Stress therapists in Santa Clara, Utah UT
We are proud to feature top rated Stress therapists in Santa Clara, UT. We encourage you to review each profile to find your best match.
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Richard Cox, PhD
Licensed Mental Health Counselor, LCMHC
Life is full of stressors, and those stressors can sometimes lead to anxiety. I know how I deal with my stressors, and with other elements that just want to beat me down. However, what works for me is not necessarily what will work for you. Therefore, our challenge is to determine what are the best tools for you in dealing with your stress, or even distress.
25 Years Experience
Online in Santa Clara, Utah (Online Only)
Psychotherapy.Com
Psychologist, Ph.D.
Cognitive Behavioral Treatment to reduce stress
28 Years Experience
Online in Santa Clara, Utah
Dr. Sheena Sikorski
Psychologist, PsyD, Licensed Psychologist
Well versed in feeling stressed or on the verge of burnout because you overwork yourself to show you're dedicated to your job, yet also sacrificing your mental well-being as a result? Learning how to find balance in work and life is a key essential to live a life of vitality. Let's work together to help you achieve the balance you desire!
7 Years Experience
Online in Santa Clara, Utah (Online Only)
Dr. Amanda Roberts
Psychologist, PhD Clinical Psychology, Masters in Marriage Family Therapy
Unaddressed stress is the basis for most medical and psychological afflictions. Close to 90% of all presentations in primary care physicians' offices are stress-related conditions treatable through outpatient psychotherapy. Dr Roberts will work diligently with you to develop dedicated practices to mitigate unnecessary stress. Through a mix of meditative practices and clinical tools you will learn ways to effectively manage and prevent the accumulation of stress.
39 Years Experience
Online in Santa Clara, Utah (Online Only)
Wendy Jensen LCSW
Licensed Clinical Social Worker, Licensed Clinical Social Worker, Certified Hypnotherapist, Diplomate Comprehensive Energy Psychology
Nearly half of women report a rise in stress levels over the past five years. And while women and men tend to cope with stress differently, we know that chronic stress contributes to a range of health problems in both sexes, including mental health disorders, heart disease and obesity, depression, anxiety, low sex drive, memory and concentration problems, headaches, upset stomach, lack of focus, lack of energy and mood swings.
Stress can be a motivator, and it can even be essential to survival. The body’s fight-or-flight mechanism tells a person when and how to respond to danger. However, when the body becomes triggered too easily, or there are too many stressors at one time, it can undermine a person’s mental and physical health and become harmful.
Stress is the body’s natural defense against predators and danger. It causes the body to flood with hormones that prepare its systems to evade or confront danger. People commonly refer to this as the fight-or-flight mechanism.
Managing stress calls for addressing the mind as well as the body, since both the brain and body contribute to symptoms. In my practice, I employ a variety of stress busting techniques derived from energy psychology including acupoint tapping, EMDR, Regenerating Images in Memory (RIM), guided meditation and exercises such as tai chi and qi gong movements meant to disapate stuck energy from the body.
29 Years Experience
Online in Santa Clara, Utah