter or sending an email.

If all else fails, there are a few things that have less to do with how your partner is, but more to do with how you are in the relationship.  One is being able to accept the fact that in all relationships, there are bound to be inequalities.  Your partner will be unpleasantly surprised if you suddenly demand for something that was never there in the first place.  Secondly, come to terms with the fact that change is bound to happen in any relationship.  In fact, keeping things as they are will take more effort than accepting that change will happen over time.  To use a metaphor, keeping a car or house in its original state is much harder than accepting the fact that they will eventually break down in certain areas.

Finally, the only thing that I can guarantee will make changes in your relationship, is a change in yourself.  Do what your partner has been asking for.  Do it without asking anything in return.  Give your partner an incentive to do what you’ve been requesting for.  Be kinder, sweeter, and show your partner that you have come to accept many of the differences that he or she brings into the relationship.  

Attempts to change your partner by sheer force of command usually backfires.  You can only influence change not demand it to happen in order for it to happen.  If you change, there is a greater likelihood that your partner will notice how much you have come to accept him or her, and thus show changes too.  It’s just up to you to be more mindful of the changes you see in your partner and appreciate your partner’s efforts.  As humans we all harbor aspirations of becoming the best person we want to be, most especially in this one special relationship that is like no other.  Your partner is no exception.  

Are you alone this Valentine?

by Nathan Chua

I have a feeling you would say that this blog post may not be worth your time.  Why?  Because how many times have you read articles that tell you to weigh the pros and cons of being alone in this time made exclusively for couples.  Well, this article will either amuse you or disappoint you.  I am not here to talk about the usual good and bad of being single and alone on Valentine’s day.  That battle in your mind will go on until the day you lose consciousness (well, for good, knock on wood).  It will never end.  It’s sort of like an old marriage joke I heard once from a clergyman, “Marriage is like flies on a screen door.  Those who are out want in and those who are in want out!”

Well, that’s the mind for you!  Sorry to sound trite, but your mind will always convince you that the grass is greener on the other side.  It is a nonstop judgment machine!  

So here’s the deal with being alone this Valentine’s day.  You can either give up your search for a lover, or you can keep doing what you are doing now (rationalizing why you shouldn’t or why you should be extra picky, or why you should anyway), or you can give it a go!  I know your mind will start barking off reasons for you to not even try.  It’s going to be one out of a hundred chances that I get to meet someone interesting.  It will be exhausting!  Boring!  Painful!  I will just get rejected more times than I can bear.

You can either follow what your mind tells you to do or step back a little and say what is dating done in the service of?  Is there a part of you that wants to be loving and caring to that one special person?  If your answer is yes, notice the verbs I use here!  It is about being loving and caring.  It is not just about marrying the right person, or having a long term commitment.  What’s the difference?  The former is something you can do endlessly until the end of your last breath, while the latter are goals you make that tell you you’re partly on your way to be the former!  Get it?  

See if we focus on our goals, we set ourselves up for disappointment…whether we succeed or not.  Why so?  That doesn’t seem fair!  Let’s see how goals work in our lives.  Goals are mostly end points in a process of pursuing something we want out of our lives.  If you fail to meet those goals, then you end up disappointed.  If you succeed in achieving your goals, how long does the satisfaction last?  Have you ever noticed that any new goals you achieve are instantly followed by a lack of satisfaction and an urge to pursue even more goals?  (Ever wondered why some of the richest billionaires end up doing something else besides what they had been doing so well for decades?)  So whether you achieve goals or not, you end up disappointed or at least unsatisfied.  Remember your mind is a judgment machine!  

So think of dating as part of your magic carpet ride!  It will be scary at times for sure, but it will likely be worth it if you know what the activity done is in the service of.  Think of a child who plays games like hide and seek!  Isn’t that scary and anxiety-causing?  But we still played the game for the sake of a more fun childhood!  That was when we hardly knew the rules that our minds gave us!  You shouldn’t feel this or that, or think this or that!  At least that’s what the adults around us said!  So the secret is to see your moves from a child’s eyes.  This is going to be horrifying at times, but alive!  Just like a movie!  There will be challenging times, but that’s what makes a movie a movie worth watching, isn’t it?  

So get in touch with the child in you and enjoy the ride.  This is just part of your journey of being or becoming more like the loving you you’ve always wanted to be!  Happy Valentine’s Day everyone! (and that includes the lonely ones!) 

How to prevent fights from escalating in your relationship

by Nathan Chua

Since I began to sense some dissatisfaction over the counseling approaches I have been using for the first nine years of my practice, I went in earnest to find better and more modern approaches to working with couples.  It didn’t take long for me to listen to a podcast from a couple of psychologists from Oxford University, raving about the efficacy of mindfulness to psychological well-being.   

Most of the approaches I had tried before for couples, were rules-based.  These rules made sense and they didn’t take a genius to understand how these rules can work.  Unfortunately, the drawback of this approach is that couples would then tend to use such rules to bash one another.

How do I now translate the mindfulness approach to dealing with couples?  Do I have my couple sit in front of me for 10 minutes and meditate?  It turns out there is a way to counsel couples to become more mindful in their relationships.  

Mindfulness allows couples to de-escalate fights, prevent fights, and recover more easily from their fights.  Most couples end up separating because their negative interactions have become hard to tolerate.  As a result, these negative exchanges can lead to a lessening of positive interactions that contribute to the couples’ opting to end the relationship.

Dr. Christensen, Doss, and Jacobson have come up with a memory aid for couples to remember.  This helps couples take a more mindful approach to de-escalating fights.  The mnemonic is START:

Stop what you are doing for the moment.”  Pause to notice what is going on at the moment.  Notice if this is something familiar that you and your partner have gone through countless times in the past.

Take a deep breath.”  This focus on the breath and being able to breathe in and out of the body part that feels tension in this exchange, can get you off the automatic reactions that lead to escalation.  

Attend to what is going on with you emotionally in the moment.”  One skill you will learn in mindfulness is to be able to identify or label the emotion that you are feeling.  Couples tend to more easily show a hard emotion over a soft hidden emotion. 

Reveal your emotional state to your partner.”  Once you have identified the deeper emotion, you may now be more open to tell your partner about these vulnerabilities that have remained hidden for so long.

Take an interest in what is going on emotionally with your partner.”  If you can be in touch with your feelings without defense, you can be more open to understanding your partner’s feelings as well.

I hope this short blog post will help you and your partner become more equipped when disagreements arise.  Committing to act on these skills is your key to developing a better relationship.    

How language can affect your mental health

by Nathan Chua

Ah, the functions of language!  Until recent years, I have never thought about how language played a role in our ability to sustain our mental health.  As the theory behind this new approach that I am using is framed upon language and how we use it, I would like to introduce you to a few terms that we use in a way that can cause us to experience unnecessary depression, excess anxiety, and even attempts at suicide!

The first expression we use quite a lot in the field of counseling is the word, “healing.”  I remember in the years I spent in graduate school, this word was used quite liberally.  In fact, there was even a book that had, as part of its title, the words, “wounded healer.”  Healing though connotes the idea that we are somehow broken and that we need to be put together like a puzzle or a broken vase in a clinical setting.  

Reality though would tell us that this can be nothing more than a figure of speech that at the least, could be considered unhelpful.  Because nothing inside of us is really broken.  It is rather a form of learning to resort to certain strategies that provide instant relief from emotional pain that end up unproductive and futile; and thereby rendering us feeling more ineffectual and deserving of our sad fate.  We are whole and complete.  What we suffer when we are said to be having some psychological problems is that of being stuck in a pattern of behaviors that do not serve our best interests.

The next phrase or term I have learned to be used in unhelpful fashions is the idea that comes from stories of people who supposedly went from being dead to surviving a coma. It is often said that they see a great white light and felt immense peace!  Attempts at suicide are basically logical responses to removing the difficult feelings brought on by our attempts at living what comes as meaningful to us.  It is better to die, since one:  it will remove the painful emotions we experience from our pursuits for meaning and purpose, and two:  there will be unimaginable bliss thereafter.  Unfortunately, allow me to paraphrase an expert in behavioral analysis who said in jest that there has so far been no one on record to have answered a survey from death that talks about how much better it is on that side.

The last term for this post is the word, confidence.  We often combine this with the word, “feel.”  This means that confidence is a feeling that we need to achieve in order to do something of significance.  As Dr. Steven Hayes likes to use etymologies in his work, the word actually means having full trust or faith in Latin.  We have somehow in our modern usage of the term used it to mean that it is something we feel rather than something we do.  We can still put our full faith in ourselves even as we feel anxious about doing a certain task. 

Remember that the best way to live is to focus on what we do rather than what we feel, because there is the possibility of redemption in the former.  Our feelings are subject to change and outside of our control.  If we hang our hats on them, we will find ourselves stuck in a cycle of frustration, and eventually see ourselves as broken vessels that need to be pieced together, or brought to a place where we choose to end it all permanently for temporary relief from the varied emotions we experience that come with truly living.

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Discussing sunk cost fallacy with Pia, Daiana, and Emma on Kada Umaga, Net 25 last July 16, 2025
Nathan Chua spoke with Pia Guanio Mago about parenting on Net 25’s Kada Umaga, June 2025
Interview with Chinkee Tan and Christine Bersola-Babao on MagBadyet Tayo about financial conflicts in relationships, October 23, 2023

The counselor is also an author!

Nathaniel Chua is the author of 

Better People, Better Country: A Psychological Blueprint for a New Philippines,

published under the pen name Starfly Chua.
The pen name was chosen in homage to his grandfather and his ethnic Chinese roots, and reflects a preference for allowing ideas to stand on their own—without emphasis on personal visibility or status.

Here are selected endorsements from international colleagues and clinical experts:

This book is a fascinating personal exploration and cultural adaptation of contextual behavioral science applied to psychotherapy. It takes you, with great clarity and humility, from the philosophical foundations of functional contextualism all the way to its practical applications in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. The way it addresses the challenges of psychological well-being in the Philippines makes it a particularly valuable contribution.

Dr. Matthieu Villatte, PhD, Co-author of Mastering the Clinical Conversation: Language as Intervention

Better People, Better Country offers a transformative shift in perspective, moving from rigid cultural rules that invite moral shaming toward one of contextual understanding. Both deeply personal and extensively practical, Starfly Chua provides a psychosocial blueprint for change and progress at multiple levels of human existence. This book is an invaluable resource for the people of the Philippines because it moves beyond the exhausted cycle of demanding ‘better people’ and instead provides the tools to build ‘better contexts’ — systems that naturally support prosocial values that benefit citizens and country alike.
 
Lou Lasprugato, MFT
Peer-Reviewed ACT Trainer
 
For far too long, theories of human behavior and psychology have been relegated to the therapy room, used in private, and often at the individual level. We now have advanced psychological theories that can explain and help foster change at the societal level.
Chua reaches for the same shining star that famed behavior analyst B.F. Skinner once reached for, applying cutting edge behavior change technology to the community at large—not just for the purposes of greater mental health—but for more workable societies. Chua doesn’t just reach for this star, he grasps it firmly. Laid out in this book is a set of common sense reforms that could revolutionize the Philippines and the world at an achievable cost: our own willingness.
 
Jacob Martinez 
Practicing Counselor
Wisconsin, USA
 

Nathaniel Chua is also a member of an international organization called the Association for Contextual Behavioral Science (ACBS). He once became chair of the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Special Interest Group (DEI-SIG) of ACBS; the first Non-North American to do so.

 

 

Nathaniel Chua has a Master’s Degree in Counseling and continues to learn more of the most cutting-edge approaches to working with the human condition.

Below is Nathaniel Chua’s first virtual talk held on November 17, 2023 in front of an international group of therapists from Low or Middle Income Countries (LMIC).  He is the first from the Philippines to do this:

What is One Life Only Counseling about?

  • We value and respect your privacy and we keep what you share confidential.
  • You will be respected regardless of your religion, gender preference, ethnicity, economic status, and even your personal lifestyle and values. We are LGBTQIA+ friendly!  
  • Your counselor will not impose their values and beliefs on you.  We welcome people from all faith traditions—or even none at all.  We understand that spirituality and belief can be deeply personal, sometimes a source of strength, and at other times a place of struggle.  Our goal is not to impose but to create space where your values, practices, and questions are respected. Whatever faith tradition you belong to, you are invited to bring your whole self into the counseling process.

Nathaniel Chua, MA

Functional Contextualist Therapist 

The Philippines’ ACT & IBCT Specialist

  • We mainly use ACT and IBCT which are both models of therapy that are based on functional contextualism – a science-based approach that focuses on what works in your unique life context.  Both approaches help individuals, couples, and families move past stuck patterns, handle difficult emotions, and build more meaningful lives and relationships.

What is functional contextualism?

Functional contextualism starts with this simple truth: behaviors don’t happen in a vacuum. Every action, every thought, every feeling occurs in your unique context — and all of them serve a purpose.

What we mean by behavior?

Behavior isn’t just what you do outwardly. It also includes inner actions like thinking, remembering, or imagining. Some behaviors can be observed; others happen quietly inside you.

What we mean by context?

Context is more than the physical space you’re in. It includes your personal history, your memories, and the people who have shaped your life — whether they’re with you now or live only in your mind.

What we mean by function or purpose?

Every behavior is influenced by what happens before and after it. The “function” is the role that behavior plays in helping you cope, adapt, or move toward something important to you.

What we don’t believe or practice:

We don’t see you as “broken” or as a set of symptoms to fix. Outside of major physical damage or impairment, there’s no solid science proving that everyday behavior is caused by some permanent biological flaw.
You’re not a checklist of traits scored four-out-of-seven or five-out-of-nine. You’re a complex, whole, and freely choosing individual whose actions make sense in the context of your life.

Beyond Diagnostic Labels

We don’t use DSM diagnoses because your life is more than a checklist of symptoms.  Real change begins with understanding your whole story, not fitting you into a category.

Medication as a Last Resort

While medication can sometimes be necessary, it’s never the first step we recommend.  We focus on approaches that build lasting strength, skills, and choice – empowering you without unnecessary dependence.

You’re More Than a Number

We don’t use psychometric testing, because no score can capture who you are.  We choose to listen, explore, and work with you through open, genuine conversations that honor your unique journey.

An Approach That is Recognized by the WHO!

The approach we use is also one that is endorsed by the World Health Organization as an effective psychological tool for coping with any kind of life crises!  It can be described as a kind of psychological vaccine that has been found to be effective in improving and promoting mental resilience in the face of many, if not all kinds of life challenges.  

Here’s a paraphrase from Dr. Steven C. Hayes in my interview with him on April 5th, 2022:

“Here’s what the World Health Organization, the best public health and scientific group in the world says about this protocol, this extensively tested protocol is helpful for anyone who is stressed, for any reason, in any circumstance.”

Since being established in 2009, it was in 2019 that we have been very excited to offer this type of a radically different approach to therapy that is not just about relieving symptoms, but also about helping people towards creating lives imbued with meaning and purpose.

Here’s a video about what makes One Life Only Counseling Services different:

You can read the written version of this video through this link: https://www.onelifeonly.net/about/what-makes-one-life-only-counseling-services-different/

Here is a recent interview for an article on Philstar Life featuring Nathaniel Chua and a legal practitioner about marital sexual consent:

https://philstarlife.com/news-and-views/928796-consent-rape-marriage-explainer

May 14, 2025 Nathan Chua was one of two guest resource persons at the UST campus with third year psychology students. Topic was about bulimia and anorexia.

 

Recent certificate given to Nathan Chua for presenting a talk about couple’s therapy in front an international audience of therapists from Low or Middle Income Country (LMIC).  He is the first and so far the only one from the Philippines to accomplish this.

Nathan Chua is probably one of the very few therapists in the Philippines who’s been on mainstream media to talk about ACT and functional contextualism in a way that stays faithful to the model.

Being faithful to the model means therapy isn’t about throwing techniques together like ingredients in a salad.  The “therapy salad” approach mixes bits and pieces without coherence, often leaving clients confused.  An integrative approach, on the other hand, is guided by a unifying framework – methods are chosen and blended with purpose, creating a clear, consistent direction that serves client’s goals.  

In other words, therapy isn’t about randomly mixing different techniques.  That can feel confusing, like tossing ingredients together without a recipe.  An integrative approach means everything fits together with a clear purpose – so the tools and methods used actually connect and support your journey.

Every step we take together has a purpose, not just a mix of techniques.

Here are some of the testimonials that people have given for our work. 

From a parent:

My son was diagnosed with Major Depressive Disorder. He’s been undergoing therapy each year between June to September. He’s given synthetic meds in between therapy but i am not seeing consistent progress.
We needed to find a psychiatric support that can really help him.

It was a blessing indeed when i met one of the resource speaker from our community event that introduced us to sir Nathaniel.

Here’s an excerpt from my son’s long message to me …. “learning a lot through this therapy and had a ton of realizations din so i wanna say thank u so much ma…”

One life Only counselling services is truly effective and i hope it can help more people who suffers from mental health concerns.

From a partner:

Nathan is amazing! We learned so much about our relationship in just a few sessions. He also gives reading references, which helps a lot to navigate the information he provides in his session. Overall, would recommend to any couple in need of counselling.

From a husband:

Me and my wife ran into a bad patch due to outside pressure put onto our marriage.
I decided to book a set of appointments with one life and I can say it help so much I wish we went years ago. We have an amazing marriage and friendship.
Best thing we ever did.

Please click the link below for more: 

https://share.google/RV5f9DYNVeURSGIJ8

Interview with Julius Babao and Christine Bersola Babao, October 25, 2023
Guest resource person with Boy Abunda on his show The Bottomline
July 2024 interview on Kapuso Mo Jessica Soho about jealousy and anger

He has also done interviews on YouTube with the developers of ACT and IBCT.

Interview with Dr. Steven C. Hayes, the developer of ACT, April 5, 2022
Interview with Dr. Andrew Christensen May 14, 2022

Here is a live interview on Kada Umaga on Net 25 starting at the 25 minute mark:

Here’s a solo interview of Nathan Chua with an ACT Matrix Expert and Counselor from the United States, Jacob Martinez:

Interviews with the experts:

Here are two interviews with the two experts that have had a huge impact on my work in recent years.  They are with Dr. Steven Hayes and Dr. Andrew Christensen.  Here are the videos:

Making Your New Year’s Resolution Work

by Nathan Chua

I think even without a new year to celebrate, many of us have often made certain commitments that we hope to accomplish beginning at a certain time.  Well, looking back, how many of those commitments have we fulfilled?  What is it that keeps us from getting from point A to point B?  

One way we end up not doing what we resolve to do has to do with reasons.  Our logical minds have evolved to find cause and effect relations.  This is an important function because in order to solve problems in our environment, we need to know what causes something to happen.  For instance, relevant to today’s issues, our minds needed to find out what causes the spread of the coronavirus in order for us to keep infections down and manage the extent of the pandemic.  The scientists needed to know how the virus causes life-threatening pneumonia, for them to find ways to counteract the process of fatal illness developing in people. 

The only drawback to this mental capacity is when the rule becomes inflexible.  They are applied across other domains when they don’t really put us on a path to where we want to be.  For example, we say, “I have to eat chocolate if I am sad.”  The rule here is sadness should be removed by eating unhealthy snacks.  However, we can reverse this statement and say, “I should not eat chocolate to stop me from feeling sad, because in the end, the lack of control of my behavior makes me even sadder and therefore the urge becomes stronger.”  

Now if reasons really have so much power over us, wouldn’t we be all following the reasons why we should not be eating chocolate when we feel sad?  The answer is no matter what the reasons our minds come up with, we still can opt to act one way or the other.  This only means that no matter how much we try to give ourselves reasons to do stuff, we can always make a decision that complies or doesn’t comply with the behavior we want to either stop or begin doing more of.

This means reasons are just thoughts that our minds come up with for us to make logical decisions.  Unfortunately, what may sound logical may not be what’s good for us.  Now, you might be thinking, what then do I do about this?  Well, one way to do it is to first notice your thoughts as thoughts.  They are not you.  Your mind is just a part of you and your bodily functions. 

One way to practice this ability to keep your thoughts separate from you, is to give your mind a name.  Thank him or her for the suggestion.  You’re not bad for having those thoughts, it’s just part of your minds’ functioning.  It is nothing more than a reason-manufacturing tool.  

You can also add in one more step.  You can notice what sticking to your diet is in the service of.  Maybe you’d like to become more attractive so you can start having more opportunities to find a date.  It could be that you’d love to see your kids grow old enough to see them go through different life stages.  Whatever your motivations are, it is best to come up with ideas that give you intrinsic motivation, rather than those that make you think that you are a bad or lousy person if you don’t follow your resolutions.  The latter only spirals into the negative feedback loop of emotions.

And finally, keep in mind that whatever life-enhancing habits we want to create, it takes time and patience.  Your road will not be a straight line.  Every time you fail at your commitments, you can always pick yourself up and keep going towards a direction you want.  We are creatures who want to create habits that work for our lives.  If we suffer an injury to our leg, we still want to stand up and walk again, don’t we?  And yes, you and I will fall to the ground as we rehab, but we pick ourselves up and keep going, with pain and all.  Because walking matters, just like living does too!  

When Anger Strikes

by Nathan Chua

Anger was a familiar foe to me.  As a child, I saw how anger in the family was able to get the giants at home what they wanted from myself and others.  And so I learned that albeit unpleasant and unbecoming, anger can be a means to a good end.  Anger for me was never an end in itself. People should understand the reason for my short temper, so I thought.  Yet, there would probably be very few occasions when I would realize that my angry behavior served me in good stead as I pursued the good ends.  

Much of what ails us with anger is not about the feeling itself, but rather the coping style that most of us use as we feel this difficult emotion.  You see, my biggest problem with my anger was precisely what I had just indicated in the opening sentence of this blogpost.  Anger had become a familiar foe, when all it was, was a part of my nervous system telling me that I just experienced frustration or disappointment or anxiety. 

For as long as anger remained my enemy, then it would continue to stand in the way of me becoming the person I wanted to be.  Back in my days as a businessman, anger got in the way of my acting in a manner that was most faithful to my deepest aspirations for my life.  My inner yearnings to help the people around me made me passionate about keeping the business healthy and viable.  Mistakes at work meant a step backwards and threatened to move the company away from this goal. My mind dutifully and persistently told me that the solution to avoiding mistakes, is to exert control over the people working for the business with my anger.  Unfortunately, gaining full control over other people is like keeping ocean water from being salty. 

The logical solution was to intimidate people into feeling motivated every day.  What’s worse is that my mind has learned this dictum to try and try the same thing over and over again until I succeed. Put in another more familiar way, my mind told me to do the same thing over and over again and expect a different result.

Here are some tips for you my readers on what to do when anger pays you a visit:

  • Welcome your old friend and breathe into the feelings and body sensations that arrive with your anger.
  • Notice it and observe it in your body. Observe what it is egging you to do.  Notice it with a beginner’s mind.
  • Remind yourself that this is but part of a journey, a hero’s journey if you will, and you just encountered something that is getting in the way of the valued outcomes you want at this very moment.
  • Give yourself some compassion as you suffer through these obstacles and difficult feelings.
  • Remember what it is that you wish to stand for in your life.  
  • Notice the thoughts as thoughts and not as commands that will make you go in a different direction if you’re not aware. Remember the actions your mind will dictate can move you away from the valued outcomes you had imagined.    

We all have seen the unfortunate results of harsh behaviors in our midst.  We have also seen how it affects our sense of purpose and meaning as we go through the daily challenges of life and relationships.  Anger is neither bad nor good.  It’s just a feeling that we all can contain within us.  It is a part of us.  Not wanting it is akin to saying that you want your tongue to taste only food that is pleasant. Unfortunately, our tongues and other senses come in a package. We will feel both ends of the spectrum of emotions. 

And if you are like me, your anger might have something to offer you.  For many years, my anger had been telling me that I did care about the business, because its viability meant the well-being of the people involved. This realization has helped me see what was behind my frustrations and disappointments. I cared and I still do to this day. May we experience the benefits of accepting life for all the bitter-sweet experiences it presents. As an old ACT saying goes, “We care where we hurt and we hurt where we care.”