Caregiver Issues Therapists in Thunder Bay, ON
Jessica Klimkovitch
Registered Psychotherapist (qualifying)
I am passionate about providing compassionate, holistic support to individuals facing life’s emotional and physical challenges. If you’re looking for a safe, non-judgmental space to heal and regain balance, I invite you to reach out and begin your journey with me
Natalie Demian
Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)
I’m dedicated to helping individuals navigate life’s challenges and discover inner strength. With an MS in Clinical Mental Health Counseling from Niagara University, I support those facing anxiety, grief and loss, life transitions, and relationship difficulties. I offer compassionate, collaborative in-person and virtual therapy across Ontario in a safe, supportive space for growth.
Eleni Anagnosti
Pre-Licensed Professional, MS, HBA, BA
My approach is compassionate, culturally attuned, and collaborative. I draw from CBT, strengths-based, solution-focused, and trauma-informed approaches to support ADHD, anxiety, depression, burnout, grief, life transitions, and relationship patterns. Together, we focus on building practical tools, emotional balance, and a stronger sense of self-trust.
Mackenzie Broomfield (she/her)
Registered Social Worker
I believe that people are the experts in their own lives, and that we naturally possess everything we need to navigate this journey through life. Sometimes, though, we just need someone to walk alongside us - I can be that person.
Caroline D Souza
Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)
I am a Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying) with over six years of experience supporting individuals across hospital, school, community, and outpatient mental health settings. I believe therapy should feel like a space where you can slow down, feel genuinely heard, and explore your experiences without judgment.
Caitlin Kemmett
Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)
I’m Caitlin, a Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying) offering individual and couples therapy in Ottawa and virtually across Ontario. I support adults facing anxiety, burnout, ADHD, relationship challenges, and life transitions. My warm, collaborative approach blends CBT, ACT, and the Gottman Method to help you feel grounded, connected, and confident moving forward.
Sean Gedney
Registered Social Worker
I've had the privilege and honour of supporting individuals and families traversing palliative care, end-of-life care and as caregivers go through their grief journey for over 10 years. Additionally, I’ve supported clients through a wide range of challenges like depression, anxiety, trauma, and life transitions. I will meet you where you’re at. I come from a long line of “listen-first, talk-seco…
Joanna Czub
Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)
I support women who have spent years caring for everyone else and now feel exhausted, guilty, disconnected from themselves or unsure who they are beyond their responsibilities. My work focuses on childhood and relational trauma, shame, people-pleasing, difficult family relationships, grief and the struggle to establish boundaries without feeling selfish.
Nathalie Héloïse Graveline
Nurse Practitioner
Nurse (RN) since 1992; Nurse Practitioner (NP) since 2009. I created Even Keel Health, my private practice in 2018. My NP's professional experience is rich with an unusual combination of knowledge, skills and experiences. You can think of me as a blend between an advanced practice nurse and an experienced addiction and mental health psychotherapist.
Abby Tait
Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)
You might come to therapy feeling stuck in familiar patterns - ways of coping, thinking, or relating that once made sense but now feel hard to shift. You may be thoughtful and self-aware, yet find yourself overthinking, avoiding certain emotions, or feeling disconnected from who you are or where you’re headed. Questions about identity, values, and purpose often sit quietly underneath these experi…
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Frequently Asked Questions About Caregiver Issues
What is caregiver burnout?
Caregiver burnout is a state of physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion that results from the prolonged stress of caring for someone with serious illness, disability, mental health challenges, or cognitive decline. It is characterized by fatigue, emotional depletion, reduced sense of personal accomplishment, increasing detachment from the person being cared for, and often a deep ambivalence — caring intensely about the person while feeling overwhelmed by the role. Burnout is not a personal failure; it is the predictable result of sustained high demands without adequate support.
Is it selfish to seek therapy as a caregiver?
No — seeking support as a caregiver is the opposite of selfish. Caregivers who maintain their own emotional health provide better care and are less likely to experience burnout, resentment, or health crises that disrupt care. The "put on your own oxygen mask" principle applies: you cannot give from empty. Therapy also provides a space where the full complexity of caregiving — including anger, grief, and love — can be expressed without the person you care for being hurt by it.
What does therapy for caregivers involve?
Therapy for caregivers addresses the emotional weight of the role — grief for who the care recipient once was, anger and resentment about the impact on the caregiver's own life, guilt, and profound fatigue. It also provides practical support for decision-making, navigating family dynamics, communicating needs, and accessing resources. Grief-informed, psychodynamic, CBT, and mindfulness-based approaches are all used depending on what the caregiver most needs.
What types of caregivers benefit from therapy?
Any caregiver can benefit — including parents of children with disabilities or mental health challenges, spouses caring for someone with chronic illness or dementia, adult children supporting aging parents, and informal caregivers supporting friends or community members. Caregiver stress is particularly significant when care is intensive, external support is limited, the relationship with the care recipient is complicated by past conflict, or the trajectory is long and the outcome uncertain.
How do I know if caregiver stress has reached the point where therapy is warranted?
Signs that caregiver stress warrants professional support include persistent sleep disruption, difficulty feeling positive emotions, increasing use of substances to cope, worsening physical health, social withdrawal, loss of sense of self outside the caregiving role, and feeling that you cannot continue but see no way out. If several of these are present, therapy is not just warranted but important. Most caregivers seek support far later than would have been beneficial.