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Psychotherapy

Are you experiencing one or more of these problems?

  • Depression
  • Low energy or withdrawal and avoidance
  • Worry, fear, anxiety, or panic 
  • Self-doubt, self-judgment, or difficulty with decisions
  • Irritability, anger, or conflict
  • Stressed out in general or using substances to change one’s mood

             These states are a part of human life, and we all experience them.  Sometimes, though, they take on a life of their own, overwhelming our best attempts to manage them and interfering with our well-being, our relationships, and our activities.  Feelings of distress, sadness, anxiety, tension, grief, or shame may become prominent.  Behaviors may be affected:  caring for others at the expense of oneself; excessive self-criticism; eating or sleeping too much or too little; poor concentration; social avoidance or withdrawal; difficulty with work or daily activities; avoiding one’s own experience; using or abusing drugs or alcohol. Relationships with partners, children, parents, family, or colleagues may become more difficult than satisfying.

It is  actually  inner strength combined with good judgment  to recognize when help is needed.

Psychotherapy is a partnership in which client and therapist work together to:

1.   Identify and understand the problem

2.  Review the client’s current ways of coping with the problem

3.   Develop new strategies and try them out

4.   Assess how well the strategies are working and make adjustments as necessary.

             An old saying goes, “A problem shared is a problem halved.”  Psychotherapy helps lift the burden of distress, offers the possibility of change, and opens a door to greater ease and well-being.

Practitioners:  Michael Jaro,  Laura Fasano

Heart-centered psychotherapy.
Heart-centered psychotherapy integrates approaches from body-oriented psychology, spirituality and the creative arts. Using these approaches, I create a safe and supportive environment for the individual to have more ability to be in touch with and express their essential worthiness, love and vision. Heart-centered psychotherapy encourages the individual to explore how certain limitations block one's aliveness, spontaneity and self-expression. As these blocks are transformed one has the ability to make choices that are life-affirming, leading to more fulfillment and empowerment. We work with issues such as:

  • Depression, anxiety/panic attacks, self-blame and criticism
     
  • The effects of chronic pain/ illness for self or others
     
  • The effects of a dysfunctional or abusive family
     
  • Spiritual meaning, direction and faith
     
  • Relationship conflicts - in intimate relationships, as a parent, etc. * Self-esteem, self-assertion and self-acceptance
     
  • Finding meaning in one's work
     
  • Loss, grief, emptiness and alienation

In working with couples, heart-centered therapy supports each person to be in touch with and express feelings and wants in a clear and loving way. We explore how we may lose ourselves in relationship and how we return to both our individuality and our love with more passion and truthfulness. We work with issues around communication, sexuality, parenting, anger and blame, money and conflict resolution.


Practitioner: Michael Jaro

 

Practitioners:

 

Michael Jaro, M.A., L.M.H.C., has been a psychotherapist, trainer and supervisor for 20 years. He has been trained in psychosynthesis, bioenergetics, psychodrama, Shamanic healing, energy healing, improvisation, existential psychodynamic psychotherapy, group process work and meditation. He leads holistic psychotherapy groups and a counseling training for helping professionals. He integrates approaches from Western and transpersonal psychology with Eastern traditions to offer a therapy that allows you to follow and express your unique soul's path. He is committed to his own healing process and to the growth and transformation of the individual and the world around us. He is married and has two young sons.  Michael accepts most insurance; call Listening to speak with Michael for more information.
   
  Laura L. Fasano, M.A., L.M.H.C., Laura has been a psychotherapist in private practice for 15 years and teaches meditation, movement and stress reduction at Worcester State College. She has been trained in mindfulness based stress reduction, existential psychoanalytic psychotherapy, relational therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy, gestalt therapy, movement meditation, yoga and vipassana meditation. Beyond her work at Worcester State College, Laura currently has an independent practice of psychotherapy at Listening specializing in greater self-connection, understanding, and acceptance through mindfulness. Laura can be reached at 978-808-6012 for any questions or to schedule an appointment. Some insurances accepted.
   

Donna O’Brien has been practicing psychotherapy since 1981.  Her experience includes working with adults, adolescents, couples and groups around issues of depression, anxiety, stress, trauma, addictions, grief and adjustment.  She holds a masters degree in expressive therapy and a PhD in Clinical Psychology.  In addition she is trained in DBT (Dialectical Behavior Therapy) and EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing). Her work draws from psychodynamic, cognitive behavioral herapy and mindfulness perspectives.

 

Coming Home To Ourselves: Mindfulness and Psychotherapy

by Laura Fasano, MA , LMHC

     Mindfulness is simply being aware of where your attention is from one moment to the next, with gentle acceptance. Nothing is rejected. Mindfulness is mostly experiential and nonverbal ( i.e., sensory, somatic, intuitive, emotional) and is developed through practice.

     Psychotherapy informed by mindfulness uses present moment awareness as the primary vehicle to investigate into the source of one’s suffering. In this therapeutic approach, a basic assumption is that we are fundamentally whole. Dis-ease is seen as a separation from this wholeness. Tensions created by this internal split may manifest as disease in one or more realms of our being: physical, mental, emotional and spiritual.

      People often come to my office with a simple wish to feel better. In this desire to feel better, our inclination is to push our difficult experience away. Isn’t this seen as normal? Indeed, we all want to avoid pain. Yet this very act of unwittingly cutting parts of ourselves off is what exacerbates the problem. We split off from our original wholeness because, in our innocence, we don’t know any other way.

      Using mindfulness as a “solution” to our perceived problems, then, is to stop running and to look directly into the heart of the matter. Through quieting the mind and feeling into the body we can begin to discover those split off places and therefore, quite naturally, begin to heal them.

      Psychotherapy informed by mindfulness is a process of letting go with awareness into the yet revealed truth of one’s experience. This may sound simple, but it is not necessarily easy. Letting go into the unfamiliar can be difficult. What we encounter on the journey inward is the fear, rage, grief, etc., that was too much to feel when it happened.  The journey of coming home to ourselves necessitates becoming intimate with these unfelt emotions.

      So, why would we go here, to the places we’d rather not face? What usually happens is that the opportunity catches up with us! Life becomes unbearably difficult, painful, or simply unsatisfying. When this happens, we have two options: to either wake up or go to sleep. To take the inner journey, or numb out.

      If we choose to take this inner journey and explore our repressed feelings within the safety of the therapeutic connection, all the way back to the source of our pain and fear, we can heal. Our sense of who we are expands, and we feel more alive and engaged with the world. Learning from all experience, life becomes the great adventure.

 

 

 

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Last modified: 2/26/2010