Sports Performance Therapists in Dieppe, NB

Emma Laughlan

Emma Laughlan

Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)

Virtual

I work with children (10+), teens, and adults who feel anxious, overwhelmed, or exhausted by the pressure to get everything “right.” You may be stuck in overthinking, people‑pleasing, panic symptoms, health anxiety, or relationship patterns that leave you doubting yourself. On the outside, you might appear high‑achieving and capable. Inside, you feel tense, self‑critical, or never quite enough.

How do therapists in Dieppe, NB compare?

Number of therapists listed

1

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in Dieppe, NB who prioritize treating:

100% Relationship Issues
100% Anxiety
100% Sports Performance
100% Depression
100% Women's Issues
100% Infertility

How therapists see their clients

100% Online Only

Top therapy approaches used in Dieppe, NB:

100% Acceptance and Commitment (ACT)
100% Somatic
100% Sports Performance
100% Internal Family Systems (IFS)
100% Dialectical Behaviour (DBT)
100% Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT)
100% Trauma Focused

Frequently Asked Questions About Sports Performance

What is sport psychology?

Sport psychology is a specialty that applies psychological principles to enhance athletic performance, support mental health in athletes, and address the unique challenges of sport participation — including performance anxiety, injury recovery, identity transitions, and the psychological demands of high-performance environments. Sport psychologists work with athletes at all levels, from recreational participants to Olympic and professional competitors, and with coaches, teams, and organizations.

What issues does sport psychology address?

Sport psychology addresses performance anxiety and "choking," focus and concentration, confidence and self-belief, motivation and goal-setting, mental recovery after injury or poor performance, the yips (sudden loss of a fine motor skill in sport), team dynamics and communication, coping with selection, loss, and career transitions, and the mental health challenges that are particularly prevalent in elite sport — including depression, eating disorders, burnout, and substance use. Mental wellbeing and performance enhancement are both legitimate goals.

How does sport psychology differ from mental performance coaching?

Sport psychologists are licensed mental health professionals with graduate training in both psychology and sport science — they can address both performance and mental health concerns. Mental performance consultants or coaches may have sport science training but are not licensed mental health practitioners and focus specifically on performance rather than clinical concerns. The distinction matters when the athlete has significant mental health needs — anxiety, depression, trauma, or eating disorders — that require clinical expertise.

Who benefits from sport psychology?

Any athlete can benefit — sport psychology is not only for elite performers. Recreational athletes dealing with performance anxiety, youth athletes struggling with pressure or burnout, injured athletes navigating recovery, masters athletes managing age-related changes, and those facing sport identity transitions (retirement, being cut, injury-forced retirement) all benefit from sport psychology. Parents navigating youth sport culture and coaches developing their psychological skills are also clients.

What techniques do sport psychologists use?

Common techniques include mental imagery and visualization (mentally rehearsing performance), arousal control strategies (breathing, progressive muscle relaxation, activation techniques), self-talk and cognitive restructuring, concentration and focus training (cue words, pre-performance routines), goal-setting frameworks, mindfulness applied to performance, and acceptance-based approaches (ACT for Sport). For athletes with clinical concerns, the full range of evidence-based therapeutic approaches is applied within the sport context.