Clinical Therapy Counseling
Faith Based Therapy – As essential as the physical, mental, and emotional aspects of a person’s health are, the spiritual aspect is just as important. Often it is the most neglected area, whether realized or not. This approach to counseling allows the client to examine or reexamine his or her faith as it pertains to their path toward change and healing.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy - This helps people identify the difference between beliefs, thoughts and feelings, so they can change unhelpful behavioral patterns. Our perception of events often influences our patterns of thinking, feelings and actions.
Reality Therapy – This approach focuses on the choices a person tends to make and the basis from which they make them. Most choices we make are correlated with learned coping skills which may or may not be beneficial. Purposed behavior is a goal.
Solution Based Therapy – The focus in this method is on the strengths and abilities that the client has and how those attributes have been used in their past experiences, and their outcomes or results. Assessing and self- evaluation lead to practical approaches and applications for the client.
Narrative Therapy – This uses the metaphor of an ongoing story, a client’s life is a journey, a work in progress. The client is the author, chapters of life can be influenced, even changed or “rewritten”. It is client focused and outcome based.
Family Systems Therapy – this approach considers the patterns that show in relationships and associations within a group. Each member is somewhat dependent on the others, which can be beneficial or detrimental. Healthy relationships, boundaries and coping skills are explored.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy - This helps people identify the difference between beliefs, thoughts and feelings, so they can change unhelpful behavioral patterns. Our perception of events often influences our patterns of thinking, feelings and actions.
Reality Therapy – This approach focuses on the choices a person tends to make and the basis from which they make them. Most choices we make are correlated with learned coping skills which may or may not be beneficial. Purposed behavior is a goal.
Solution Based Therapy – The focus in this method is on the strengths and abilities that the client has and how those attributes have been used in their past experiences, and their outcomes or results. Assessing and self- evaluation lead to practical approaches and applications for the client.
Narrative Therapy – This uses the metaphor of an ongoing story, a client’s life is a journey, a work in progress. The client is the author, chapters of life can be influenced, even changed or “rewritten”. It is client focused and outcome based.
Family Systems Therapy – this approach considers the patterns that show in relationships and associations within a group. Each member is somewhat dependent on the others, which can be beneficial or detrimental. Healthy relationships, boundaries and coping skills are explored.