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| Helena Paras Psychologist |
| I am child centred and family focussed. I like to work with families holistically to develop emotional resilience, highlight existing strengths, increase connectedness and cohesion, and promote inclusion and child participation. I aim to work collaboratively with my clients, facilitating their journey towards self awareness and fulfillment. I believe a solid and positive therapeutic relationship may facilitate change. |
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| Clifford Parker Counsellor, Coach |
| At Business Counselling Australia (BCA), we have a simple, uncomplicated philosophy:
"Help our business clients to help themselves". We understand there are times in a person's (or Counsellors') business life when they may experience (or have experienced) very stressful events, including relationship, grief, loss, personal and business issues. Our goal is to help our business clients regain their self-confidence, direction, self-esteem and ultimately a sense of business empowerment. |
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| Zoe Parry Counsellor, Psychologist |
| The psychologists at Amherst Psychology & Counselling realise that the pressures of everyday life can sometimes result in distress, making it difficult for people to undertake or enjoy work, family or social activities. Counselling provides a professional and non-judgemental environment for clients to develop and achieve goals which will improve their wellbeing and relationships. |
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| Sue Paton Psychotherapist, Counsellor |
| Psychotherapy can provide a new model of what a close relationship can be; it can teach you to reflect on feelings, events and patterns of your own behaviour in a way that you have been unable to before; it can compensate to some degree for nurturing experiences you never had as a child; it can be an opportunity to face some unpleasant facts about how you really operate in relationships; it can offer a safe haven where feelings of shame no longer present a barrier to self-exploration. |
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| Pauline Pearson Psychotherapist |
| I specialize in therapy for people in their early 30s to their mid 50's. People often experience significant changes in family, work, health & relationships during this time & often the way we have been no longer seems as satisfying as it once did. Early life experience may resurface too. As we age we are able to explore our lives with a new capacity for greater depth & more meaningful ways of being and relating can emerge. In my experience this is an excellent time to seek therapy. |
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| Meg Perkins Psychologist |
| I work with people on probation and parole, with people recently released from prison and people still in prison. Since 1991 when I first went into the old Boggo Road jail in Brisbane, I have been interested in working with the mental health issues that lead to substance abuse and through the substance abuse to offending behaviour. I am able to bulk bill most ex-prisoners as Medicare includes substance abuse in the list of mental health problems covered by the new rebates. |
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| Faye Perry Counsellor |
| Attend to your unfinished emotional business in a journey of discovery. Honour, heal and release your past, empower your present and reclaim your future. Allow me to support you in your individual journey to healing and emotional wholeness in a compassionate, gentle and safe environment, with integrity and confidentiality.
“Live out your imagination, not your past”
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| Milan Peters Psychotherapist, Counsellor |
| The answers we seek are not always found in thought alone. The body can also hold clues to things that have long ago passed from mind and memory. As a Therapist who values the connection between body and mind, I encourage people to explore this connection in themselves. Change within people does not have to be forced, but will come about spontaneously as the different, and often conflicting aspects of ourselves have a chance to be expressed, deeply understood and then allowed to integrate. |
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| Mandy Peyton Counselling Psychologist |
| The principles that form the core of my therapeutic approach include an abiding respect for the uniqueness of each person, and for the vulnerabilities that are courageously explored in therapy; that we each hold within us a wisdom for creating our own well-being that we need to become reacquainted with; that each individual holds primary responsibility for their progress, and I act as a guide in that journey. |
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| Diana Phillips Psychotherapist, Counsellor |
| I see that all of us are walking works of art in that we have so survived our particular childhood situations that all of the behaviours and ways of being that were developed then are deeply ingrained into our unconscious dynamic. For most of us as we grow older we find that many of these behaviours are unsustainable, dysfunctional and limiting. We have emotional reactions to things that we don’t understand, and we have behaviour in relationships that make us stuck and frustrated. |
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