Individual support

One-on-One Counselling in Vancouver

A confidential space to unburden yourself, explore your patterns, and reclaim your life.

Does This Sound Familiar?

  • You’re holding it together on the outside, but the inside everything feels heavy
  • Anxiety has crept into things that used to feel easy
  • You’ve lost touch with what you actually want
  • You find yourself replaying the same conversations, mistakes, and worries
  • You’ve been telling yourself you’ll deal with it later — but later never arrives

“So many of us walk around holding it all together, afraid that if we let go, everything will fall apart. Therapy is the place where you can finally set that weight down.”

How I Work With Individuals

Most people don’t come to therapy because of one specific thing. They come because the strategies that used to work have stopped working — and they’re not sure what to try next.

My work draws on Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and Existential Therapy. In practice that means we work on two levels at once:

The first level is the day-to-day. CBT gives us a way to examine the relationship between your thoughts, your emotions, and your behaviours — so we can interrupt the patterns keeping you stuck. The racing 3am thoughts. The procrastination loop. The story you’ve been telling yourself for years that may not actually be true.

The second level is deeper. Existential Therapy makes room for the questions underneath the symptoms — about meaning, identity, mortality, freedom, the life you’re actually living versus the one you thought you’d have. Not everyone wants to go there. But the option is on the table.

In both modes, my approach is measured. I think carefully about my questions and the way I frame things. The goal isn’t to give you advice or fix you — it’s to help you see yourself more clearly, and decide what you want to do about what you see.

What I Can Help With

People come to me for many reasons, including:

  • Anxiety and panic — racing thoughts, physical tension, the constant low hum of worry
  • Depression and low mood — feelings of disconnection, hopelessness, or going through the motions
  • Self-worth and the inner critic — the harsh internal voice that holds you to impossible standards
  • Life transitions — career changes, breakups, relocation, parenthood, retirement
  • Grief and loss — including the loss of relationships, identities, or imagined futures
  • Burnout and overwhelm — when your nervous system has been running hot for too long
  • Trauma and difficult past experiences — when the body keeps holding on to something the mind has tried to move past

Navigating Trauma and Overwhelm

When we go through something difficult or overwhelming, the body often holds onto it after the mind has tried to move on. This can leave you stuck in one of two states.

The first is hyper-arousal — anxiety, vigilance, the sense that the threat isn’t quite over. You’re always a little braced for something.

The second is hypo-arousal — numbness, shutdown, a flatness that makes everything feel far away. You’re functioning, but you’re not really here.

Both are the nervous system’s attempt to protect you, and both can settle. In our work together, we move slowly. We expand what therapists call your window of tolerance — the range in which you can feel difficult emotions without being overwhelmed by them — so the past can begin to integrate rather than intrude.

This isn’t about reliving anything. It’s about building the capacity to revisit hard material without getting stuck in it.

Rewriting Your Inner Narrative

For many people, the harshest voice they hear all day is their own.

It might sound like constant low-grade self-criticism, replaying old mistakes, holding yourself to standards you’d never apply to anyone else, or assuming the worst about how others see you. Over time this voice can feel like the truth — just how things are.

It isn’t. The inner critic is almost always a protective strategy that started out trying to help and has long since outgrown its usefulness. Somewhere along the way, being hard on yourself felt safer than being kind.

Rather than trying to silence this voice, we get curious about it. Where did it come from? What is it trying to protect? What would change if you stopped believing it?

The result, gradually, is a quieter mind — not because the voice disappears, but because you stop taking everything it says at face value.

What to Expect

The first session is mostly about getting to know each other. I’ll ask what’s bringing you in, what you’ve already tried, and what you’re hoping might shift. We won’t solve anything in 50 minutes — we’re just starting to build the relationship that the rest of the work depends on.

From there, the shape of our work depends on you. Some clients come for a focused piece of work and feel done in 8 to 12 sessions. Others stay longer, especially when there’s more history to explore. We check in regularly about whether the work is still useful, and at any point you’re free to say it isn’t.

The practical details:

  • 50-minute sessions. Standard length for individual work.
  • $160 per session. I don’t offer direct billing, but I provide receipts you can submit to your extended health plan — most plans in BC cover counselling with a Registered Clinical Counsellor.
  • Weekly to start. Momentum matters early on. Many clients move to biweekly once the work is established.
  • In-person or virtual. I work from a East Vancouver office and offer virtual sessions across BC. I prefer in-person when possible, but virtual is genuinely effective when that’s not practical.

You do not have to do this alone

I offer a free 20-minute consultation to help you decide whether now feels like the right time to begin.

Frequently Asked Questions

What if I don't know what's wrong — I just feel "off"?

That’s a more common starting point than people realize. Many of the people I work with don’t arrive with a clear problem to solve; they arrive with a sense that something underneath isn’t right. Part of the early work is putting language to it. We figure out what we’re actually dealing with together — you don’t need to know in advance.

I've tried therapy before and it didn't help. Why would this be different?

Honestly, it might not be. Therapy works through fit — the right therapist at the right time using the right approach for you. If a previous attempt didn’t help, it could have been timing, fit, approach, or some combination. I’d rather you do a free consultation and trust your own read of whether this feels different than commit to anything based on my pitch.

How is therapy different from talking to a friend?

Friends are essential, and a good friend can hold a lot. But friends have their own stakes in your life. They want you to feel better partly because they care, and partly because your distress affects them. Therapy is a relationship where the only agenda is your understanding of yourself. There’s nothing I need from you to be okay, which makes it possible to say things you wouldn’t say anywhere else.

Will you give me advice or tell me what to do?

Rarely. My job isn’t to give you my answer — it’s to help you find yours. Sometimes I’ll share an observation, suggest a frame, or offer a piece of information you might not have. But the decisions about your life stay with you. If you’re looking for someone to tell you what to do, I’m probably not the right fit.

Do you prescribe medication?

No — Registered Clinical Counsellors don’t prescribe in BC. If medication seems like it might be useful, that’s a conversation for your GP or a psychiatrist, and I’m happy to work alongside whoever you’re seeing on the medical side.

How do I know if I need therapy or if I should just push through?

There’s no clean test. But a useful question is: is what you’re doing working? If you’ve been telling yourself you’ll “deal with it later” for a while now, and later keeps not arriving, that’s usually a sign. You don’t need to be in crisis to benefit from therapy. Plenty of people come to do good work on themselves while their lives look fine from the outside.

How much does individual therapy cost?

Sessions are $160 for 50 minutes. I don’t offer direct billing, but I provide receipts after each session that you can submit to your extended health plan — most plans in BC cover counselling with a Registered Clinical Counsellor, though it’s worth confirming with your insurer. The first 20-minute consultation is free.

How long does therapy take?

It depends on what you’re working on. Some people come for focused short-term work and feel done in 8 to 12 sessions. Others stay longer, especially when there’s more history to explore. We’ll check in regularly about whether the work is still useful, and you’re free to end at any point.

About Me

I’m Justin Morrison, a Registered Clinical Counsellor raised in Ireland, based in Vancouver. I came to this work later in life, after my own struggles taught me that the things we can’t talk about are usually the things we most need to talk about.

I work with couples and individuals from my East Vancouver office and online across BC.

Read more about me

Working through something with a partner? Learn about couples therapy →

Ready To Take The Next Step?

I offer a free 20-minute consultation by phone or video. It’s a low-pressure way to ask questions, get a feel for whether we’d work well together, and decide what feels right from there. No commitment, no pitch.