Therapists for college students near Boston College
Dr. Kaeley Majewski (she/her/hers) is a licensed clinical psychologist and an adjunct professor in the Clinical Psychology Department at William James College (WJC). Dr. Majewski graduated from American University with a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology. She continued her education at WJC earning a Master of Arts (MA) in Professional Psychology and a Psychology Doctorate (PsyD) in Clinical Psychology. Dr. Kaeley Majewski is the co-owner of Elysium Counseling LLC. Elysium is a female-owned united team of dedicated mental health professionals that believe in the power of togetherness, collaboration, and compassion. Dr. Majewski has experience working across many levels of care in a variety of settings, including adult and child/adolescent inpatient units at MetroWest Medical Center in Natick, MA, and in a residential and partial hospitalization DBT program with the Hill Center for Women at McLean Hospital, which is the largest psychiatric teaching hospital associated with Harvard Medical School. Dr. Majewski has experience at several counseling programs, including the Wellesley College Stone Center Counseling Service, The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Student and Mental Health Counseling Service, and the Curry College Counseling Center. She has supervisory experience as Assistant Director of Training with oversight of doctoral-level interns. Dr. Majewski utilizes a person-centered, relational approach. She is trained in behavioral modalities such as Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). She works closely with clients to learn ways to tolerate distress and regulate their emotions while learning to recover from difficult experiences. She works with clients to create a safe environment to discuss their challenges. A strong therapeutic alliance is important for clients to gain insight and learn coping skills. She strives to help clients to work on building a life worth living and navigating all that comes with it.
I work with adults of all ages, and particularly enjoy helping college students struggling with anxiety, depression, trauma and developmental issues that are prominent at this life stage. I provide a warm, collaborative environment within which I help my clients develop curiosity, self-compassion, and the courage to make important changes. I incorporate psychodynamic, relational, experiential/emotion-focused, cognitive-behavioral and mindfulness-based approaches in my interventions. I take an active approach to help my clients achieve their goals and resolve their problems. I see people in person in both my Wellesley Square and Coolidge Corner (Brookline) offices. I am also available for zoom sessions on a secure, end to end encrypted account.
**Daytime availability only.** I provide psychotherapy to individuals with a variety of concerns including anxiety, loneliness, relationship struggles, and transitions. My approach is to balance warmth and humor with feedback and direction. Young adults are an age with whom I have significant experience and enjoy working. Regardless of what brings you here, my goal is for you to feel understood and accepted as you are today, while hopeful about the changes you seek. My clinical orientation is strength based and relationship centered, incorporating psychodynamic and cognitive behavioral techniques. Racial and ethnic identity development is a key element of my training as well, and I use a multicultural lens with all clients. Please contact me to discuss your needs and to determine whether we might be a good fit.
As a clinical psychologist, I assist clients to address issues that are difficult to confront alone. I encourage self-reflection, help clients gain a clearer understanding of their life experiences and bring awareness to patterns of relating that are interfering with living a satisfying life. My orientation is primarily psychodynamic; it promotes self-exploration and gaining insight, along with productive behavior change. I take an active and engaged role with my clients by asking questions and offering ideas. I approach therapy as a collaborative process with the intention of reducing suffering, increasing self-understanding, and cultivating deeper and more compassionate relationships. I specialize in addressing chronic trauma, depression, anxiety, life transitions, loss, and relationship difficulties.
With a warm, down-to-earth, supportive, and engaged style, I offer treatment for a wide range of issues such as: Depression Anxiety OCD Relationship difficulties Life transitions Grief and loss Academic and career concerns Creative blocks As an integrative therapist, my approach is customized to what works best for you. While I draw from a wide variety of treatment approaches, principles of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), humanistic therapy, and psychodynamic therapy will frequently inform the work we do together. We will always prioritize your needs over adherence to any specific treatment approach or theory.
Please visit my profile to learn more about my services.
MEDA provides various clinical and therapeutic services to support individuals looking to improve their relationship with food and body. We offer the following services: Assessments to determine what level of care is best suited for your needs. Based on the individual assessment, we will make specialized recommendations for next steps – which may mean seeing a MEDA provider, joining a MEDA therapy group, providing a list of eating disorder specialists in your area, or recommending higher levels of care. Individual Therapy and Nutrition Counseling Sessions provide outpatient care to clients. Therapy Groups are a structured place to build a community with a shared goal of full recovery. Free Drop-in Support Groups are virtual groups moderated by a Master’s level therapist or Graduate clinical intern. Skills Coaching Sessions are supplementary services that assist individuals in identifying and implementing concrete steps to recovery.
“I don’t want to feel like this any longer.” Or “I just want to feel better about myself and my life.” Many of my clients will say something like this. They feel stuck. Anxieties, sadness, pain and the fears of not being good enough only grow. They can point to many good things in their lives but somehow feeling fulfilled and happier isn’t happening. Feeling ashamed to admit even to themselves or others about how hard things are while self-doubt is settling in. Perfectionism, self-criticism and imposter syndrome can tear you down inside even if no one else knows it. Work, school and relationships require energy that is harder to find. The need to present well can be exhausting and at times even destructive. You may try to remind yourself to feel grateful or more positive but sometimes even that reinforces a feeling of shame that your life feels so difficult. The idea of showing up for yourself starts to feel impossible; connecting with friends, family or a partner feels difficult or simply out of reach. Sadness can show up as anger or withdrawing from activities you once enjoyed and withdrawing from people who care about you. As the need to numb yourself grows, alcohol or other addictive patterns may increase. Anxiety, sadness, shame, medical or physical trauma, perinatal challenges, perfectionism and self-criticism, bullying or pain from childhood and family issues, relationship patterns you want to change, sports performance injuries or difficulties, negative thoughts and feelings about yourself and low self-esteem can all have origins in trauma. Trauma may not be the word that is used. Sometimes we think traumatic experiences must be extremely dramatic but actually trauma is experienced by all of us at different times in our lives. Trauma is really anything in our past that is difficult to think about or feel, draining us emotionally. Having a stronger sense of yourself will allow you to respond to challenges with more freedom, as well as direct your life with goals and purpose. If you want to let go of stuff from your past but aren’t sure of how to move forward, I can help.
As an Attachment based EMDR Certified Therapist I work well with high achieving young adults who feel unsatisfied in their relationships and struggle with health challenges.
PLEASE NOTE WE ARE CURRENTLY OFFERING GROUP COUNSELING. WE HAVE AVAILABLE TWO FREE SUPPORT GROUPS FOR YOUNG ADULTS (AGES 18-24). ONE IS FOR ALL GENDERS AND THE OTHER IS FOR MALE IDENTIFIED INDIVIDUALS. CALL OR EMAIL FOR MORE INFO. WE ALSO HAVE AVAILABLE FREE COUNSELING SERVICES PROVIDED BY A MASTERS LEVEL MENTAL HEALTH COUNSELING INTERN. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED PLEASE FILL OUT AN INQUIRY FORM ON OUR WEBSITE, EMAIL INQUIRY TO INFONCCSINC@GMAIL.COM OR CALL 781-600-6074 Neighborhood Counseling and Community Services, Inc.'s mission and overall goals are informed by generosity of spirit and concern for the common good. The organization was founded to help increase the availability of community based mental health and support services so that they are affordable and accessible to all. We seek to improve the quality of life for all by providing counseling and material support to people at vulnerable times in life - often periods of transition - as they find ways to help themselves, their families, friends and larger community.
Accepting New clients for tele-health sessions only Born and raised in Boston the owner has intimate knowledge of the city and the challenges people living in the city can face. Beyond that the owner recognized the benefit of working with a therapist that looks and has shared experiences with the client. Boston offers a unique population of families, working professionals, immigrants, and college students from both in and out of state. Each therapist on this team fits in one or more of those categories ensuring their ability to understand where you are coming from and where you want to go. It is out of that philosophy that Through The Forest Counseling was created. We know that for clients to get the most out of each session, they should first feel comfortable not just with the therapist, but also with the surroundings. This plays a significant role in their overall improvement. Let us guide you to your destination of a healthier, happier life.
Hello! The transition to college and university can be a very exciting one, and can also bring up new challenges and unforeseen emotions. I’m here to support you in an authentic and non-judgmental way as you navigate this transition and new experiences. I use a collaborative approach, centering and honoring YOU as the expert of your experience. Through our work together, I hope that you will feel empowered to take steps towards a healthy well-being.
I have been a licensed clinical psychologist since 1993 and have extensive I experience treating undergraduate and graduate students from Boston area universities for anxiety, depression, relationship, and eating-disorder issues. My therapeutic approach is broadly psychodynamic (focusing on thoughts and emotions) but with an active, problem-solving style. I see my clients both in-person and virtually by telehealth.
I work with young adults and adults who are struggling with a range of mental health concerns. I specialize in supporting individuals with eating disorders, personality disorders, anxiety, depression, and trauma-related concerns. I take an integrative approach, tailoring evidence-based interventions to meet the client’s individual needs and drawing from my experience as both a licensed mental health counselor (LMHC) and licensed art therapist (ATR). I aim to help my clients achieve meaningful change with an eclectic combination including dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), radically-open DBT, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and enhanced CBT, motivational interviewing, and art therapy, among others. Within this integrative framework, I hold a person-centered and trauma-informed lens and offer compassion, humor and directness to my clients. I believe that the therapeutic relationship is an essential foundation for growth and change, and I strive to create a space that is collaborative, warm, and accepting.
Hope Ave Therapy is a group of warm, skilled, experienced and effective licensed clinicians who practice in Waltham, MA and serve the Greater Boston community. We prioritize your comfort, trust and the therapeutic alliance and utilize research-supported "best practice" treatments to meet your needs and support you in growth and change.
Our College Mental Health Programs provide young adults with educational opportunities to build collegiate resilience, academic and wellness tools, and social connections. Our work is steeped in the principles of psychiatric rehabilitation: personhood, hope, choice, and self- determination, and we believe in recovery from mental health and substance use conditions, and the power of peers, mentoring, collaboration, mutuality, and inclusive communities.
You deserve to feel heard, understood, and valued for who you are as an individual! When we feel stuck and misunderstood, challenged by uncomfortable feelings, or we are struggling to navigate life, engaging in therapy allows us to understand what is contributing to each of these experiences. Being able to talk through these moments helps start us on a path toward feeling fulfilled and enlivened. Together, we will explore how your past and present experiences, your interpersonal relationships, and your learned coping strategies contributes to how you feel. I believe everyone can be a confident, strong, and thriving individual. I am warm, non-judgmental, and attentive. I strive to meet you where you are at, help you explore your thoughts and feelings in a safe space, and find ways to overcome the challenges you face. I believe in the power of conversation to help facilitate understanding and change. I work with adolescents and adults from all backgrounds. I have advanced training in psychodynamic psychotherapy. In addition to private practice, I am a Staff Psychologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center/Harvard Medical School.
Please visit my profile to learn more about my services.
Bernice Ruiz has over 18 years of dedicated service to children, youth, and families as an educator then mental health therapist. Her treatment approach is tailored to each clients' unique needs with a focus on depression, anxiety, relationship issues and school related-issues. She’s collaborated in delivering national suicide-prevention programming and has supported incarcerated mothers after release. As a first generation Haitian-American, she has a particular interest in supporting international students and other first/second-generation students address the stressors of navigating the education system.