The approaches I draw on,
and what each one does

These are the main frameworks I am trained in. In practice, most people's work draws on more than one. The approach always follows the person, I will always explain what I am suggesting and why before we try anything new.

The approach always follows the person,
not the other way around

I am trained in a range of evidence-based approaches because different people, and different problems, respond to different things. Here is a plain-language explanation of each one.

Part two

Therapeutic Approaches

These are the main frameworks I am trained in. In practice, most people's work draws on more than one, and the approach always follows the person. I will always explain what I am suggesting and why before we try anything new.

CBT

Cognitive Behaviour Therapy

CBT looks at the connection between how we think, feel, and behave. It helps you notice the thought patterns that are keeping you stuck and work on shifting them in a practical, collaborative way. You will usually leave sessions with concrete tools and strategies to use between appointments. It is one of the most well-researched approaches in psychology and is effective across a wide range of presentations.

Particularly useful for
AnxietyDepressionStressLow self-esteemOCDPhobias
ACT

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy

ACT takes a slightly different approach. Rather than trying to get rid of difficult thoughts and feelings, it helps you change your relationship with them. The idea is that when we stop fighting our inner experience and start moving toward what actually matters to us, life opens up. Grounded in mindfulness and values, ACT builds the psychological flexibility to keep going even when things feel hard. Particularly powerful for people who have tried hard to think their way out of a problem.

Particularly useful for
Chronic worryBurnoutValues clarificationAvoidancePerfectionism
Schema Therapy

Schema Therapy

From a young age we develop beliefs about ourselves, others, and the world, beliefs that made sense at the time but can end up running the show long into adulthood. Schema therapy works at a deeper level, exploring these long-standing patterns and where they came from. It is particularly helpful for people who feel stuck despite having tried other approaches, or who notice the same difficult dynamics showing up again and again in their relationships.

Particularly useful for
Recurring patternsRelationship difficultiesPersonality disordersLong-term depression
DBT

Dialectical Behaviour Therapy

DBT teaches practical, concrete skills across four areas, emotional regulation, distress tolerance, mindfulness, and interpersonal effectiveness. It was originally developed for people who experience very intense emotions, but is now used across a wide range of presentations. If your emotions tend to go from zero to one hundred quickly, or you find certain relationships particularly difficult to navigate, DBT skills can make a real difference.

Particularly useful for
Emotion dysregulationIntense emotionsBPDAdolescentsSelf-harm
EMDR

Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing

EMDR is a structured, evidence-based therapy for processing memories and experiences that have become stuck. Rather than talking through events in detail, it uses bilateral stimulation, typically guided eye movements, to help the brain process these memories so they no longer feel so raw. Widely used for trauma and PTSD, and increasingly for anxiety and phobias. It is now recommended in Australian and international trauma guidelines, and sessions are always paced carefully so you feel safe throughout.

Particularly useful for
Trauma and PTSDBirth traumaAnxietyPhobiasGrief
Psychotherapy

Psychotherapy

Psychotherapy is a more open-ended, exploratory style of therapy, less about tools and techniques, and more about understanding yourself more deeply. Your patterns, your history, your relationships, and what drives the way you think and feel. It is not rushed or structured, and that is often exactly what people need. A consistent, safe space with someone who is genuinely present can be quietly but profoundly healing over time.

Particularly useful for
IdentityComplex griefRelationship patternsSelf-understandingLong-term change
Attachment-based

Circle of Security Parenting

Based on decades of attachment research, Circle of Security helps parents tune into their child's emotional world and understand what their child needs from them at different moments. It looks at the balance between being a safe haven when your child is distressed, and a secure base from which they can explore and grow. Practical and accessible, it is particularly valuable during the early years and for parents moving through the postnatal period. I am formally accredited in this program and have delivered it both individually and in group settings.

Particularly useful for
New parentsMother-baby attachmentPostnatal periodParenting support
Couples

Gottman Method Couples Therapy

The Gottman method is one of the most extensively researched approaches in couples therapy, developed over decades of observational research by Drs John and Julie Gottman. It identifies the specific patterns that predict relationship breakdown and gives couples practical tools to shift them. I integrate the Gottman framework with my broader clinical training to work with the couple as a whole, not just the presenting problem. Sessions draw on communication skills, conflict management, building friendship and intimacy, and understanding each person's emotional world.

Particularly useful for
Communication breakdownRecurring conflictEmotional disconnectionRebuilding intimacyNew parents

Questions about the approaches

If you are trying to work out what any of this means for you, these might help. And if your question is not here, just ask.

How do I know which approach is right for me?

You probably do not, and that is completely fine. Most people who come to therapy have no idea which approach they need, and they should not have to. My job is to understand what you are dealing with, think about what is most likely to help, and then explain my reasoning so you can decide whether it makes sense. Most people end up drawing on more than one approach at different points anyway.

What is the difference between CBT and the other therapies on this page?

CBT is probably the most well known because it has the strongest research base and works well for a wide range of presentations. It is structured, practical, and relatively short term. Other approaches like Schema Therapy or psychodynamic work tend to be slower and more exploratory, and suit people dealing with longer standing or more complex patterns. ACT and DBT sit somewhere in between. None of them is universally better than the others. The research consistently shows that the quality of the relationship between client and therapist matters more than which specific approach is used.

What is EMDR and does it actually work?

EMDR stands for Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing. It uses guided bilateral stimulation, usually eye movements, while you briefly hold a distressing memory in mind. The process helps the brain reprocess the memory so it no longer feels so raw or charged. It sounds unusual but the research behind it is solid. It is endorsed by the World Health Organisation and recommended in Australian clinical guidelines for PTSD. Many people find it produces meaningful shifts faster than traditional talk therapy for trauma, though it is not the right fit for everyone. I always explain exactly how it works before we try it, so there are no surprises.

I have tried CBT before and it did not help. Does that mean therapy will not work for me?

Not at all. CBT is the most commonly used approach, which means it is often the first thing people try, and it does not work equally well for everyone or every problem. There are many reasons a previous attempt at therapy might not have helped, including the fit with the therapist, the timing, the specific approach used, or simply that something else would have been more appropriate. A different approach, or even the same approach delivered differently, can produce very different results. Schema Therapy in particular is designed for people who have tried other things and feel stuck.

What is Schema Therapy and how is it different from regular CBT?

CBT primarily works on current thoughts, feelings, and behaviours. Schema Therapy goes deeper, exploring the beliefs and patterns that formed earlier in life and how they are still driving things now. It is particularly useful when the same difficult dynamics keep showing up across relationships or situations, or when standard CBT has not produced the change you were hoping for. It tends to be longer term and more exploratory than CBT, but for the right person it can produce change that goes further and lasts longer.

Is DBT only for people with serious mental health diagnoses?

No. DBT was originally developed for people with Borderline Personality Disorder, but the skills it teaches, around emotion regulation, distress tolerance, mindfulness, and interpersonal effectiveness, are genuinely useful for a much wider range of people. If you tend to feel things intensely, find certain relationships difficult to navigate, or struggle to manage big emotions without it affecting the people around you, DBT skills can make a real practical difference regardless of whether you have a formal diagnosis.

What is the Circle of Security and who is it for?

Circle of Security is an internationally accredited attachment-based program for parents. It helps you tune into what your child actually needs from you at different moments, and understand the balance between being a safe haven when they are distressed and a secure base from which they can explore and grow. It is grounded in decades of attachment research and is particularly valuable in the early years, though the principles apply well beyond infancy. I am formally accredited in the program and have delivered it both individually and in group settings. It is not therapy in the traditional sense so much as a framework that helps you understand your child and yourself as a parent more clearly.

Do you use just one approach with each person, or a combination?

Almost always a combination. Most of my clients' work draws on more than one framework, and that shifts over time as things change. Someone might start with ACT to build some stability and flexibility, then move into deeper Schema work once the foundation is there. Or we might use EMDR to process something specific and then return to more general CBT-based work. I always explain what I am suggesting and why. Nothing happens without your understanding and your agreement.

Not sure which approach
is right for you?

That is completely fine, most people are not. The free 15-minute call is a good place to start, and I will always explain what I am recommending and why.