Transpersonal Therapists in Mississauga, ON

Zarifa Andani

Zarifa Andani

MPCC-P, RTC-C

Virtual

This work isn’t about fixing your parts—it’s about helping you feel more like your whole self again. We can work together to slow down, get curious, and listen deeply. Our internal body wisdom is an integral source of information that speaks more significantly than words. Real change is possible when ALL of you feels safe enough to be seen and supported, just as you are.

Anna Marson

Anna Marson

Registered Psychotherapist

Virtual

Anna Marson is a registered psychotherapist specializing in ADHD, trauma, neurodiversity, attachment, stress, and emotion regulation. She integrates evidence-based therapies, mindfulness, and ADHD coaching to help clients build resilience, regulate emotions, and develop practical skills for lasting, positive change. Her approach is compassionate, brain/body-informed, and strength-based.

Jodi Evers

Jodi Evers

Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)

Virtual

Providing person-centred, psychodynamic therapy for adults across a wide range of treatment goals. Using an integrative approach that considers the whole person, treatment is adapted to the individual and is deep, experiential, challenging, trauma informed and focused on the body, emotions, and patterns of behavior.

Meg Walsh

Meg Walsh

Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)

Virtual

MEG WALSH, Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying), BFA, E-RYT I am a Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying) with the CRPO, a member in good standing with my professional association (Canadian Association for Psychodynamic Therapy). I have earned a post-graduate diploma in Psychodynamic Psychotherapy from The Centre for Training in Psychotherapy (CTP), and a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the OCAD U…

Daniel Cooper

Daniel Cooper

Registered Psychotherapist

Virtual

I specialize in anxiety, depression, and relationship issues. We'll work together to manage symptoms, understand patterns, and cultivate self-compassion. I blend scientifically-grounded methods with a person-centered, culturally-sensitive approach. Integrating ACT, CBT, Narrative, & Mindfulness practices, you'll find a safe, non-judgmental space for you to explore emotions, identities, and values.

Kumasi Jay Gwynne

Kumasi Jay Gwynne

Registered Psychotherapist

Virtual

Relationships of any kind can be challenging. I never underestimate how complicated things can get once we tease out the relational pieces in our lives and try to understand how they are affecting us.

How do therapists in Mississauga, ON compare?

Number of therapists listed

6

Average years in practice

5 Years

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in Mississauga, ON who prioritize treating:

100% Relationship Issues
83% Trauma and PTSD
67% Self Esteem
50% Anxiety
50% Emotional Dysregulation
50% ADHD
33% Grief
33% 2SLGBTQI+

How therapists see their clients

100% Online Only

Top therapy approaches used in Mississauga, ON:

100% Transpersonal
83% Attachment-based
83% Internal Family Systems (IFS)
83% Relational
83% Culturally Sensitive
67% Psychodynamic
67% Couples Counselling
67% Mindfulness-Based (MBCT)

Frequently Asked Questions About Transpersonal

What is transpersonal therapy?

Transpersonal therapy (or transpersonal psychology) is an approach that extends beyond the personal dimensions of human experience to include spiritual, transcendent, and consciousness-expanding dimensions. Developed in the 1960s by figures including Abraham Maslow, Stanislav Grof, and Ken Wilber, it acknowledges states of consciousness, spiritual experience, and a sense of something larger than the individual self as legitimate and important aspects of human psychology — and addresses these dimensions in therapy as well as conventional psychological concerns.

What distinguishes transpersonal therapy from other approaches?

Most mainstream therapeutic approaches focus on the personal self — the individual's thoughts, emotions, history, and relationships. Transpersonal therapy explicitly engages with dimensions beyond the personal ego: mystical and spiritual experiences, peak states of consciousness, the sense of unity with something greater, near-death experiences, psychedelic experiences, shamanic or indigenous spiritual practices, and the psychological integration of transcendent states. It treats these as potentially significant, growth-promoting experiences rather than symptoms of pathology.

What issues does transpersonal therapy address?

Transpersonal therapy addresses spiritual crises ("dark nights of the soul"), the psychological integration of psychedelic experiences, near-death experiences and their aftermath, mystical experiences that create confusion or are difficult to integrate, questions of meaning and transcendence, grief and end-of-life concerns, existential emptiness, and the desire for a therapy that takes spiritual experience seriously as legitimate data. It also addresses conventional psychological concerns using a broader framework.

Is transpersonal therapy evidence-based?

Transpersonal therapy has a limited formal evidence base compared to CBT or psychodynamic therapy, partly because its subject matter is difficult to operationalize and study in standard research designs. However, related fields have growing evidence: mindfulness-based therapies, which draw on contemplative and spiritual traditions, have extensive research support. Psychedelic-assisted therapy — being researched in clinical trials — falls partly within the transpersonal tradition. Research on spirituality and mental health broadly shows positive associations between spiritual practice and wellbeing.

Who seeks transpersonal therapy?

Transpersonal therapy appeals to people for whom spiritual experience is central to their sense of identity and who want a therapist who will engage with this dimension rather than pathologize or minimize it. It is sought by people integrating significant spiritual experiences (mystical states, psychedelic experiences, near-death experiences), those experiencing spiritual emergence or crisis, those pursuing contemplative or spiritual development alongside personal healing, and people who find conventional therapy's secular frameworks insufficient for their inner life.