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Check out therapists located nearby or offering teletherapy in Minnesota below.

More Therapists Nearby

Photo of Grace Heneghan, Pre-Licensed Professional in Mendota Heights, MN
Grace Heneghan
Pre-Licensed Professional, LGSW
Verified Verified
Minneapolis, MN 55408  (Online Only)
Not accepting new clients
​I enjoy working with folks exploring gender, sexuality, relationships, and the intersections of fatness, disability, and queerness. Additional areas of interest and experience include, sex therapy, neurodiversity, grief and loss, body image, self-worth, anxiety, depression, and COVID-19-related processing and support.
​I enjoy working with folks exploring gender, sexuality, relationships, and the intersections of fatness, disability, and queerness. Additional areas of interest and experience include, sex therapy, neurodiversity, grief and loss, body image, self-worth, anxiety, depression, and COVID-19-related processing and support.
(612) 453-4683 View (612) 453-4683

Online Therapists

Photo of Kim Aspen, Pre-Licensed Professional in Mendota Heights, MN
Kim Aspen
Pre-Licensed Professional, MS
Verified Verified
1 Endorsed
Maple Grove, MN 55369
I am passionate about helping individuals navigate neurodivergence (specifically ADHD and/or autism), PTSD, religious trauma, depression, anxiety, personality disorders, and mood disorders.
Hi, I'm Kim. :) My therapeutic approach centers around individuality and celebrating differences. People are complex beings and therapy is not "one size fits all." Open communication is important to me, so let's work together to figure out what is the most beneficial for you. Change is an exhausting journey and growth is never easy, but my goal is to create a safe space where your successes are celebrated and setbacks are met with compassion.
I am passionate about helping individuals navigate neurodivergence (specifically ADHD and/or autism), PTSD, religious trauma, depression, anxiety, personality disorders, and mood disorders.
Hi, I'm Kim. :) My therapeutic approach centers around individuality and celebrating differences. People are complex beings and therapy is not "one size fits all." Open communication is important to me, so let's work together to figure out what is the most beneficial for you. Change is an exhausting journey and growth is never easy, but my goal is to create a safe space where your successes are celebrated and setbacks are met with compassion.
(763) 284-3855 View (763) 284-3855
Photo of Acquire Mental Health, Marriage & Family Therapist in Mendota Heights, MN
Acquire Mental Health
Marriage & Family Therapist, LMFT
Verified Verified
Saint Cloud, MN 56303
Our mission is to normalize mental health, reduce the stigma, strengthen the community, and help people reach their goals/dreams. We use your expertise on yourself, your strengths, and our knowledge about mental health to help you get what you want out of therapy. We are someone on the outside who can recognize patterns, challenge them when needed, offer ways to change that pattern, but we don't shame you if you don't want to, can't or are not ready. We understand that you need a connection, and aren't an "authority" figure. We acknowledge we are human too.
Our mission is to normalize mental health, reduce the stigma, strengthen the community, and help people reach their goals/dreams. We use your expertise on yourself, your strengths, and our knowledge about mental health to help you get what you want out of therapy. We are someone on the outside who can recognize patterns, challenge them when needed, offer ways to change that pattern, but we don't shame you if you don't want to, can't or are not ready. We understand that you need a connection, and aren't an "authority" figure. We acknowledge we are human too.
(218) 228-3128 View (218) 228-3128

See more therapy options for Mendota Heights

Depression Therapists

What is the goal of therapy for depression?

Therapy for depression has several major goals. One is to relieve the mental pain of depression, which distorts feeling and thinking so that sufferers cannot see beyond their current state of mind or envision feeling better. Another is to give people the mental tools to recognize and correct the kinds of distorted thinking that turn a problem into a catastrophe and lead to despair. Therapy also teaches people how to process negative emotions in constructive ways, so they have more control over their own emotional reactivity. And it helps people regain the ability to see themselves positively, the motivation to do things, and the capacity for pleasure.

What happens in therapy for depression?

Perhaps most important, no matter the type of therapy, patients form an alliance with the therapist; that connection is therapeutic in itself, plus it becomes an instrument of change. Patients learn to identify and to challenge their own erroneous beliefs and thoughts that amplify the effects of negative experiences. They learn to identify situations in which they are especially vulnerable. And they learn new patterns of thinking and behaving. They may be given “homework” assignments in which they practice their developing skills. In addition, good therapists regularly monitor patients to assess whether and how much the condition is improving.

What therapy types help with depression?

Several types of short-term therapy have been found effective, each targeting one or more areas of dysfunction. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) helps clients challenge their negative thoughts and beliefs, learn new behavioral strategies, and curb reactivity to distressing situations. Behavioral activation (BA) is a form of therapy often used in conjunction with CBT; it focuses on engagement in rewarding activity as a pathway to changing negative feelings and disturbed mood. Another widely used approach is interpersonal therapy (IPT), which targets the social difficulties that both give rise to and get exacerbated by depression. Therapists may combine approaches as needed.

Can therapy for depression be done online?

Studies have found that online therapy can be highly effective for treating depression, although it may be more challenging to build a good therapist-patient alliance on screen than in person—at least at first. However, online therapy can offer considerable advantages. Accessibility and convenience are tops among them. Some people actually find it easier to talk about problems online than in person. While online therapy typically limits visibility of facial expression and body gestures that give important nonverbal cues to a patient’s state of mind, it can give therapists a glimpse into a patient’s world and life, providing information that can be highly useful in guiding therapy.

How effective is therapy for depression?

Many studies show that therapy is highly effective provided that patients complete the prescribed course of therapy, commonly 16 to 20 sessions. Over the long term, it is more effective than medication and the effects are more enduring. As a result, psychotherapy has the power not just to relieve current suffering but to prevent future episodes of the disorder. Therapy reverses the dysfunction in neural circuitry that disposes individuals to a negative view of themselves, the world, and their future and they acquire coping techniques, problem-solving skills, and understanding of their own vulnerabilities that are useful over the course of a lifetime.