About the Provider

Provider’s Lived Experience / Identities

Autistic, AuDHD, ADHD; Bisexual; Cisgender; Neurodivergent; Parent; White/European Diaspora; Woman

Sources of Pleasure and Fat Joy

Nature, audio books, crafting, Fall, and baking/cooking

Languages Spoken

English

In Practice Since…

2022

License or Registration Number(s)

British Columbia Association of Clinical Counsellors #19849 RCC

About the Therapy

Availability

Not accepting new clients, but have a waitlist they can join

Current Services

Individual Counseling / Therapy

Competencies

Neurodiversity

Specialties

Children/Adolescents; Neurodivergence; Parenting; Stress; Trauma

Primary Therapeutic Approaches

Existential; Expressive arts therapy; Motivational Interviewing; Narrative; Person-Centered; Play therapy; Strength-Based

Type of Service

In-person and Virtual / Online

Coaching Offered to Other Jurisdictions or Countries

No

Group Practice Name / Business Name

Moss & Fern Counselling

About the Money

Rates and Currency

$140 for 50-min session, CAD

Forms of Payment

credit card

Offers Sliding Scale or Low-cost Options

Not currently/all spots are taken

Insurance Accepted

Other Details

Land and Territory Acknowledgement

Moss & Fern Counselling honours and recognizes the countless sacrifices made by our Hosts so that we may live in the privilege that we do & we commit to putting our privilege to use by including decolonizing work that is both personal and professional as part of our practice. As this work also includes community and continuous learning, we commit to hiring Indigenous Facilitators/Educators in ways that are appropriate & as respectful as possible in accordance with our practice of allyship. The Indigenous People of this land, the unceded Coast Salish Territories, includes the Qayqayt and Kwikwetlem First Nations as well as the Semiahmoo, Katzie, Kwantlen, and Tsawwassen peoples, who have been stewards of this area for many generations. ​ The Qayqayt First Nation is one of the smallest First Nations in Canada and the only one registered without a land base. Chief Rhonda Larrabee gifts her story and her revitalization of the Qayqayt First Nations in the documentary called "A Tribe Of One".

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