Your Chair Therapy Clinic - a therapy practice where real conversations meet practical tools. Come as you are—we’ll work together to help things feel more manageable.

Real conversations. Genuine Support

Real conversations. Genuine Support

Welcome to Your Chair Therapy Clinic

You’re allowed to slow down here. There’s no pressure to perform, explain, or be anything other than yourself.

If anxiety feels constant or grief has changed how you move through the world, you don’t have to navigate it on your own. Here, we’ll explore your thoughts and emotions with care and find ways to help things feel more manageable.

Logo of a stylized chair and the text 'YOUR CHAIR THERAPY CLINIC' on a blurred, dark background.

Meet Regan, Registered Psychotherapist

A young woman with long blonde hair sitting on a white chair, smiling and resting her chin on her hand, in a bright room with a large potted plant in the background.

Psychotherapy is a space to slow down, make sense of what you’re experiencing, and feel less alone with it. My approach is collaborative, grounded, and practical — focused on helping things feel more manageable.

What’s weighing on you — let’s talk about it.

Some things are easy to name. Others sit quietly in the background, shaping how you feel, how you show up, and how much space you give yourself. Therapy is a place to slow down and talk about the things you’ve been carrying — whether they feel heavy, confusing, or hard to put into words. You don’t need to know exactly what’s “wrong” to begin. We can start with what’s been showing up for you lately and take it from there.

  • Grief can show up in waves, numbness, longing, or feeling like the world kept moving when yours changed — therapy offers a place to carry that loss without rushing it.

  • If you’re often prioritizing others, over-explaining, or feeling guilty for having needs, therapy can help you understand these patterns and begin relating from a more grounded place.

  • Anxiety isn’t just worry — it can live in your body, your thoughts, and your relationships, and therapy can help you feel steadier and more at ease over time.