Accelerated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy (AEDP) Therapists in Victoria, BC

Aida Retta

Aida Retta

Registered Psychotherapist

Virtual

You’ve always been the one others count on—the thoughtful one, the steady one. But under the surface, you might feel anxious, resentful, or quietly overwhelmed. You say yes when you want to say no. You shrink your needs to keep the peace. You care deeply, but sometimes feel like you’re disappearing in the process. These patterns often begin in relationships where love felt conditional, conflict w…

How do therapists in Victoria, BC compare?

Number of therapists listed

1

Average years in practice

2.8 Years

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in Victoria, BC who prioritize treating:

100% Anxiety
100% Codependency
100% Depression
100% Emotional Dysregulation
100% Self Esteem
100% Trauma and PTSD

How therapists see their clients

100% Online Only

Top therapy approaches used in Victoria, BC:

100% Accelerated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy (AEDP)
100% Attachment-based
100% Culturally Sensitive
100% Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT)
100% Humanistic
100% Internal Family Systems (IFS)
100% Person-Centered
100% Psychodynamic

Frequently Asked Questions About Accelerated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy (AEDP)

What is AEDP?

Accelerated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy (AEDP) is an evidence-informed, trauma-focused psychotherapy developed by Diana Fosha in New York. It integrates attachment theory, neuroscience, transformational studies, and emotion theory. AEDP's central premise is that healing is a natural process that unfolds when the right conditions are present — specifically, a secure, attuned therapeutic relationship that allows the client to safely experience and process emotions that have previously been too painful, frightening, or overwhelming to feel. AEDP works with the leading edge of transformation, not just the trailing edge of pathology.

What distinguishes AEDP from other trauma therapies?

AEDP is distinctive in its explicit focus on the positive emotions that emerge as people heal — relief, gratitude, trembling aliveness, joy — as much as on processing painful material. It uses a technique called metatherapeutic processing: attending to and deepening the positive experiences that arise during healing, rather than quickly moving past them. AEDP is also strongly focused on the therapeutic relationship itself as the engine of change, making the warmth, presence, and attunement of the therapist central to the work.

What does AEDP treat?

AEDP is particularly suited to trauma, attachment difficulties, depression, anxiety, and the effects of adverse childhood experiences. It is used with adults experiencing complex relational trauma and with people who have previously found therapy difficult or who felt they couldn't "do therapy right." AEDP's focus on the body, emotion, and the here-and-now of the therapeutic relationship makes it useful for people who intellectualize or who have difficulty accessing their emotional experience.

What does an AEDP session look like?

AEDP sessions involve slowing down and attending carefully to emotional experience in the moment — the therapist tracks the client's affect, body, and relational experience with great care. When something meaningful arises (a touch of emotion, a shift in the body, an experience of connection), the therapist helps the client stay with and deepen that experience rather than moving past it. The therapist is actively and warmly present — not neutral. Metatherapeutic processing involves explicitly attending to the experience of the therapy itself and to moments of positive transformation.

How long does AEDP therapy take?

AEDP can produce meaningful change relatively quickly for some people — the word "accelerated" in its name reflects its aim to move efficiently through transformation. For less complex presentations, meaningful shifts can occur within 10–20 sessions. For complex trauma and attachment difficulties, longer-term work is typical. AEDP is designed to be used flexibly — session frequency and length can be adapted to the individual. Availability of trained AEDP therapists is more limited than CBT or other common approaches.