Julie Ayala Chahal, LPC, SEP, EMDR-Certified
We are meant to be active participants in life, not let life happen to us.
Do you feel in control of your mind, emotions, and inner peace? Do you feel empowered? Do you have the deep, intimate connection to your people that you want?
I help individual women transform from stuck and overwhelmed to peaceful and in control by healing past trauma and rewire the mind, creating permanent change in their lives and how they feel.
I am not a passive counselor. My goal is to shift something inside you that allows you to make lasting changes in your life. I work with intention and specific therapeutic modalities, including EMDR and Somatic Experiencing, removing blocks and allowing you to become the best version of yourself. You will experience a sense of freedom and lightness when these blocks are removed, and you will understand who you are at your core in a way that you haven’t before.
I will guide you through the healing and growth process.
As a Licensed Professional Counselor, I offer individual therapy to women specializing in Trauma Therapy, Relationship Counseling and Therapy Intensives. Julie is a certified EMDR therapist and has completed extensive training to specialize in the treatment of trauma including certification in SEP.
If you have any questions or want more information, feel free to email me directly at julie@thecounselingcollectivefw.com. Counseling appointment fees with Julie Ayala, LPC are $225 for a 50 minute session and $4200 for a therapy intensive.
In the past several weeks, I’ve learned that many of the “thoughts” I was having were actually mental compulsions. I — like many others — had always associated the disorder with compulsive behaviors like washing one’s hands, counting floor tiles, or checking to see if a door was locked. But for those with Pure OCD or Pure O (nicknames for a subset of the disorder that don’t present physical behaviors), compulsions may be “rumination, mental reviewing, avoidance, reassurance seeking, or compulsive checking,” explains Chrissie Hodges, a mental health advocate and author Pure OCD: The Invisible Side of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder. The way I reviewed situations to determine how I felt or recall what I did, the way I asked loved ones for definite, concrete answers, and my obsessive internet research were all anxiety-reducing behaviors. Like someone who feels the need to wash their hands in order to feel clean, I needed to do these things in order to quell my worries.