Positive Psychology Therapists in New Brunswick

View all cities in New Brunswick

Mandeep Lalli

Mandeep Lalli

Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)

Virtual

Are you feeling anxious, overwhelmed or stuck? Something feels wrong? I help people navigate anxiety, depression, ADHD, trauma, and relationship struggles, with culturally sensitive care that honours your full background, including pressures others may miss. As a South Asian therapist with 15 years of experience in the corporate world, I bring lived experience and real-world context to therapy.

How do therapists in New Brunswick compare?

Number of therapists listed

1

Average years in practice

1.5 Years

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in New Brunswick who prioritize treating:

100% ADHD
100% Anxiety
100% Trauma and PTSD
100% Stress
100% Relationship Issues
100% Marital and Premarital

How therapists see their clients

100% Online Only

Top therapy approaches used in New Brunswick:

100% Acceptance and Commitment (ACT)
100% Attachment-based
100% Coaching
100% Cognitive Behavioural (CBT)
100% Couples Counselling
100% Culturally Sensitive
100% Existential
100% Multicultural

Frequently Asked Questions About Positive Psychology

What is positive psychology and how is it used in therapy?

Positive psychology is the scientific study of what makes life worth living — examining wellbeing, strengths, meaning, engagement, and flourishing rather than focusing exclusively on illness and dysfunction. In therapy, positive psychology principles are applied through Positive Psychotherapy (PPT) and wellbeing-focused interventions that build psychological resources alongside addressing distress. It is not about toxic positivity or ignoring problems; it is about cultivating the positive conditions under which people can heal, grow, and thrive.

How is positive psychology therapy different from traditional approaches?

Traditional therapy tends to focus on identifying and resolving problems — reducing symptoms, challenging distorted thinking, or processing painful experiences. Positive psychology therapy adds a complementary focus: identifying and building on your existing strengths, cultivating positive emotions, developing meaning and purpose, and building relationships that nourish you. Research suggests that building the positive is not just a pleasant add-on but actively accelerates recovery from depression, anxiety, and burnout in ways that deficit-focused therapy alone may not achieve.

What issues is positive psychology well-suited for?

Positive psychology is particularly valuable for depression (where depleted positive affect is central), burnout and recovery from exhaustion, life transitions where identity and meaning are in question, people who are functioning but not flourishing ("languishing"), grief and post-traumatic growth, relationship enrichment, and general personal development. It is often integrated into CBT or other evidence-based approaches rather than used as a standalone therapy, allowing clients to address both symptoms and wellbeing simultaneously.

What does a positive psychology session look like?

Sessions may include identifying and reflecting on your signature character strengths (using validated tools like the VIA Survey), gratitude practices and positive emotion cultivation, exploring what gives your life meaning and purpose, building positive relationships and social connections, reviewing and building on past successes, and setting goals aligned with your values. These are not surface-level exercises — they are delivered in a therapeutic context that holds the full complexity of your experience, including pain, alongside the work of building a life worth living.

Is positive psychology therapy evidence-based?

Yes — positive psychology has a robust research foundation. Positive Psychotherapy (PPT) developed by Martin Seligman and colleagues has demonstrated effectiveness for depression in randomized controlled trials. Specific positive psychology interventions — gratitude exercises, strengths identification, best possible self visualization, and savoring practices — each have independent research support. Many therapists integrate evidence-based positive psychology techniques into broader treatment rather than using it as an exclusive approach.