Adlerian Therapists in Trois-Rivières, QC

Tina Pirvali

Tina Pirvali

Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)

Virtual

Accepting new clients. I provide virtual therapy across Canada for adults and couples navigating trauma, relationship challenges, communication difficulties, infidelity, codependency, attachment patterns, and life transitions. Using a warm, trauma-informed approach, I help clients strengthen their relationships, reconnect with themselves, and create lasting, meaningful change.

Paris Moaf

Paris Moaf

Registered Psychotherapist, M Psy, MSc, RP

Virtual

As the founder and clinical director of Paris Mind Clinic, Paris Parastoo Moaf specializes in helping clients manage and overcome depression, anxiety, PTSD, emotional disorders, grief, and relationship issues. Using CBT, DBT, MBCT, ACT, EFT, and Adlerian Therapy, Paris Parastoo Moaf tailors sessions to your unique needs.

How do therapists in Trois-Rivières, QC compare?

Number of therapists listed

2

Average years in practice

1.8 Years

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in Trois-Rivières, QC who prioritize treating:

100% Anxiety
100% Depression
100% Relationship Issues
50% Anger Management
50% Behavioral Issues
50% Divorce
50% Codependency
50% Infidelity

How therapists see their clients

100% Online Only

Top therapy approaches used in Trois-Rivières, QC:

100% Adlerian
100% Couples Counselling
100% Culturally Sensitive
100% Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT)
100% Strength-Based
100% Trauma Focused
100% Narrative
50% Acceptance and Commitment (ACT)

Frequently Asked Questions About Adlerian

What is Adlerian therapy?

Adlerian therapy (also called Individual Psychology) was developed by Alfred Adler, a contemporary and later colleague of Sigmund Freud who broke from psychoanalysis to develop his own approach. Adler believed that human behaviour is purposeful and goal-directed, that feelings of inferiority and the striving to overcome them are central to human motivation, and that social connection and belonging (what Adler called "social interest" or Gemeinschaftsgefühl) are fundamental to mental health. Adlerian therapy emphasizes the person's unique lifestyle — the characteristic ways they interpret experience and pursue belonging and significance.

What key concepts does Adlerian therapy use?

Key Adlerian concepts include the inferiority complex (excessive feelings of inadequacy driving compensatory or avoidant behaviour), social interest (the capacity for connection and contribution that Adler saw as essential to wellbeing), birth order (the psychological position within the family as a formative influence), lifestyle assessment (understanding the person's characteristic beliefs about self, others, and life), and the fictional final goal (the idealized endpoint that motivates behaviour, often outside of conscious awareness).

What issues does Adlerian therapy address?

Adlerian therapy addresses depression, anxiety, relationship difficulties, low self-esteem, parenting challenges, and problems with meaning and purpose. It is particularly well-suited to people interested in understanding how their early experiences, family dynamics, and characteristic patterns of interpretation shape their current difficulties. Adlerian approaches have been influential in school counselling, positive parenting programs (such as STEP), and brief therapy models.

What does an Adlerian therapy session look like?

Adlerian therapy typically begins with a lifestyle assessment — exploring early memories, family constellation, and the patterns and beliefs that have shaped the person's characteristic way of navigating life. The therapist helps the person develop insight into their goals and the mistaken beliefs that may be limiting them. Sessions are collaborative and egalitarian — Adler emphasized the equality of therapist and client. The work moves from insight toward encouragement and behaviour change — building the person's capacity for meaningful connection and contribution.

How long does Adlerian therapy typically take?

Adlerian therapy can be adapted to both brief and longer-term formats. Brief Adlerian approaches focus on lifestyle assessment and targeted intervention over 12–20 sessions. Longer-term Adlerian work explores the deeper layers of lifestyle beliefs and early experiences more thoroughly. The approach's emphasis on encouragement and social interest gives it a practical, action-oriented quality that tends toward meaningful progress rather than open-ended exploration.