If you work in psychology, counselling, or mental health — and you write about how physical environment, sleep, rest, and recovery intersect with psychological wellbeing — the Trucomfort blog is looking for contributors with your depth. The relationship between how people live physically and how they feel mentally is one of the most compelling areas in contemporary wellness research, and it sits directly at the heart of what our audience cares about.
This page is for psychologists, counsellors, therapists, and mental health writers whose work touches on the home environment, sleep, stress recovery, and the physical foundations of mental health. For yoga, meditation, nutrition, or somatic practice topics, visit the Trucomfort Write for Us page for the complete guidelines.
Why Mental Health Writers Belong on the Trucomfort Blog
Trucomfort readers invest in their home environment because they understand that physical comfort and mental wellbeing are not separate domains. A person managing chronic stress who improves their sleep environment, their evening recovery routine, or the quality of their daily physical rest is not just buying furniture. They are making an informed decision about the conditions that govern their mental health on a daily basis.
A psychologist or mental health writer who can articulate that connection — with clinical grounding and accessible language — is contributing exactly the kind of content that earns trust from our most motivated readers and helps them make better decisions about their home and their health.
Mental Health & Home Environment Topics We’re Looking For
Sleep & Mental Health
- The bidirectional relationship between sleep quality and mental health — what the research says
- How sleep deprivation affects mood regulation, emotional reactivity, and cognitive function
- Insomnia as both a symptom and a cause of anxiety and depression
- Sleep and trauma — how PTSD, anxiety disorders, and trauma history affect sleep architecture
- Evidence-based approaches to improving sleep quality for people with mental health conditions
- The mental health case for investing in sleep environment quality
Stress, Recovery & the Home Environment
- How chronic stress changes the body and brain — and what the home environment can do about it
- The psychology of home as a recovery space — what makes a home feel restorative vs. draining
- Allostatic load and the role of daily physical recovery in long-term stress management
- How clutter, disorganisation, and poor bedroom design contribute to ambient stress and cognitive load
- The psychological impact of investing in home comfort — why it matters beyond the physical
- Creating a home environment that actively supports stress recovery rather than just containing it
Physical Comfort & Psychological Safety
- The psychology of physical comfort — how the body’s sense of ease affects mood, safety, and openness
- Touch, pressure, and proprioception — how physical sensations (including massage) affect the nervous system and emotional state
- How physical pain and discomfort contribute to irritability, low mood, and reduced emotional resilience
- The relationship between chronic pain management and mental health outcomes
- Why physical recovery practices — rest, massage, heat therapy — are relevant to mental health treatment plans
Behavioural & Environmental Psychology
- Environmental psychology and how physical spaces shape behaviour, mood, and cognitive performance
- Biophilic design and the psychological benefits of natural elements in home spaces
- The psychology of bedroom design — how colour, light, noise, and spatial layout affect sleep and mood
- Behavioural activation and the role of intentional home environment design in depression management
- How the quality of rest environments affects self-regulation, decision-making, and emotional capacity
What You Get as a Contributor
- A do-follow backlink to your practice, professional profile, or website — one contextual link in the article and one in your author bio
- Your credentials featured prominently in your author bio on every article you publish
- Exposure to a health-invested audience actively making decisions about sleep, recovery, and home environment
- Long-term organic visibility on a niche platform with consistent traffic in the home wellness space
- A credible publishing outlet aligned with the evidence-based standard of your clinical or research practice
Submission Requirements
- Length: 1,000 words minimum — 1,200 to 1,800 preferred for clinical or research-based pieces
- Originality: 100% original, not published or submitted elsewhere
- Evidence standard: Claims supported by peer-reviewed research, clinical guidelines, or documented professional practice
- Format: Google Doc with editor access, or Word document. Clear H2/H3 structure required
- Author bio: 50–80 words with your name, credentials, and one link
- Images: Suggest at least one royalty-free image relevant to your topic
- No advertorials: Editorial content only — no promotional content for practices, apps, or affiliated services
Ready to Pitch Your Mental Health Article?
Send a 3–5 sentence pitch with your topic, your angle, and a brief note on your credentials and professional background. We review every pitch personally and respond within 5–7 business days.
📩 Submit Your Pitch →The Submission Process
- Pitch first — Email sales@trucomfortmassagechairs.com with your topic, angle, and a brief note on your clinical background and credentials.
- We confirm fit — Our team responds within 5–7 business days. If it’s a match, we confirm and share specific editorial direction.
- Write and submit — Send your completed draft as a Google Doc with editor access, your author bio, image suggestions, references, and preferred backlink.
- Editorial review — Light edits for clarity, formatting, or SEO may be made. You’ll be notified before anything goes live.
- Publication — Your article is published and we send you the live URL to share with your own audience and network.
Who We’re Looking For
- Registered psychologists (PhD, PsyD, C.Psych) with a clinical or research specialization relevant to sleep, stress, or home environment
- Licensed counsellors, therapists, and psychotherapists (LPC, LCSW, LMFT) with a wellness-oriented practice
- Psychiatrists and mental health physicians writing for a general wellness audience
- Positive psychologists and wellbeing researchers with accessible, evidence-based writing
- Environmental psychologists and behavioural scientists studying home environment and mental health
- Mental health writers with a genuine clinical or research grounding and a track record of evidence-based content
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I write about mental health conditions like anxiety, depression, or PTSD?
Yes, from an educational perspective. Articles addressing how specific conditions intersect with sleep, home environment, and physical recovery are valuable and welcome. Frame content as general education, not clinical advice directed at specific patients or readers.
Can I include a disclaimer about seeking professional help?
Yes — and for articles touching on serious mental health conditions, we encourage it. Including a brief note recommending readers seek qualified professional support is appropriate and aligned with our editorial values.
Can I write about psychologically informed approaches to interior design or home environment?
Yes. Articles bridging environmental psychology, behavioural science, and home design are a strong fit for our blog and our audience.
How long after approval until my article goes live?
Typically 7–14 business days after your draft is approved and any editorial revisions are finalized.
Contact the Editorial Team
Questions before you pitch? Reach us at sales@trucomfortmassagechairs.com or call +1 (418) 717-0912.
For the full guest post guidelines covering sleep science, massage therapy, sports recovery, nutrition, and mind-body wellness, visit the Trucomfort Write for Us page.
Share Your Mental Health Expertise With Our Readers
Psychologists, therapists, counsellors, and mental health writers — if you have clinical knowledge about sleep, stress, home environment, and psychological wellbeing, we want to publish it.
View the Full Submission Guidelines →