Shadow Work
Shadow work in psychotherapy involves exploring and integrating the unconscious aspects of the psyche, known as the "shadow." This approach, based on Jungian psychology, delves into repressed emotions, desires, and unresolved issues. Helping clients understand/confront their shadows can transforming inner conflicts into opportunities for wholeness and self-empowerment. Shadow work is valuable for addressing deep-seated patterns, traumas, and behavioral issues, leading to greater self-understanding and healthier relationships.
Inner Child Work
The "inner child" represents vulnerable aspects of the psyche formed during early years. Through emotional expression, reparenting, and challenging limiting beliefs, individuals address past traumas and negative experiences. Inner child work helps individuals develop healthier boundaries and self-protective mechanisms to prevent re-traumatization and emotional harm. Guided visualizations may aid in this process. This approach is valuable for those with emotional difficulties, self-esteem issues, and unresolved trauma.
Internal Family Systems
Imagine your mind as a big family with different family members or "parts." Each part has its own personality and job. Some parts are protective and want to keep you safe, while others might be hurt or scared from past experiences. Sometimes, these parts can clash and cause inner conflicts or strong emotions. IFS therapy is like having a family meeting with a therapist as the mediator. By doing this, you can build better relationships with these parts and help them work together harmoniously. This way, you can achieve more balance and healing within yourself, like having a happier and healthier inner family.
Multiculturally Informed
Multiculturally informed psychotherapy integrates cultural considerations into therapy.
It recognizes intersectionality and the influence of multiple social factors. Therapeutic approaches are adapted to align with cultural values and communication styles. Collaboration and empowerment are emphasized, valuing clients' expertise. Cultural disparities and social justice are addressed.
Trauma-Informed
Trauma-informed care seeks to minimize harm and re-traumatization by providing support services that are appropriate and accessible to individuals who have experienced trauma. It involves understanding the effects of trauma on physical, emotional, and psychological well-being and integrating this understanding into the therapeutic process. Some key elements of trauma-informed care in psychotherapy include prioritizing trust and safety, empowerment of clients in the treatment process, awareness and management of triggers, and integrating traumatic memories, thereby enabling healing and growth.
Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
Psychodynamic therapy recognizes the role of unconscious processes in shaping behavior. It focuses on helping individuals become aware of and understand their unconscious thoughts, feelings, and desires that may be contributing to their difficulties. By bringing these unconscious processes to conscious awareness, individuals can gain insight and make conscious choices. More than other approaches, psychodynamic psychotherapy places the emphasis on the therapeutic relationship as a catalyst for change.
Polyvagal Informed Therapy
A central framework in trauma therapy that provides a nervous-system-based lens for therapists and clients to understand human behavior in response to traumatic experiences. Incorporating polyvagal principles in therapy helps to create a safe and supportive environment for healing, promote resilience, and enhance the effectiveness of trauma-informed interventions, including techniques to regulate the nervous system and manage overwhelming emotions.
Family Of Origin Work
Family of Origin work starts by looking at the family you grew up in as a source for where people typically learn to become who they are. One’s upbringing is where a person learns how to communicate and process emotions. One’s family is where beliefs and values are transmitted and attachment style is formed, so Family of Origin is a helpful therapeutic approach to unpacking emotional concerns, identifying unhealthy patterns, building self-awareness, and improving parenting skills.
Couples Therapy
Couples Therapy employs an integrated approach to treatment depending on the needs of the couple. Ranging from Emotionally Focused Therapies to Behavioural Therapies, Couples Therapy can help you understand yourself and your partner better so that you can change unhealthy dynamics and learn to communicate better. Couples Therapy is not exclusive to romantic partnerships but does have the treatment goal of stronger emotional connections and an overall healthier relationship.
Attachment Therapy
Integrating attachment theory in therapy is like understanding the love language between you and your past caregivers. It's about exploring how your early relationships shaped your emotional patterns and how they affect your current connections. This therapeutic approach helps you make sense of why you react to others the way you do while identifying strategies to support you in developing healthier ways of relating. It's like learning your ‘hidden blueprint’ for relationships so you can build stronger, more fulfilling connections and feel more secure and supported in the world.
Accelerated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy
AEDP is an interdisciplinary model focused on creating neuroplasticity in the brain through corrective emotional and relational experiences in therapy. AEDP is particularly indicated for the treatment of trauma and PTSD, anxiety disorders, depression, grief/loss, and self-esteem and self-identity issues.
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
ACT is a behavioural therapy that helps individuals accept—or reduce the influence of—their painful thoughts and feelings, while simultaneously committing to actions that will help them build a meaningful and expansive life. ACT is like learning to surf the waves of life. Instead of trying to control or fight against challenging thoughts and emotions, you learn to accept them as natural parts of your experience. You also identify your core values and commit to actions that align with these values, like paddling in the direction you want to go. ACT is an empirically proven treatment for anxiety, panic attacks, chronic pain, OCD, and depression.