Healing with Hope
PTSD therapy at Balanced Life Therapy offers compassionate, trauma-informed support for individuals affected by single-event, repeated, or work-related trauma. PTSD can impact emotions, relationships, sleep, and daily life. We provide PTSD therapy in Barrie and online across Ontario, with extensive experience supporting first responders and others living with the lasting effects of trauma.

Compassionate Care


Emotional Stabilization Support
Trusted Trauma Support
Balanced Life Therapy brings many years of experience working with first responders who are exposed to intense stress, repeated trauma, and situations most people will never encounter firsthand. Police, firefighters, paramedics, correctional workers, nurses, dispatchers, military members, and other frontline professionals often carry trauma in ways that can be difficult to explain to others. The pressure to stay functional, composed, and alert can make it even harder to notice when the nervous system has been overloaded for too long.
PTSD in first responders can be connected to one major incident, repeated cumulative exposure, moral injury, grief, helplessness, or years of suppressing what the work demands them to witness. Therapy can offer a place where first responders do not have to minimize what they have been carrying. It can help reduce shame, improve emotional regulation, process traumatic material, and support healthier functioning both at work and at home.
We also understand that many first responders are used to pushing through, staying highly self-reliant, and protecting others before themselves. PTSD therapy can help shift that pattern by creating space for support, recovery, and healing without judgment.


Family Healing Support
PTSD affects not only the individual but also their partner, children, and wider family system. It can lead to emotional distance, irritability, withdrawal, sleep difficulties, and challenges with connection, even when love is present. Family members may feel confused, overwhelmed, or unsure how to respond, and children may sense tension or instability in the home.
Therapy can help because healing PTSD is not only about reducing symptoms in one person—it is also about restoring connection in relationships. When appropriate, therapy can support the individual while also helping couples and families understand PTSD and respond to each other in more supportive and healthy ways.
CBT can help people with PTSD notice the thought patterns that often develop after trauma, such as expecting danger everywhere, blaming themselves, distrusting others, or believing they are permanently damaged. CBT helps identify those patterns and gradually replace them with more grounded, accurate, and supportive ways of thinking. It can also help with avoidance, fear responses, anxiety, and depressive symptoms that often travel with PTSD
DBT can be especially helpful when PTSD shows up through intense emotional reactions, distress, anger, impulsivity, shutdown, or difficulty coping in the moment. DBT focuses on emotional regulation, distress tolerance, mindfulness, and interpersonal effectiveness. These skills can help people feel more stable and better equipped to handle triggers, relationship stress, and trauma-related emotional surges while deeper healing work is underway.
EMDR is one of the most recognized therapies for trauma and PTSD. It helps the brain process distressing memories so they no longer feel as emotionally raw, immediate, or overwhelming. For people living with PTSD, EMDR can help reduce the intensity of trauma memories, lessen triggers, and support the nervous system in moving out of constant survival mode. This can be especially helpful for first responders and others who feel that certain scenes, sounds, images, or moments still stay vividly active inside them.

Supportive Healing Path
The first step may begin with a free 20-minute consultation where you can talk about what is bringing you in, ask questions, and explore whether PTSD therapy at Balanced Life Therapy feels like the right fit. From there, therapy is shaped around your needs, your history, and your readiness.
You can expect a calm, respectful, and confidential space where your pace is honored. Therapy may include grounding, coping tools, emotional regulation strategies, trauma-informed education, EMDR, CBT, DBT, and other supportive approaches depending on what will be most helpful. The goal is not simply to survive trauma more quietly. It is to help you heal in a way that supports safety, connection, and daily life.
In-Person & Online
Balanced Life Therapy offers PTSD therapy in Barrie, Ontario at 27 Gowan St., as well as online PTSD therapy across Ontario. This flexibility allows clients to access care in the format that feels most comfortable and practical for their lives.
Some people prefer in-person therapy because it offers a grounded and contained environment. Others prefer virtual therapy because it makes support more accessible and easier to maintain consistently. Both options are available so that care can meet people where they are.

You can learn how to talk about hard things more openly, honestly, and respectfully without getting pulled into the same painful cycle.
Therapy can help you understand what happens during conflict and build new ways of responding that feel safer and more productive.
As you begin to feel more understood, it can become easier to reconnect emotionally and rebuild a sense of partnership.
When trust has been damaged, counselling can help you talk about what happened, understand the impact, and begin the work of repair.
You can start to understand your goals as a couple and make changes that support a stronger, healthier relationship over time.
Therapy can help you stop feeling like opponents and begin approaching challenges with more understanding, shared responsibility, and care.
Common Concerns
If you are looking for PTSD therapy in Barrie or online across Ontario, Balanced Life Therapy offers compassionate, experienced, trauma-informed support for individuals, first responders, and families affected by trauma. Reaching out can be the first step toward feeling safer, more connected, and less alone in what you have been carrying.