Holistic Jungian therapist specializing in trauma and relationships
I am a Licensed Clinical Mental Health Counselor, National Certified Counselor, and trained play therapist with particular experience working with young adults, parents, and families. The ultimate professional goal of my work with my clients is to facilitate positive growth and healthy adjustment to all of life’s challenges. I hold certifications in DBT, SFBT, and am currently working to complete certification in EMDR. I am also trained in ACT and CBT, and I integrate techniques and skills associated with these modalities into person-centered therapy. The theory supporting person-centered methods aligns strongly with my beliefs about people. I believe that all people are deserving of true respect, and are worthy of acceptance without judgment, and I believe that within a therapeutic relationship based on these positive conditions, people can hone the skills necessary to achieve emotional health and become truly fully functioning.
Licensed · Professional · Cancel Anytime
Amy Wesley is a licensed clinical mental health counselor, a National Certified Counselor, and a trained play therapist who brings particular experience supporting young adults, parents, and families. With nine years of clinical practice, she focuses on helping people achieve positive growth and healthy adjustment when they face life’s challenges.
She holds counseling licenses in both South Carolina and North Carolina—licensed to practice in South Carolina as a Licensed Professional Counselor (SC LPC 10470) and in North Carolina as a Licensed Clinical Mental Health Counselor (NC LCMHC 5051). Amy also maintains training and certifications in a range of evidence-informed approaches, including Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) and Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT), and she is currently working toward certification in Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR).
In addition to those credentials, Amy is trained in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), and she weaves techniques from these models into a person-centered framework. That person-centered foundation reflects her core belief that people deserve sincere respect and acceptance without judgment, and that a therapeutic relationship built on these conditions helps individuals develop the skills needed for emotional well-being and fuller functioning.
Many people want to know whether online therapy can truly help. For common concerns such as stress, anxiety, depression, relationship struggles, or navigating life changes, online therapy has been shown to be as effective as traditional in-person sessions for most people.
One major benefit is convenience and flexibility – clients can connect in the way that works best for them, whether through video calls, phone sessions, live chat, or in-app messaging. That flexibility makes it easier to fit regular care into a busy life.
Licensed professionals provide online therapy, and if someone feels they need a different therapeutic fit they can change therapists at any time. For many clients, remote sessions offer a practical and effective path to address everyday mental health and relationship concerns.
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