Infertility Therapists in Chestermere, AB

Courtney Wiebe

Courtney Wiebe

Registered Marriage & Family Therapist, Canadian Certified Counsellor, Registered Counselling Therapist

Virtual

As a Marriage & Family therapist (RMFT-SQ), Registered Counselling Therapist (RCT), and Clinical Counsellor (CCC), I am uniquely trained to work with individuals, couples, and families. I am EMDR trained for trauma intervention, and I am a Ph.D. candidate in Counsellor Education and Supervision.

Jennifer Wright-Maley

Jennifer Wright-Maley

Registered Provisional Psychologist

Virtual

Hi. I'm Jenn (she/her). I'm dually licensed as a Registered Provisional Psychologist and Registered Midwife. I primarily work with people who are working to become pregnant, pregnant, postpartum, or in the midst of parenting young children. I have honed skills to work with grief and trauma, and enjoy helping clients find healing from difficult experiences.

Jordyn Pakkala

Jordyn Pakkala

Registered Provisional Psychologist

Virtual

I believe in establishing a supportive, compassionate and safe space for clients to explore both positive and negative emotions. I believe in the foundation of human connection between a therapist and their client as well as collaboration with therapeutic healing and achievable goals to guide and encourage success.

Mara Behan

Mara Behan

Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)

Virtual

I help couples and individuals find growth, healing, and stronger connections. Using evidence-based and individualized approaches, I support those struggling with women's health concerns (e.g., pregnancy, postpartum, perimenopause, menopause), relationship concerns (e.g., resentment, infidelity), and life transitions (e.g., separation/divorce, parenting). I offer a free 15-minute consultation!

How do therapists in Chestermere, AB compare?

Number of therapists listed

4

Average years in practice

1.3 Years

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in Chestermere, AB who prioritize treating:

100% Infertility
100% Pregnancy, Prenatal, Postpartum
75% Grief
50% Trauma and PTSD
25% Family Conflict
25% Spirituality
25% Parenting
25% Women's Issues

How therapists see their clients

100% Online Only

Top therapy approaches used in Chestermere, AB:

75% Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT)
75% Humanistic
50% Acceptance and Commitment (ACT)
50% Attachment-based
50% Feminist
50% Internal Family Systems (IFS)
50% Trauma Focused
50% Relational

Frequently Asked Questions About Infertility

How can therapy help when dealing with infertility?

Infertility is a profound and often isolating experience that affects mental health in significant ways. Therapy provides a space to grieve the losses involved — of expected timelines, biological children, or pregnancies — while developing coping strategies for the emotional demands of fertility treatment, navigating relationship strain, and making difficult decisions. Research shows that psychological support during infertility treatment improves emotional wellbeing and, in some studies, treatment outcomes.

What emotions are common when facing infertility?

People facing infertility commonly experience grief, anger, guilt, shame, anxiety, depression, and a profound sense of loss of control. It is also common to feel isolated — especially when friends and family are having children easily — and to feel that others do not fully understand the weight of the experience. Ambivalence about continuing treatment, relationship tension between partners, and existential questions about identity and the future are also typical. All of these are valid responses to a genuinely difficult situation.

Should both partners attend infertility counselling?

Both individual and couples counselling are valuable, and the best format depends on your situation. Partners often experience infertility differently — one may want to keep trying while the other is reaching a limit; one may grieve openly while the other copes by researching options. Couples therapy helps partners stay connected and communicate through these differences. Individual therapy provides space that is entirely your own. Many people benefit from both simultaneously.

When is the right time to seek therapy during fertility treatment?

There is no wrong time — support can be valuable at any point. Many people seek therapy after a failed cycle, a miscarriage, or a difficult diagnosis. Others come before treatment begins to build coping strategies proactively. If you are experiencing significant depression or anxiety, relationship strain, or finding that infertility is consuming your life, therapy is warranted sooner rather than later. You do not need to reach a breaking point before seeking support.

Can therapy help after infertility, even if we eventually have children?

Yes — the grief and trauma of the infertility journey does not automatically resolve when a child arrives, whether through birth, adoption, or other paths to parenthood. Pregnancy after infertility is often marked by anxiety rather than joy. The losses experienced along the way — miscarriages, failed treatments, grief over biological children not born — may still need to be processed. Therapy supports the full arc of the journey, not just the moments of crisis within it.