Emotion-Focused Therapy
Explore emotional needs and patterns with greater clarity, compassion, and openness to change.
Therapy is tailored to you, combining practical strategies with a warm, respectful relationship where meaningful change can take root.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, or CBT, explores how thoughts, emotions, and behaviors influence one another. By noticing patterns and testing new responses, you can reduce distress and create more flexible, helpful ways of thinking and acting.
CBT may include practical exercises, reflection between sessions, coping skills, behavioral changes, and compassionate examination of deeply held beliefs.
Mindfulness helps you notice thoughts, emotions, and physical sensations as they arise, without immediately reacting or becoming overwhelmed by them.
With practice, mindfulness can support emotional regulation, self-compassion, stress reduction, and a greater ability to stay connected to the present moment.
Trauma-focused therapy recognizes that difficult experiences can shape the nervous system, beliefs, relationships, and sense of safety long after the original event has passed.
The work begins by creating stability, choice, and trust. Processing happens gradually and collaboratively, with attention to your readiness and emotional capacity.
Care emphasizes safety, transparency, collaboration, empowerment, and respect for your boundaries. You remain an active participant in every decision about treatment.
Diane’s training in structural family therapy informs how she understands patterns, relationships, roles, boundaries, and the systems that shape a person’s life.
Explore emotional needs and patterns with greater clarity, compassion, and openness to change.
Understand how relationships influence connection, safety, trust, and emotional responses.
Examine relationship patterns, roles, boundaries, and family dynamics that may affect current well-being.
Build on existing resilience, capabilities, and the natural movement toward health and balance.
Diane draws from CBT, mindfulness, trauma-informed care, strengths-based work, and person-centered therapy to create an approach that reflects your needs and goals.