Gestalt Therapists in St. Catharines, ON

Katelyn Matias

Katelyn Matias

Registered Psychotherapist

Virtual

Hi, I’m Katelyn Matias, a Registered Psychotherapist and the Founder of Anchor & Bloom Psychotherapy. My approach to therapy is trauma-informed, relational, and grounded in attachment theory. I believe that our experiences, relationships, and nervous system responses shape how we understand ourselves, navigate emotions, and connect with others.

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…

Feel Your Way Therapy

Feel Your Way Therapy

Registered Psychotherapist

Virtual

Feel Your Way Therapy is a Toronto-based psychotherapy clinic offering individual, couples, child, and family therapy. Our diverse team of therapists provides support for anxiety, trauma, ADHD, depression, stress, and relationship issues, using evidence-based approaches in a compassionate and client-centered way.

Ukasha Malik

Ukasha Malik

Registered Psychotherapist

Virtual

Ukasha Psychotherapy is a private therapy practice focused on trauma-informed care, self-awareness, and empowerment. It offers a safe, supportive space for clients to work through challenges like anxiety, depression, and relationship issues. The practice emphasizes accessible mental health education, coping tools, and personal growth.

Lylla Goheen

Lylla Goheen

Registered Psychotherapist RP (Qualifying), Certified Canadian Counsellor (CCC)

Virtual

Do you and your partner speak different languages? Whether it’s the silence of a "roommate phase," sexual dysfunction, or the weight of chronic illness, you don't have to navigate it alone. I provide inclusive Sex Therapy, Gottman Couples Counselling, and Chronic Pain support in Etobicoke & Toronto. My practice is judgment-free and not "one-size-fits-all." Let's start your new era.

Carol D.B. Whaley

Carol D.B. Whaley

Psychotherapist

Virtual

I am a Vancouver based Psychotherapist in a diverse and inclusive Private Practice offering both in person and virtual sessions. I have over 22 years of extensive clinical experience working with individuals, couples, families and groups. I work with all ages on any issues that are getting in the way of the client experiencing life to its fullest in the very personal way they want to live.

Mariana Lafrance

Mariana Lafrance

Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)

Virtual Waitlist for new clients

Are you struggling with being human in our modern world? If you've found your way here, it's likely that you're feeling uncomfortable and stuck and that you're getting ready to do something about it... even if it's terrifying. You sense there's something more to you than what you've experienced thus far, and the way forward is muddied.

Jennifer Oakley

Jennifer Oakley

Registered Psychotherapist

Virtual

I am a therapist honoured to support individuals looking for harmony and clarity in their life. I specialize in Grief, Anxiety, Depression, Early Childhood Trauma, Abandonment, PTSD, with a special interest in Adoption Loss and Reunion, Family Separation, and Family Conflict.

Jessica DeMille

Jessica DeMille

Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying), MACP, B.Sc (Hons)

Virtual

I work with individuals, couples, families, and children (10+), providing a safe, supportive space for exploration and growth. Using an integrative, client-centered approach, I help clients navigate anxiety, depression, relationships, and life transitions, fostering resilience, self-awareness, and meaningful change. Together, we explore tools and strategies to support emotional well-being.

Sophie Marie McPherson

Sophie Marie McPherson

Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying) B.A., M.A.

Virtual

I offer psychotherapy services to teens and adults struggling with a wide range of presenting concerns. I have experience working with ADHD, anxiety, life transitions, stress, self-esteem and body image issues, chronic illness/pain, gender dysphoria, sexuality exploration, and non-monogamous relationships.

Amanda Rennick-Hazen

Amanda Rennick-Hazen

Registered Psychotherapist

Virtual

I enjoy using a variety of techniques such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Solution Focused Strategies, Mindfulness Meditation, Trauma Informed, Compassion Focused, & Emotion Focused. Depression & Sadness Anxiety & Worry Work , Home, & School Stress ​Grief & Loss Divorce & Separation Unexpected life transitions, unexpected change, lost opportunities

How do therapists in St. Catharines, ON compare?

Number of therapists listed

11

Average years in practice

8.3 Years

Currently accepting new clients

91 %

Therapists in St. Catharines, ON who prioritize treating:

100% Anxiety
82% Relationship Issues
55% Trauma and PTSD
55% Depression
45% Self Esteem
45% Grief
27% ADHD
18% Addiction

How therapists see their clients

100% Online Only

Top therapy approaches used in St. Catharines, ON:

100% Gestalt
73% Attachment-based
73% Trauma Focused
64% Cognitive Behavioural (CBT)
64% Person-Centered
64% Couples Counselling
55% Acceptance and Commitment (ACT)
55% Psychodynamic

Frequently Asked Questions About Gestalt

What is Gestalt therapy?

Gestalt therapy was developed by Fritz Perls, Laura Perls, and Paul Goodman in the 1940s–50s. It is a humanistic, experiential, phenomenological therapy focused on present-moment awareness, the wholeness of experience (the "gestalt" — the whole is more than the sum of its parts), and the quality of contact between person and environment. Gestalt therapy emphasizes the "here and now": what is happening right now, in the body, in relationship, in the session — not interpretation of the past or planning for the future.

What are the core concepts and techniques of Gestalt therapy?

Key Gestalt concepts include figure and ground (what comes into the foreground of awareness), contact and contact boundaries (how we meet and engage with our environment and others), unfinished business (incomplete experiences that demand resolution), and the cycle of experience (how needs arise, are met, and recede). Techniques include the empty chair (speaking to an imagined person or aspect of oneself in an empty chair), exaggeration (amplifying a gesture or feeling to heighten awareness), staying with the feeling, and body awareness. The therapeutic relationship is itself the primary medium of change.

What issues does Gestalt therapy address?

Gestalt therapy addresses anxiety, depression, relationship difficulties, unresolved grief and loss, patterns of avoidance or emotional numbing, low self-esteem, boundary difficulties, somatic symptoms, and the impact of past experiences that remain unresolved ("unfinished business"). It is particularly suited to people who want to develop greater self-awareness and authentic self-expression, those who feel disconnected from their feelings or body, and those navigating significant life transitions.

What does a Gestalt therapy session look like?

Gestalt sessions are more structured around present-moment awareness and experimentation than psychodynamic or CBT sessions. The therapist asks "what are you aware of right now?" and "what do you notice in your body?" The session may involve experiments — invitations to try something new (speaking directly to an imagined person, exaggerating a gesture, changing your posture) and noticing what happens. The therapist is actively present, using their own reactions and the quality of contact in the room as therapeutic material.

Is Gestalt therapy evidence-based?

Gestalt therapy has a smaller formal evidence base than CBT, primarily because it developed outside of the academic research tradition and the manualization required for randomized trials sits awkwardly with its emphasis on individual presence and process. However, meta-analyses of humanistic and experiential therapies (which include Gestalt) show them to be at least as effective as other approaches for many conditions. Specific Gestalt techniques — particularly empty chair — have been studied and show good outcomes for depression and unresolved relationship issues.