by Finding Solutions Together | Mar 22, 2024 | Change, Children & Adolescence, Friendship, Mental Health, Parenting, Teens
Are Our Phones Smarter Than We Are? Smart phones are like our very own personal assistants (who we can even have a conversation with). Appointments, dinner dates, meetings, and deadlines are recorded to keep us on track. Email and Internet access are easy to use...
by Finding Solutions Together | Mar 17, 2024 | Change, Health & Fitness, Problem-Solving
Changing The Way We Think About “Diet” Everywhere we turn, we are hearing about a new diet craze. Whether it be endorsed by a favourite celebrity or health professional, or it seems to produce fast results. However, we quickly come to realize that after...
by Finding Solutions Together | Mar 16, 2024 | Change, Children & Adolescence, Family, Problem-Solving, Teens, Work & Employment
Many of the resources available for Autism and other developmental disabilities focus on children to the age of eighteen. Very few social service programs are geared to support people over the age of eighteen. So what about these young adults? What career development...
by Finding Solutions Together | Mar 15, 2024 | Anxiety, Change, Conflict, Crisis, Mental Health, Stress
What is Going Through Your Mind? How am I going to pay the bills this month? Am I spending enough time with my family? What do I really want to do with my life? Sometimes our daily routine can gradually appear redundant, unpleasant, and lacking excitement. But we’re...
by Finding Solutions Together | Mar 14, 2024 | Change
Photo credit: mikekinol from morguefile.com Who am I really? Why do I do the things I do? Why do I always fall for the wrong ones? Who am I compatible with? “Anyone who wants to know the human psyche will learn next to nothing from experimental psychology. He would be...
by Finding Solutions Together | Mar 13, 2024 | Anxiety, Change, Crisis, Depression, Health & Fitness, Mental Health, Problem-Solving, Stress
CBT- Breakthrough to Reduce Anxiety Anne’s presenting problem was preoccupation and fear that she had breast cancer. Five days a week, she would spend up to 80 per cent of her day thinking about the possibility that she might have cancer or that she had the symptoms...
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