Therapy at Psychologia
Psychological therapy can assist people in different ways. For some, they are seeking support and guidance on how to navigate challenging times in their lives. Therapy can assist with the opportunity to reflect and process how this event has impacted, changes that have occurred, emotions involved and the nature of related problems.
Individuals may experience trauma requiring treatment to assist recovery and to improve daily functioning again.
Individual therapy assists others who experience chronic or episodic mental ill-health and are seeking support and assistance to manage symptoms of mental health conditions over time.
Clinical psychologists utilise numerous modalities of therapy to treat mental health conditions including Cognitive-Behaviour Therapy (CBT) and Emotion Focussed Therapy (EFT).
At Psychologia, we work with clients in the initial 1-2 sessions to develop individualised, client-focused treatment goals that reflect a well-developed shared-understanding of the problem and identification of needs to be addressed.
“Just because no one else can heal or do your inner work for you, doesn’t mean you can, should, or need to do it alone.”
— Lisa Olivera, 2022
Psychologia offers therapy for:
Children
Adults
Couples
“Vulnerability is not knowing victory of defeat, it’s understanding the necessity of both; it’s engaging. It’s being all in.”
- Brene Brown

How we help adults:
- Managing difficult events and trauma, including PTSD
- Workplace issues, including harassment, conflicts and work role
- Bereavement, grief and loss
- Chronic health conditions and injury
- Life stages adjustment
- Building independence for daily living
- Motivation and goal success
- Social isolation or conflicts
- Stress and anxiety (social, phobias, general worry, separation, health)
- Depression
- Sleep concerns including insomnia
- Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, personality disorders, dissociation
- Perinatal mental health
Therapeutic Approaches - Adults
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This therapy explores the relationships between a person’s thoughts, feelings and behaviors. The key principles of CBT are uncovering unhealthy patterns of thinking and analysing how these may be causing difficult emotion and behaviours.
CBT treatment includes homework between sessions to practice replacing negative with more helpful self talk and changing behaviour to achieve desired outcomes. CBT is well supported by research and practiced widely.
Cognitive-behavioural approaches have evolved over the decades with numerous alternative therapies available for psychologists to used that fit with a diverse range of clients.
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Dialectical Behavioural Therapy (DBT), Mindfulness CBT (MCBT), Trauma-informed CBT (TICBT), Schema therapy
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Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFIT) is a humanistic, evidence-based approach to psychotherapy, drawing primarily from attachment theory to facilitate the creation of secure, vibrant connection with self and others.
EFT offers a clear, structured path to helping clients. Focusing on the development of emotional intelligence and awareness, enabling therapists to guide clients in recognizing and expressing their emotional needs more effectively. By fostering a secure attachment bond, EFT enables clients to respond to their partners and family members in healthier, more constructive ways.The modality’s efficacy is well-supported by empirical, peer reviewed outcome research, making it a credible and respected approach in the therapeutic community.
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Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) is an action-oriented approach that stems from CBT. In this method, the aim is for clients to stop avoiding, denying, and struggling with their inner emotions and instead, learning to accept that these deeper feelings are appropriate responses to certain situations. Intention is for clients to accept their hardships and commit to making necessary behavioural changes, regardless of what is going on in their lives and how they feel about it. Rather than ‘negative’ human emotions needing to be fixed, managed, or changed, the view with ACT is that acceptance, mindfulness, and values focused living are the way forward.
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Dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT) was originally developed to treat chronically suicidal individuals with borderline personality disorder (BPD). Over time, DBT has been adapted to treat people with multiple different mental illnesses, however most people who are treated with DBT tend to have Bipolar Personality Disorder as a primary diagnosis.
DBT is an evolution of CBT that emphasizes validation, or accepting uncomfortable thoughts, feelings and behaviours instead of struggling with them. Clients learn to come to terms with the troubling thoughts, emotions or behaviours that they struggle with, and they create a gradual plan for recovery.
The aim in DBT is for clients to find a balance between acceptance and change. T
The person learns to develop new skills, like coping methods and mindfulness practices, so that the person has the power to improve unhealthy thoughts and behaviours.
Like CBT, individuals undergoing DBT are usually instructed to practice these new methods as homework between sessions. Improving coping strategies is an essential aspect of successful DBT treatment.
Studies have shown DBT to be effective at producing significant and long-lasting improvement for people experiencing a mental illness. DBT program involves learning mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotion regulation and interpersonal effectiveness.
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Exposure therapy is a type of cognitive behavioural therapy that is most frequently used to treat obsessive-compulsive disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder and phobias. During treatment, a client works with a therapist to identify their anxiety or trauma triggers and learns techniques to avoid performing rituals or becoming anxious when they are exposed to them. The client then confronts their triggers in a controlled environment where they can safely practice implementing new strategies. Graded exposure is the main method used where small steps are taken to face feared situations to achieve desensitization. Prolonged Exposure (PE) and Exposure with Response Prevention (ERP) are types of exposure therapy.
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Cognitive processing therapy (CPT) is a specific type of cognitive-behavioural therapy found to be effective for treating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in people who have experienced traumatic events like violence, abuse, natural disasters. CPT is short-term, typically conducted over the course of 12 sessions.
In CPT, the client is assisted by the psychologist to evaluate his or her thoughts surrounding the trauma, particularly unhelpful or self-blaming thoughts that may be increasing the PTSD symptoms, including anxiety and depression. The client learns to challenge those thoughts and take a new perspective when appropriate. Similar to other types of CBT, home work is part of CPT; like patients can be asked to write an account of their trauma between sessions.
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Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy, MBCT, is a modified form of CBT that incorporates mindfulness practices that include present moment awareness, meditation, and breathing exercises. This therapy was formulated to address depression. Using these tools, the mindfulness-based psychologist assists a client learn how to be in the here and now as well as break away from negative thought patterns that can cause a decline into a mood-disordered state. This therapy can include techniques like breathing, grounding, refocusing, meditation, and relaxation.
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The humanistic approach focuses on self-growth that leads to actualisation. This includes exploring and developing a person's creativity, freedom, strengths, spirituality, and values. Personal responsibility, freedom of choice, and self-mastery are the essential components of humanistic therapies
Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT) is one of the world's most widely used therapeutic treatments (De Shazer, 2007, Hsu, 2011). Unlike traditional forms of therapy that take time to analyse problems, pathology, and past life events, SFBT concentrates on finding solutions in the present and exploring one’s hope for the future to find a quick and pragmatic resolution of one’s problems. The view is that you know what you need to do to improve your own life and, with the appropriate coaching and questioning, are capable of finding the best solutions.
Narrative therapy is a form of counselling that views people as separate from their problems and destructive behaviours. This allows clients to get some distance from the difficulty they face; this helps them to see how it might be helping or protecting them, more than it is hurting them. With this perspective, individuals feel more empowered to make changes in their thought patterns and behaviour and “rewrite” their life story for a future that reflects who they really are, what they are capable of, and what their purpose is, separate from their problems. This therapy encourages clients to be respectful of the self and does not point blame or judgment inward e.g., see themselves as making a mistake, rather than seeing themselves as bad, per se.
“I am not afraid of storms for I am learning how to sail my ship.”
— Louisa May Alcott, 1868

How we help children:
- Relationships with peers
- Disruptive behaviours
- Parent-child relationship
- Managing difficult events and trauma
- School refusal or learning issues
- Developmental concerns
- Childhood disorders including ADHD, Autism, Selective mutism
- Phobias, separation anxiety, general worry
- Obsessive-compulsive behaviours
- Emotional regulation
- Depression, low motivation
- Low self esteem
- Identity, sexuality, gender dysphoria
- Communication
Therapeutic Approaches - Children
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Play therapy is typically targeted to children ages 3 to 11 who have social, emotional, or behavioural difficulties. Through play therapy, children learn to express their thoughts and feelings in appropriate ways, learn about the feelings of others, learn ways of controlling their own behaviour, and learn how to solve problems they encounter.
Play therapy is conducted in the medium of play because play is a major outlet through which children demonstrate what is on their mind, whether they can put their experience in words or not.
Play therapy takes place with array of toys that children can use to act out their feelings and discuss their play with the psychologist. Special attention to the child’s choice of play objects, the type of play the child engages in, as well as the style of play can provide a better understanding of the child’s difficulties. In addition, the therapist and child set up a trusting relationship between them that has therapeutic value.
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CBT for kids has practical everyday applications. This therapy is adapted to be suitable to children at their stage of development. A child can learn to understand the negativity of their thought patterns and learn how to replace them with more positive ones. Discovering new ways of looking at things and how to respond differently can improve rather than worsen stressful situations.
This therapy can give a child realistic strategies to assist them to feel better and manage in their school and home environment.
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Trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy (TF-CBT) addresses the mental health needs of children, adolescents, and families suffering from the destructive effects of early trauma. The treatment is particularly sensitive to the unique problems of youth with post-traumatic stress and mood disorders resulting from sexual abuse, as well as from physical abuse, violence, or grief. Because the client is usually a child, TF-CBT often brings non-offending parents or other caregivers into treatment and incorporates principles of family therapy. The three phases include stabilization, narration and processing and integration and consolidation.
“You’re a unique tapestry, with all your life experiences interwoven.”
— Molly Robbins | Psychologia, 2024

How we help couples:
- Interpersonal conflicts
- Managing during unexpected events
- Navigating relationship changes
- Critical events like infidelity, loss, betrayal
- Separation or divorce
- Pre-marital counselling
- Communication
- Improving quality of relationship
Therapeutic Approaches - Couples
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Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) is a form of short-term therapy. Drawing on attachment research, EFT regards the importance of partner connection as the mechanism for change in a relationship and an important source of growth for couple. Building the emotional ties helps partners to be physically and psychologically open and more responsive to each other. Couples are assisted to discover their unmet need for closeness that underpins their anger or alienation. In EFT, couples that share their vulnerability can experience a new dialogue and create opportunities to express tenderness.
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The Gottman Method is an approach to couples therapy that includes a thorough assessment of the couple’s relationship and integrates research-based interventions based on the Sound Relationship House Theory. The goals of are to explore and alter conflicting verbal communication; increase intimacy, respect, and affection; to create a heightened sense of empathy and understanding. Interventions help couples strengthen their relationships in three primary areas: friendship, conflict management, and creation of shared meaning. Couples learn to replace negative conflict patterns with positive interactions and to repair past hurts. Interventions aim to increase closeness and intimacy by improving friendship, deepening emotional connection, and enabling change to develop the couples’ shared goals
“Everything can be taken from a man, but the last of the human freedoms: to choose one’s attitudes in any given set of circumstances.”
- Viktor Frankl