Loss or Grief therapists in Bedford, Western Australia WA, Australia AU
Ardross Psychology Practice
Psychologist, Registered Clinical Psychologists - Dr Peter Gibbons and Adri Hunt
Adri Hunt has extensive experience in dealing with loss and grief - and uses a variety of ways to help clients integrate seemingly insurmountable grief reactions. Both Adri Hunt and Peter Gibbons take a spiritual approach to the inevitability of grief and loss experiences in life.
32 Years Experience
Dr Poppy Edwards, Illume Psychology
Psychologist, BA (Hons), DPsych (Forensic), MPsych (Clinical)
Illume Psychology is a boutique psychology practice that offers a nurturing space to meaningfully and collaboratively work through your inner troubles. Loss and grief can be a confusing, painful and destabilising time that necessitates the thoughtful and skilled attention of a dedicated therapist to provide support, help make sense of your experiences, and work through despair and separation as you adjust to life change.
12 Years Experience
H-L Therapy
Counsellor/Therapist, BSW, MGY, Dip of Hypno-Counselling, Cert Clinical Hypno-Psychotherapy, AMHSW, MAASW, CMAHA
The common understanding of grief and loss is as the emotional pain that follows a death of someone close. Grief and loss however may also occur in many other situations. For example, in relation to the loss of friendship, relationship, culture, health, function, employment, status, lifestyle, self-identity and so forth. H-L Therapy staff work with many grief and loss related presentations. We listen, understand and work in partnership with the clients to re-establish new meaning, identity, roles, and lifestyles following the loss. We use Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, Interpersonal Therapy, and mindfulness techniques to assist in transitioning from the stage of grief towards an improved emotional wellbeing.
30 Years Experience
Basten and Associates
Psychologist, Masters in Clinical Psychology, Ph.D.
We grieve all losses, not just the loss of life. It is surprising how a few consultations can help reorganise one's emotions after a loss. In the case of a death, grief does not always need therapy. But grief can so easily become 'complicated' by one of many issues (trauma, suicide, the nature of the death, our relationship with that person, or how they died) and then therapy can help free up the natural processing of a loss.
25 Years Experience
Kristen Bayliss
Psychologist, Registered Psychologist, BSc, MA
Most people will experience loss at some point in their lives. Therapy can help with any sort of loss, whether society validates the grief or not. Therapy is an opportunity to explore your feelings and memories without judgment. No loss is too big or too small to warrant support. You do not have to endure your grief alone.
26 Years Experience