Counselling

A warm, trauma-informed space to begin gently, even if you don't know what to say yet.

You may be wondering whether counselling is the right next step.

You may not know how to explain what has happened, where to begin, or whether you would be expected to tell me everything at once. That's okay.

If we work together, we can begin with what feels possible. You don't need to arrive with a clear story, the right words, or a plan for what counselling should look like.

My role is to offer a calm and respectful space where you can slow things down, feel heard without judgment, and begin making sense of what you have lived through at a pace that feels safe enough for you.

Meet Fiona
green watercolour counselling chair clear background
Abstract floral bouquet watercolour

What to expect in counselling

Counselling with me is collaborative, practical, and reflective. We begin with what is happening for you now and what you hope may be different in your life as a result of counselling.

You do not need to have a clear goal before you arrive. Part of the work may be helping you find language for what feels difficult, confusing or hard to carry.

In the first session

In the first session, we may talk about what has brought you to counselling, what has been affecting you most, and what you would like support with.

We may explore questions such as:

I will also explain practical things such as confidentiality, consent, session structure, and how we can work together.

Across future sessions

Future sessions may include making sense of what you have lived through, understanding emotional responses, noticing patterns, strengthening boundaries, rebuilding self-trust, and exploring what supports greater clarity and choice.

Depending on what is helpful for you, we may also use gentle psychoeducation, reflection, grounding strategies, body awareness, values-based questions, or practical ways to notice what is happening in your relationships and daily life.

The work may be different from week to week. Some sessions may feel reflective. Some may feel practical. Some may help you connect pieces of your story that have felt confusing or separate.

Counselling can support your wellbeing by helping you make sense of what you have lived through and move toward greater clarity, self-trust and choice.

Counselling for what you've lived through

Painful, traumatic or destabilising experiences can affect more than the moment they happened. They can shape how safe you feel, how you relate to others, how clearly you can hear yourself, and how much you trust your own needs and choices.

If we work together, we can make space not only for what happened, but for the emotional aftermath, the overwhelm, grief, shame, self-doubt, disconnection, boundary confusion or loss of confidence that may have followed.

You may recognise yourself in one or more of these areas.

Choose a topic to learn more.

What trauma can leave behind
Trauma is not only about what happened. It can also be about what happened inside you afterwards, how your body learned to stay alert, how your emotions learned to protect you, and how your sense of safety, identity or self-trust may have changed.

How it can show up
You may shut down, go blank, feel overwhelmed, become tearful, lose words, feel disconnected from your body, or keep pushing through long after you are exhausted. You may also carry shame or self-blame, even when another part of you knows you were doing your best to survive or cope.

Wanting connection and needing protection
Sometimes trauma leaves people caught between wanting connection and needing protection. One part of you may want closeness, clarity or change, while another part feels cautious, numb, avoidant, pleasing, watchful or afraid. These responses may be protective adaptations to experiences that once felt overwhelming or unsafe.

How counselling may help
In counselling, we can begin with what feels most present now: the body signals, emotions, memories, patterns or protective responses that are affecting your life today.

Together, we can gently make sense of these responses without shame, pressure, or judgement, and support you in reconnecting with yourself safely, rebuilding self-trust, and moving toward greater clarity and choice.

When harm affects your sense of self
Relationship harm is not only about what happened between you and another person. It can also be about what the relationship taught you to doubt, silence, carry, explain away or fear.

How it can show up
You may find yourself questioning your memories, your judgement, your needs, your reactions, or your right to have boundaries. You may carry grief for what you hoped the relationship would be, confusion about what was real, or shame for things that were never yours to carry.

Coercion, control and self-trust
When there has been coercion, control, betrayal, manipulation, physical violence, spiritual harm or repeated boundary violations, the emotional impact can reach deeply into your sense of self. It may affect how safe you feel with others, how you trust your own perceptions, and how much freedom you feel to choose what is right for you.

How counselling may help
In counselling, we can gently make sense of the emotional aftermath without pressure to minimise, justify or explain everything perfectly. We may explore how the relationship affected your self-trust, boundaries, bodily signals, grief, and sense of choice.

This work is about helping you understand what you lived through with compassion, reconnect with your own knowing, and begin rebuilding safety, clarity and self-trust in your relationship with yourself and others.

Safety note
Counselling Memories is not a crisis service. If you are currently unsafe or in immediate danger, please call 000 or contact a specialist family violence service.

When your inner signals have been questioned
Boundaries can become confusing when your needs, limits or perceptions have been ignored, questioned, punished or made to feel unreasonable.

How it can show up
You may find it hard to know what you feel until after the moment has passed. You may say yes while something inside you is saying no. You may feel responsible for other people’s disappointment, anger, silence or withdrawal.

The protective pattern underneath
Sometimes boundary confusion develops because part of you learned that keeping peace, staying quiet, pleasing others, or not needing too much was safer than being clear. These responses may have helped you stay connected or protected in the past, even if they now leave you feeling resentful, unsure, invisible or disconnected from yourself.

How counselling may help
In counselling, we can slow this down. We may gently notice what happens inside you when a boundary is needed, what makes it hard to hear your own needs, and what protective responses have helped you manage relationships.

This work is not about becoming harsh or detached. It is about learning to listen to yourself safely, recognise your own cues, strengthen boundaries in ways that feel realistic, and make choices that feel more grounded in who you are.

Over time, this may support a clearer relationship with your needs, your limits, your body, your values and your own sense of choice.

When life no longer feels the same
Grief can arise after many kinds of loss or change. It can arise after you have lost someone dear to you, when life no longer looks, feels or means what it once did, or when something you deeply hoped for has not come to be.

What may be lost or changing
You may be grieving a person, a relationship, a family structure, a role, a season of life, a faith community, a future you imagined, or a version of yourself you no longer feel connected to. Sometimes the loss is clear to others. Sometimes it is private, complicated or hard to explain.

Identity, meaning and belonging
Grief and major life transitions can unsettle your sense of identity, belonging, meaning and direction. You may feel changed by what has happened, but unsure how to understand who you are now. You may feel caught between what has been lost, what still matters, and what may slowly be forming in you.

How counselling may help
In counselling, there is space to honour both the loss and the ongoing relationship you may still carry with what has changed. We can gently explore the story of what happened, the meaning it holds, and how it has affected your sense of self, your relationships, your values and your future.

This work does not ask you to move on. It supports you in making sense of grief in a way that respects your pace, your memories, your body, your faith or meaning (where relevant), and the complexity of love, loss and change.

Over time, counselling may help you feel more able to live with what has changed while reconnecting with clarity, identity, belonging and choice.

When faith or meaning matters
Faith, meaning and spirituality can be deeply connected to identity, belonging, hope, values and community. For some people, these are important sources of strength. For others, they may also be connected with pain, confusion, pressure, silence, exclusion or harm.

How it can show up
You may be carrying spiritual questions, grief around faith or belonging, religious harm, spiritual abuse, changes in belief, or uncertainty about how to make sense of what has happened. You may feel torn between parts of your faith or community that still matter to you and parts that have felt unsafe, shaming or controlling.

When spirituality has been used to control
When spiritual or religious experiences have been used to minimise harm, silence your needs, override your boundaries, or make you doubt your own judgement, the impact can reach into your sense of self, safety, worth and belonging.

How counselling may help
My counselling approach is faith-aware and spiritually respectful. That means faith, spirituality, meaning, spiritual questions or religious harm will be included where they are important to you. It also means they do not need to be included if they are not relevant to you.

In counselling, we can gently make space for these areas without imposing answers or assumptions. The focus remains client-led: your values, your beliefs, your needs, your choices, your safety, and your own sense of meaning.

This work may help you untangle shame from spirituality, listen to yourself with more compassion, and make space for identity, belonging, and meaning in a way that feels safer and more honest for you.

Counselling in Warrandyte, Balwyn North and online

I offer in-person counselling in Warrandyte and Balwyn North, supporting clients across Melbourne’s east and the Yarra Ranges.

Online counselling is also available across Australia.

First step

A free 15-minute Discovery call

Sessions

60-minutes

Fees

$150 per session

Availability

Monday, Tuesday, Friday and Saturday.

You are welcome to begin gently

You do not need to have everything worked out before you reach out.

A free discovery call can help you ask questions, get a feel for how I work, and decide whether counselling feels like the right next step.