Spirituality Therapists in Winnipeg, MB

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.

Ebube Ojukwu

Ebube Ojukwu

Canadian Certified Counselor (CCC)

Virtual

In any phase you are in life: adapting to life after a medical or mental health diagnosis, navigating new relationships, embracing the pain that comes with grieving, exploring your faith and spirituality, setting those boundaries everyone keeps preaching about, therapy can offer that space to explore your feelings and gain the insight you need in living the life you desire . So lets work together.

James Kalimina

James Kalimina

M.A CCC

In-Person

we offers an holistic approach in counselling. Also, providing clients with services which are specifically tailored to individual and their needs. At Pathway, we believes that people are designed and wired differently. We do also recognizes the need for a place and an atmosphere to foster the healing our clients needs.

How do therapists in Winnipeg, MB compare?

Number of therapists listed

3

Average years in practice

5.3 Years

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in Winnipeg, MB who prioritize treating:

100% Spirituality
67% Grief
67% Trauma and PTSD
67% Depression
33% Infertility
33% Family Conflict
33% Pregnancy, Prenatal, Postpartum
33% Emotional Dysregulation

How therapists see their clients

67% Online Only
33% In Person Only

Frequently Asked Questions About Spirituality

How does spirituality intersect with mental health and therapy?

Spirituality — a sense of connection to something larger than oneself, whether through religion, nature, contemplative practice, community, or personal meaning-making — is a significant dimension of wellbeing for many people. Research consistently shows that spiritual or religious practice is associated with improved mental health outcomes, greater resilience, and lower rates of depression and anxiety. For many people, spirituality is not separate from their mental health — it is part of how they understand suffering, find meaning, and navigate life. Therapy that ignores this dimension misses something important.

What does spiritually sensitive therapy look like?

Spiritually sensitive therapy takes the client's spiritual framework seriously as a source of meaning, support, and identity rather than dismissing or pathologizing it. This means exploring how spirituality shows up in the client's life, how it helps or sometimes hinders, and how therapeutic work can engage with rather than work around spiritual beliefs and practices. It does not require the therapist to share the client's beliefs — only to approach them with genuine curiosity and respect.

Is spirituality different from religion in therapy?

Spirituality and religion overlap but are not identical. Religion typically refers to organized systems of belief, practice, and community — Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and others. Spirituality is broader — a personal sense of meaning, transcendence, or connection that may or may not be embedded in a religious tradition. Many people identify as spiritual but not religious. Therapy can engage meaningfully with both, as well as with the experience of deconstructing or leaving a religious tradition, which is its own significant psychological process.

When might spirituality be a central focus in therapy?

Spirituality may be particularly central in therapy during: spiritual crises or dark nights of the soul; deconstructing or leaving a faith tradition; religious trauma or spiritual abuse; navigating grief that raises questions of meaning and afterlife; integrating mystical or peak experiences; confronting moral injury; and for people for whom spiritual practice is a primary coping resource that has stopped working. For Indigenous clients, spirituality and culture are often inseparable dimensions that a culturally competent therapist must be able to hold.

Can therapy be harmful to someone's spiritual life?

Yes — therapy that dismisses, pathologizes, or subtly devalues a client's spiritual beliefs can cause real harm. It communicates that a core part of the person's identity and meaning-making is not welcome in the therapy room, which undermines the therapeutic relationship. A therapist who treats religious belief as a symptom of psychological difficulty — rather than exploring its functions and meanings — is not being helpful. Finding a therapist who can engage respectfully with your spiritual life, regardless of their own beliefs, is important.