Integration Therapy - Psychotherapy Services
Online Therapy Ontario! We offer virtual therapy for individuals and couples. Book today!
06/16/2026
I offer depth psychotherapy online that helps you move from overwhelm to lasting clarity. Through integrative, long-form work—trauma‑informed, attachment‑focused, and somatic—you’ll notice measurable changes: less reactivity, clearer choices, and steadier regulation. I explain how your nervous system learns new habits in simple neuroscience terms and give practical tools you can use between sessions. As a Toronto‑based clinician, I provide secure online therapy across Ontario so you can keep continuity of care from wherever you are. Visit https://wix.to/sTD7Rqk to learn more and book a confidential consult.
06/15/2026
I see how deeply you feel, and I’m here to help you use that depth as a strength. In my attachment‑based, somatic approach I pace sessions to match your nervous system, use sensory‑aware techniques, and teach practical boundaries that protect your energy. You’ll learn simple neuroscience‑based tools to reduce emotional flooding, clarify and hold boundaries, and build a sustainable self‑care routine. If you’re an adult in Ontario seeking compassionate, paced care, let’s talk. https://wix.to/mwHvwIY
Feeling overwhelmed by ADHD right now? I get it — and there are small, therapist-backed steps you can use today to ease that pressure. 1) Structure-friendly routines: try a short morning checklist (3 wins only) to cue focus and build momentum. 2) Sensory-aware adjustments: lower bright lights, add calming textures, or use a weighted lap pad for steadying input. 3) Brief body-based resets: two minutes of grounding breath or a quick standing stretch to reset attention and calm the nervous system. These strategies support executive function and emotional regulation without medication. I work with adults across Ontario, adapting online sessions to meet executive-function needs—shorter meets, visual prompts, and collaborative planning so therapy fits your brain. Ready to try something practical this week? Book a session to get a tailored plan and immediate tools you can use right away: https://wix.to/MZXt4yG
06/09/2026
Feeling stuck in overthinking, panic, or unclear relationships? I blend attachment-focused work, somatic (body-based) techniques, and trauma-informed approaches to help adults in Ontario move from rumination to steady, actionable insight. Together we’ll calm the nervous system, reduce panic, and build clearer, more connected relationships — because real change happens beneath symptoms. Science-backed tip: breathing with a 4-6 second exhale activates the vagus nerve to soothe stress in the moment. Ready to invest in lasting emotional regulation? Book a Toronto appointment today: https://wix.to/zJ47PuA 📅💛
06/01/2026
I see how overwhelming flashbacks and sleepless nights can feel. In this micro-series I’ll share one simple somatic step you can try right now: grounding with breath plus a gentle body scan. Practice: inhale slowly for 4, exhale for 6, then notice tension from head to toes and soften what you can. Neuroscience note: A longer exhale calms your nervous system and often reduces flashback intensity and helps sleep. I work with adults in Toronto using trauma- and attachment-informed methods—practical tools you can use between sessions. Want the next step? Visit https://wix.to/0MyDKdY and let’s take this one small step together.
05/21/2026
Do you struggle with rejection?
“How RSD Evolved from Protector to Tormentor in the ADHD Brain” Fear of rejection is an evolutionary adaptation that is much stronger in women with ADHD.
05/19/2026
Feeling overwhelmed by emotions doesn’t mean something is wrong with you — it often points to attachment patterns shaped early on. In my online depth psychotherapy practice, I blend a relational psychodynamic approach with somatic awareness and emerging therapies to help you understand how those patterns show up now.
We start by tracing how relationships shaped your nervous system, then slow down and notice body-based signals so you can respond differently. A typical thread of progress: you'll start naming triggers with less shame; then you’re practicing a new, calming response in real time; over months, those moments of overwhelm become less frequent and less intense.
Neuroscience tip: repeated, safe relational experiences actually update neural pathways — new patterns become more accessible when you practice them with mindful support.
If you’re an adult in Ontario seeking long-term, integrative care that includes somatic work and openness to innovative methods, I’d welcome the chance to work with you. Visit https://wix.to/81y0Rlv to learn more or book a consult.
How does overwhelm show up for you? Share one small moment below — I read every comment.
05/14/2026
Healing with ADHD + trauma is possible.
Just not through one-size-fits-all approaches.
You don’t need:
❌ More discipline
❌ More forcing yourself
❌ More “why can’t I just…”
You need support that actually fits how you’re wired.
💬 If this resonates, I’d love to hear:
What part of this hit home for you?
🔗 Learn more: www.integrationtherapy.ca
05/13/2026
Chaotic and stressful early family environments can exacerbate ADHD-related traits. ADHD-related traits existing in unsupportive environments or without resources and help can certainly be a traumatic experience.
This is not the same thing as saying that ADHD-related traits are primarily the result of trauma in childhood. Just because trauma can cause lasting problems in our lives does not mean that ADHD (or any mental health problem) is caused by childhood trauma. For those with a different genetic proclivity, trauma may affect them differently. You tend to break in ways that you’re genetically prone to break.
ADHD is not an illness nor is it a trauma response.
New genetics research suggests that there is sizable genetic basis to ADHD.
ADHD confers both gifts and challenges, and has a complex etiology.
If you are struggling and need support. Please reach out.
05/13/2026
https://www.psychologytoday.com/ca/blog/beautiful-minds/202502/adhd-isnt-a-trauma-reaction
ADHD Isn’t a Trauma Response I am inundated with Instagram ads telling me that “ADHD is not laziness, it’s a trauma response.” Well actually, it's neither! These falsehoods are so popular, yet so wrong.
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