

Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT)
Structured therapy for emotional dysregulation, impulsivity, and high-risk behaviours
I offer DBT-informed therapy delivered within a comprehensive DBT framework for adolescents (16+) and adults who struggle with intense emotions, impulsive behaviours, and patterns that interfere with safety, relationships, or daily functioning.
DBT is a structured, skills-based approach designed to help people build stability, reduce harmful behaviours, and create a life that feels more manageable and meaningful.

Who DBT Is For
DBT may be a good fit if you experience:
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Intense or rapidly shifting emotions
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Self-harm urges or high-risk behaviours
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Impulsivity (substance use, reckless decisions, emotional outbursts)
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Chronic relationship conflict or instability
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Difficulty coping with distress without making things worse
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Repeated therapy starts and stops that haven’t held
DBT works best for people who are willing to engage in structured, active treatment.

How DBT Works Here
My DBT approach includes:
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Weekly individual therapy sessions
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Skills teaching and practice tailored to your needs
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Diary cards to track emotions, urges, behaviours, and skills
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Text coaching, when appropriate, to support skill use in daily life
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Ongoing DBT consultation to support treatment integrity and safety
This structure closely mirrors comprehensive DBT while remaining accessible within private practice.

Treatment Focus and Priorities
DBT follows a clear hierarchy:
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Life-threatening behaviours
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Therapy-interfering behaviours (such as missed sessions)
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Quality-of-life concerns (emotions, relationships, work, substance use, avoidance)
Skills are taught throughout treatment. The hierarchy guides what is prioritized, not whether support is provided.
For some clients, stabilizing high-risk behaviours may be the primary goal of therapy. For others, DBT gradually expands into deeper quality-of-life work.
DBT Skills Training Groups
While DBT skills are taught in individual therapy, skills groups are the primary way to ensure full coverage of all DBT skills modules.
When available, DBT skills groups are offered as an adjunct to individual therapy and are discussed separately.
Commitment and Fit
DBT is not drop-in therapy. It requires:
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Weekly attendance
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Active participation
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Completion of diary cards
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Willingness to work within a structured framework
If life circumstances (medical, financial, or otherwise) prevent regular participation, DBT may not be the right fit at that time. This is not a failure — it is about finding the right level of care.
Fees
Individual DBT sessions: $175 per session
Skills groups (when available): additional cost
Interested in DBT?
If you’re considering DBT and want to know whether this approach is a good fit, I invite you to reach out to discuss next steps.