Experiential Therapy Therapists in Red Deer, AB

Melody Hazelton

Melody Hazelton

Counselling Therapist

Virtual

Feeling stuck, anxious, or disconnected? I’m a trauma-informed therapist specializing in somatic therapy, CBT, and ART to help you heal, build resilience, and reconnect with yourself. Whether you’re facing anxiety, trauma, or relationship struggles, I provide a safe, supportive space for growth. Online sessions make getting started easy—click to learn more and book a free consultation!

Alexandra Vartosu

Alexandra Vartosu

Holistic Psychotherapist, Hypnotherapist & Transformational Coach

Virtual

I help sensitive, introspective adults who feel anxious, overwhelmed, or stuck in old patterns return to a deeper sense of calm, clarity, and self-trust. I blend psychotherapy, hypnotherapy, mindfulness, and subconscious healing to meet what lives beneath the surface, not just the symptoms. Healing, I believe, is a return to yourself, not a reinvention.

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!

Sarah Perone

Sarah Perone

Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)

Virtual

I help individuals and couples break painful relationship cycles so they can feel more connected, secure, and confident. I support concerns like recurrent conflict, relationship anxiety (and ROCD), limerence, and resentment. Using an attachment- and evidence-based approach, I offer warm, non-judgmental virtual therapy across Ontario. Book a free 15-minute consultation to get started.

Maiya Robbie

Maiya Robbie

Registered Therapeutic Counsellor, Registered Expressive Arts Therapist

Virtual

My approach is compassionate, curious, resourcing, arts-based and informed by my particular constellation of interests and experiences in the field of psychotherapy. I'm dedicated to helping folks navigate liminal (in-between) spaces of not knowing. Sometimes this looks like stuck-ness, or feeling at a standstill... experiencing grief, overwhelm, depression or anxiety. ​I'm here to help.

How do therapists in Red Deer, AB compare?

Number of therapists listed

5

Average years in practice

9.4 Years

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in Red Deer, AB who prioritize treating:

60% Anxiety
60% Relationship Issues
40% Self Esteem
40% Spirituality
40% Divorce
40% Infidelity
40% Marital and Premarital
40% Emotional Dysregulation

How therapists see their clients

100% Online Only

Top therapy approaches used in Red Deer, AB:

100% Experiential Therapy
80% Cognitive Behavioural (CBT)
80% Internal Family Systems (IFS)
80% Culturally Sensitive
80% Dialectical Behaviour (DBT)
80% Motivational Interviewing
80% Person-Centered
80% Positive Psychology

Frequently Asked Questions About Experiential Therapy

What is experiential therapy?

Experiential therapy is an umbrella term for approaches that focus on direct emotional and sensory experience in the therapy session — rather than primarily working with thoughts, beliefs, or narratives. Experiential therapies include Emotion-Focused Therapy (EFT), Gestalt therapy, Psychodrama, somatic approaches, AEDP, and others. What unites them is the conviction that genuine therapeutic change happens through lived emotional experience, not through insight or intellectual understanding alone. "Feeling it" is as important as "understanding it."

How does experiential therapy differ from cognitive or talk therapy?

Cognitive approaches (CBT) focus primarily on identifying and changing thoughts and beliefs. Psychodynamic approaches work with unconscious patterns and the therapeutic relationship. Experiential approaches prioritize direct access to emotional experience — often through body awareness, imagery, creative expression, or enactment. Experiential therapists are more likely to invite you to "stay with what's arising right now" or to "notice where you feel that in your body" than to identify cognitive distortions. The emphasis is on the present moment and on felt experience.

What issues does experiential therapy address?

Experiential therapy addresses trauma, depression, anxiety, relationship difficulties, grief, emotional numbing or disconnection, personality difficulties, and situations where people feel "stuck" despite having insight into their patterns. It is particularly well-suited for people who find they understand their problems intellectually but still cannot change how they feel or behave — or for those who have tried primarily cognitive approaches and found them insufficient for reaching deeper emotional material.

What does an experiential therapy session feel like?

Experiential sessions often feel more unpredictable and alive than structured cognitive therapy — there is less homework and protocol, more following what arises. The therapist may slow you down when emotion appears and invite you to stay with it rather than analyzing it away. You might be invited to notice body sensations, to speak directly to a part of yourself, to explore an image, or to "stay with" a difficult feeling rather than explaining it. Many people find experiential therapy more emotionally challenging but more deeply moving than other approaches.

Is experiential therapy evidence-based?

Many specific experiential approaches have substantial evidence. Emotion-Focused Therapy (EFT) has strong evidence for depression and relationship problems. AEDP has emerging research support. Gestalt has a smaller evidence base but decades of clinical application. The broader category of "humanistic and experiential" therapy has been shown to be at least as effective as CBT for many conditions in meta-analyses. The evidence base varies significantly across specific experiential approaches.