Schema Therapy Therapists in Surrey, BC

DeRoux Jones

DeRoux Jones

Registered Psychotherapist

Virtual

I’m DeRoux Jones, a Registered Psychotherapist in Ontario with a Master of Counselling Psychology specializing in Marriage & Family Therapy. I serve individuals, couples, and families, helping with anxiety, depression, grief, relationships, and Christian counselling. My approach is collaborative, evidence-based, and client-centered, creating a safe space for growth and healing.

Aaron Chin

Aaron Chin

Registered Clinical Counsellor

Virtual In-Person

Hi, I’m Aaron, a Registered Clinical Counsellor (RCC# 21391) practicing online, and in person for clients in Surrey, BC. I strongly believe in the power of therapy to facilitate personal growth, healing, and empowerment. My approach is rooted in empathy, respect, and collaboration, providing a safe and non-judgmental space for clients to explore their concerns.

How do therapists in Surrey, BC compare?

Number of therapists listed

2

Average years in practice

5.2 Years

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in Surrey, BC who prioritize treating:

100% Anxiety
100% Depression
50% ADHD
50% Anger Management
50% Trauma and PTSD
50% Relationship Issues
50% Grief
50% Stress

How therapists see their clients

50% In Person & Online
50% Online Only

Top therapy approaches used in Surrey, BC:

100% Cognitive Behavioural (CBT)
100% Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT)
100% Existential
100% Integrative
100% Internal Family Systems (IFS)
100% Psychodynamic
100% Schema Therapy
100% Solution Focused Brief (SFBT)

Frequently Asked Questions About Schema Therapy

What is schema therapy?

Schema therapy was developed by Jeffrey Young as an extension of CBT to address personality disorders and chronic characterological problems that did not respond adequately to standard CBT. It integrates CBT, attachment theory, Gestalt experiential techniques, and object relations. A "schema" is a deeply held belief and pattern about self and world — typically developed in early childhood in response to unmet core emotional needs. Schemas such as "I am fundamentally unlovable," "I will be abandoned," or "I am defective" drive chronic psychological difficulties.

What are schema modes?

Schema modes are current emotional and coping states — the "parts" that we flip between — that are driven by underlying schemas. Common modes include Vulnerable Child (the frightened, shamed, or abandoned inner child), Angry Child, Punitive Parent (an internalized harsh critical voice), Detached Protector (emotional shutdown and distancing), and Healthy Adult (the integrated, functional part). Schema therapy focuses on identifying modes as they appear in the therapy session and in daily life, strengthening the Healthy Adult, and healing the wounded child modes.

What does schema therapy treat?

Schema therapy has the strongest evidence for borderline personality disorder (BPD) — multiple randomized trials show it produces significant and lasting improvement. It also has evidence for other personality disorders (narcissistic, avoidant), chronic depression and anxiety, eating disorders, relationship difficulties, and complex trauma. It is particularly suited to people who have not fully benefited from standard CBT, whose difficulties are deeply rooted and long-standing, and who have significant childhood adversity in their history.

What makes schema therapy different from CBT?

Standard CBT focuses on current thoughts and behaviours, typically in a structured, present-focused format. Schema therapy goes deeper — exploring the origins of schemas in childhood experiences, using experiential techniques (imagery rescripting, mode work, limited reparenting within the therapeutic relationship) to work at an emotional level, not just a cognitive one. The therapeutic relationship in schema therapy is explicitly used as a vehicle for healing early unmet needs — the therapist maintains "limited reparenting," providing warmth and care that may have been absent in childhood.

How long does schema therapy take?

Schema therapy is typically a longer-term treatment — 1–3 years of weekly sessions for personality disorders, and shorter for less complex presentations. The depth of the work — healing early childhood wounds and changing deeply entrenched patterns — takes time. Schema therapy is conducted in individual and group formats; the group format can be more economical and has its own evidence base for BPD. Both modalities produce significant, lasting change.