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Stay focused on your healing and recovery.
Let us help you handle the pressure

You have a life to live. Stop worrying about what to do next, how to keep a smile on your face, stay motivated, courageous, and keeping your head held high. Let us help you get back to doing the things you love and care about.

Our Services

We help you move forward, no matter your age, symptoms, challenges, or goals.

Your treatment team is comprehensive and tackles your family member’s needs from all angles, working to heal the body, mind, and spirit all at once. Join us in helping your family find the healing they need in a supportive, individualized, and detailed treatment model.

Psychotherapy

Psychotherapy

I have trouble coping with daily life, controlling troubling symptoms or function better.

Parenting/Family Psycho-education

Parenting or Family Psycho-education

My family and I find it difficult to set and follow through with boundaries and keep a positive, low-stress environment.

Trauma and PTSD

Trauma and PTSD

I have stress-related triggers such as severe anxiety, flashbacks or nightmares that affect my ability to self-care.

Emotional & Behavioral Difficulties

Emotional & Behavioral Difficulties

I find it challenging to regulate emotions or behavior, including anxiety and depression, in school or work environments.

Hyperactivity/Attention Deficit - ADHD/ADD

Hyperactivity or Attention Deficit

I struggle to sustain attention, and I am experiencing academic difficulties (learning disabilities – dyslexia, dyscalculia, dysgraphia) - ADHD/ADD.

Autism, TBI/Concussion Illustration

Autism Spectrum Disorder, TBI or Concussion

I have more medically-based concerns (Autism, TBI or Concussion, headaches or migraines, memory and cognitive decline).

Accepted Insurance Providers

Anthem, BlueCross, BlueShield
Husky
Aetna
TricareEast
United HealthCare
Cigna
Medicaid
Medicare
Humana logo
Optum HealthCare logo

Frequently asked questions

Get detailed information before hand

How can therapy help me?

A number of benefits are available from participating in therapy. Therapists can provide support, problem-solving skills, and enhanced coping strategies for issues such as depression, anxiety, relationship troubles, unresolved childhood issues, grief, stress management, body image issues and creative blocks. Many people also find that counselors can be a tremendous asset to managing personal growth, interpersonal relationships, family concerns, marriage issues, and the hassles of daily life. Therapists can provide a fresh perspective on a difficult problem or point you in the direction of a solution. The benefits you obtain from therapy depend on how well you use the process and put into practice what you learn. Some of the benefits available from therapy include:
  • Attaining a better understanding of yourself, your goals and values
  • Developing skills for improving your relationships
  • Finding resolutions to the issues or concerns that led you to seek therapy
  • Learning new ways to cope with stress and anxiety
  • Managing anger, grief, depression, and other emotional pressures
  • Improving communications and listening skills
  • Changing old behavior patterns and developing new ones
  • Discovering new ways to solve problems in your family or marriage
  • Improving your self-esteem and boosting self-confidence

Everyone goes through challenging situations in life, and while you may have successfully navigated through other difficulties you've faced, there's nothing wrong with seeking out extra support when you need it. In fact, therapy is for people who have enough self-awareness to realize they need a helping hand, and that is something to be admired. You are taking responsibility by accepting where you're at in life and making a commitment to change the situation by seeking therapy. Therapy provides long-lasting benefits and support, giving you the tools you need to avoid triggers, re-direct damaging patterns, and overcome whatever challenges you face.

People have many different motivations for coming to psychotherapy. Some may be going through a major life transition (unemployment, divorce, a new job, among others) or are not handling stressful circumstances well. Some people need assistance managing various other issues such as low self-esteem, depression, anxiety, addictions, relationship problems, spiritual conflicts and creative blocks. Therapy can help provide some much-needed encouragement and help with skills to get them through these periods. Others may be at a point where they are ready to learn more about themselves or want to be more effective with their goals in life. In short, people seeking psychotherapy are ready to meet the challenges in their lives and prepared to make changes in their lives.

Each person has different issues and goals. So, therapy will be different depending on the individual. In general, you can expect to discuss the current events happening in your life, your personal history relevant to your issue, and report progress (or any new insights gained) from the previous therapy session. Depending on your specific needs, therapy can be short-term, for a particular issue or longer-term to deal with more complex patterns or your desire for more personal development. Either way, it is most common to schedule regular sessions with your therapist weekly in most cases.

It is essential to understand that you will get more results from therapy if you actively participate in the process. The ultimate purpose of treatment is to help you bring what you learn in session back into your life. Therefore, beyond the work you do in therapy sessions, your therapist may make suggestions to partake outside therapy to support your process - such as reading a pertinent book, journaling on specific topics, noting particular behaviors or taking action on your goals. As a result, people seeking psychotherapy are ready to make positive changes in their lives, are open to new perspectives and take responsibility for their lives.

It is well established that the pain caused by long-term mental and emotional problems never gets solved by medication. Instead of just treating the symptom, therapy addresses the cause of our distress and the behavior patterns that curb our progress. You can best achieve sustainable growth and a greater sense of well-being with an integrative approach to wellness. Working with your medical doctor, you can determine what's best for you, and in some cases, a combination of medication and therapy is the right course of action.

To determine if you have mental health coverage through your insurance carrier, the first thing you should do is call them. Check your coverage carefully and make sure you understand their answers. Some helpful questions you can ask them:

  • What are my mental health benefits?
  • What is the coverage amount per therapy session?
  • How many therapy sessions does my plan cover?
  • How much does my insurance pay for an out-of-network provider?
  • Is approval required from my primary care physician?

Confidentiality is one of the most important components between a client and a psychotherapist. Successful therapy requires a high degree of trust with highly sensitive subject matters usually not discussed anywhere but the therapist's office. Therefore, every therapist should provide a written copy of their confidential disclosure agreement, and you can expect that what you discuss in session will not be shared with anyone. This is called "Informed Consent". Sometimes, however, you may want your therapist to share information or give an update to someone on your healthcare team (your Physician, Naturopath, Attorney). However, by law, your therapist cannot release this information without obtaining your written permission.

However, state law and professional ethics require therapists to maintain confidentiality except for the following situations where therapists are required to report:


  • Suspected past or present abuse or neglect of children, adults, and elders to the authorities, including Child Protection and law enforcement, based on information provided by the client or collateral sources.
  • If the therapist has reason to suspect the client is seriously in danger of harming themselves or has threatened to harm another person.

Get in Touch

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The most helpful practice for:

individuals

children

couples

families

Choosing Insight Inverse Counseling in your healing journey means never worrying about tackling your situation alone.

Congnitive support

Integrative Procedures

Proven processes

Tons of resources