Rebecca Olmsted, MFT
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Somatic comes from the Greek word "soma", meaning body. Somatic psychotherapy is "talk therapy", but with a difference. It values bodily experience as much as thoughts and feelings. Working somatically with a mindful approach helps to bring about change by raising awareness in the present moment. Change happens in the here and now.

There is something about really being present that fosters transformation. The goal of therapy is to help us live more fully. Many people come to therapy because there is something in their life that they want to transform, but they have been unable to do so on their own. Working with the right therapist can change your life.
Services
I work with individual adults, elders, couples, adolescents, and families. I have had success working with clients who have diagnoses such as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD or ADD), and Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD), as well as depression, addictions and eating disorders.
License to practice psychotherapy, provided by the state of California. MFTs have a master's degree in counseling psychology and gain a minimum of 3000 hours of clinical experience before they can sit for licensing exams. Recreating the Self - this advanced technique is used to access your internal spiritual resources.
Join Rebecca and Michelle Dwyer for an eight week group exploring the relationship between nutrition and your mental and emotional health. This group will provide you with useful information to help you to achieve the lifestyle you want to have, and will also provide you with emotional support you need to achieve it.
Because choosing a therapist is a very personal decision, I offer a free twenty minute phone consultation. We can talk, and you can ask me any questions you may have. The "captcha" box below ensures that you are a live human, and not some automated web device. Please type in the sum of the two numbers.
A lot of therapy is about working with the obvious in a new way. Only rarely do my clients come up with something unknown about themselves. The real work is in coming to a new relationship to what they already know. Sometimes the work of the therapist - and the client - is to state what is in plain sight, in a way that clarifies the situation.
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