Maya Anna Javanifard Verified
Couples and Family Therapist, Psychotherapist
MFT
350-500 NIS
None
Sliding Scale | Free Consultation | Student Discount
Hi, I'm a trauma-informed psychotherapist, passionate about helping individuals overcome challenges and achieve personal growth. I have spent the last 8 years studying psychology and have worked with diverse clients from all walks of life. I received a B.A. in Psychology from the University of California Santa Barbara and an M.A. in Marriage and Family Therapy from the California School of Professional Psychology while training at prestigious internships throughout the Los Angeles area.
My treatment approach centers around the therapeutic relationship and creating a safe environment for my clients. I will work alongside you as a resource to help guide you toward healing and reconnecting with your most authentic Self. Together, we will focus on transforming your relationship with yourself and others by identifying and repairing patterns that have left you feeling stuck, unfulfilled, or inauthentic.
My approach is primarily relational, valuing authenticity and connection with my clients, while drawing on a range of clinical interventions. I integrate mindfulness and self-compassion skills into my work to guide individuals out of suffering and toward emotional healing. My work is intended to enhance awareness and self-acceptance while mitigating self-doubt, fear, and resistance. Using an integrative approach, I help my clients reconnect to their true Self through healing their relationship to their mind, body, and soul.
Individual Therapy: Individual therapy serves as an effective avenue for delving into the thoughts, emotions, and behaviors that contribute to feelings of anxiety, low self-esteem, depression, shame, and anger. If these challenges hinder your growth, self-awareness, and overall fulfillment, you've come to the right place.
Couples Therapy: Couples therapy provides a safe space to identify interaction patterns and address challenges. It helps couples foster understanding and compassion in communication instead of judgment. By improving communication and conflict management, couples can build trust and intimacy. In my sessions, I focus on enhancing communication, deepening connections, and resolving conflicts, whether you're rekindling intimacy, considering marriage, or navigating separation and its effects on children. Couples therapy can offer valuable support.
Family Therapy: Family dynamics can oftentimes be complicated, leading to conflicts and misunderstandings. I partner with families to cultivate mutual understanding, improve communication, and strengthen relationships. I will help facilitate change by developing new ways to solve problems and resolve conflicts stemming from various life stressors such as blended families, academic struggles, job loss, financial pressures, relocation, substance misuse, mental health issues, divorce, bereavement, and loss. A healthy family system offers an environment where every member is empowered to have a voice and be heard so that the whole family can learn to flourish together.
MFT
California School of Professional Psychology at Alliant International University
2022
2
Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy - The Medical University of South Carolina - 2021
Mindfulness Self Compassion (MSC) - Alliant International University - 2021
Telephone Counseling, Online Therapy
Anxiety / Panic
Couples / Relationship / Marriage Counseling
Depression
Self-Esteem
Trauma / Post Traumatic Stress Disorder PTSD
Anxiety / Panic
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
Eating Disorders
Executive / Career / Life Coaching
Family Issues
Grief
Mood Disorders
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
Self-Harm / Suicide
Sex Therapy
Sexual Abuse / Rape
Stress Management
Children
Adolescents
Adults
Couples
Families
LGBTQ
Men
Women
English
Attachment-Based Family Therapy (ABFT)Attachment-based family therapy (ABFT) is a form of psychotherapy that focuses on the family's relationships and communication patterns. It is based on the theory that strong and secure attachments between family members are essential for emotional health and well-being. The goal of ABFT is to identify any problems in family relationships, enable family members to become more attuned to each other’s needs, and build a secure bond between them. It also helps family members to practice healthy communication skills, learn effective problem-solving strategies, and build trust within the family.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is a type of psychotherapy that focuses on how one's thoughts, feelings and behaviors are connected and can be changed. It is based on the idea that how we think (cognition) and how we feel (emotion) can influence how we behave. CBT helps people identify and challenge distorted thinking and replace it with more balanced thinking, leading to improved mood and behavior. ‘Homework’, usually containing practical writing exercises, is often completed by the client between sessions to reinforce the therapy. Examples of tools that practitioners often use are journaling, challenging beliefs, and mindfulness.
Emotion-Focused TherapyEmotion-focused therapy (EFT) is a type of psychotherapy that is based on the idea that emotions play a key role in a person’s mental health. EFT focuses on helping people to identify, accept, and manage their emotions in a healthy and productive way. The goal of EFT is to help people identify and express their emotions, understand how those emotions impact their behavior, and learn how to manage their emotions in a way that is adaptive and healthy. EFT is a research-based approach to psychotherapy that has been found to be effective in helping people manage a variety of mental health conditions. It has been used successfully in the treatment of individuals, couples, and families, as well as with groups. EFT is particularly beneficial for people who struggle with emotional regulation, mood disorders, anxiety, trauma, and relationship issues.
Family Systems TherapyFamily Systems Therapy is an approach to psychotherapy that emphasizes the importance of understanding how the family functions as a whole, and how individual family members interact and affect one another. It focuses on how family dynamics, such as communication patterns, roles, and power dynamics, shape behavior, and how changing these dynamics can lead to positive change. Family Systems Therapy is a collaborative approach, where the therapist works with the family as a whole to identify and address areas of conflict and distress.
Gottman MethodThe Gottman Method is an evidence-based approach to couples therapy that is designed to help couples strengthen their relationships and resolve conflicts. This method is based upon decades of research on thousands of couples and utilizes an approach that is both structured and collaborative. The method is designed to help couples increase respect, affection, and closeness, break through and resolve conflict, generate greater understanding, and to keep conflict discussions calm. It emphasizes the importance of self-regulation, constructive communication, and creating a safe environment for couples to talk and work through their issues. During sessions, couples work on skills such as active listening and expressing needs and feelings effectively. Couples are also given tools to identify and work through conflicts by using problem-solving techniques and developing strategies to manage emotions and reduce stress.
Holistic PsychotherapyHolistic psychotherapy emphasizes the individual's interconnectedness between the individual's physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual aspects and views them as inseparable components of a single holistic system. Holistic psychotherapy focuses on understanding how these components interact and affect a person’s wellbeing. The goal of holistic psychotherapy is to create a sense of wholeness and harmony within the individual, and to foster self-awareness and self-care. Holistic practitioners use a variety of approaches, including traditional talk therapy, mindfulness practices, and body-based therapies like movement therapy. They also may incorporate nutrition, physical activity, and other lifestyle factors into treatment plans.
Internal Family Systems (IFS)Internal Family Systems (IFS) is an evidence-based psychotherapy that uses the metaphor of an internal family of parts to help people gain awareness of how different parts of themselves can interact in healthy and unhealthy ways. IFS encourages people to become curious about their different parts, with the goal of helping them gain access to their true Self or core. Through this process, people can learn to recognize and care for the different parts of themselves, as well as develop compassionate understanding for the origins of their parts. A key principle of IFS is that each part within the person has its own positive intention and is trying to protect the person in some way. By understanding the positive intention of each part, the practitioner and client can work together to help the parts feel heard and understood, and to find more adaptive ways of meeting their needs. IFS has been found to be an effective treatment for a variety of mental health issues, including depression, anxiety, trauma, and relationship issues.
Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT)Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) is a form of therapy that combines cognitive behavioral therapy with mindfulness practices. It is based on the idea that our thoughts, emotions, and physical sensations can affect our mental health. MBCT helps individuals become aware of their thoughts, emotions, and physical sensations in order to gain insight and control over them. MBCT helps clients learn how to recognize their sense of being and see themselves as separate from their thoughts and moods. This separation can free the client from thought patterns in which the repeated negative messages may be dominating the client’s focus. After developing an awareness of the separation between thoughts, emotions, and the self, people in treatment may find that while the self and the emotions may exist simultaneously, they do not have to exist within the same dimension. The healing can take place when one learns how to interject positive thoughts into negative moods and thereby create a shift in mood.
Narrative TherapyNarrative therapy is a form of psychotherapy that focuses on the stories, or narratives, of a person's life in order to help them gain insights into their situation and develop skills to make positive changes. It is based on the idea that people construct their own stories and meanings to make sense of their lives and experiences. It emphasizes the strengths, values, and skills of the person, while also exploring the influences of culture and context on their life. Narrative therapy seeks to empower individuals by helping them to identify and use their inner resources to overcome challenges and create positive change.
PsychoanalysisPsychoanalysis is a form of psychotherapy that focuses on unconscious processes and is used to treat mental health conditions. It is based on the belief that unconscious conflicts are the root of psychological issues. It seeks to understand an individual's psychological experience, including thoughts, feelings, and behaviors, in order to identify patterns, uncover underlying conflicts, and gain insight into how these conflicts may be impacting the individual's life. Psychoanalysis is based on the idea that unconscious processes and experiences can affect behavior, mood, and relationships. The goal of psychoanalysis is to help the individual gain insight into these unconscious processes. Psychoanalysis suggests that the client’s symptoms can be reduced by bringing these conflicts into conscious awareness.
Psychodynamic TherapyPsychodynamic therapy is a form of therapy that focuses on the unconscious mind and how it affects behavior. It works to help people understand and work through past experiences and feelings that may be causing difficulties in the present. This type of therapy encourages individuals to explore their emotions, relationships, and behaviors in order to gain insight into their current difficulties. It can help individuals better understand themselves and their motivations, and gain insight into how past events have impacted their current lives. People tend to develop defense mechanisms when faced with challenges in life. Defense mechanisms may keep painful feelings, memories, and experiences in the unconscious. A few common defense mechanisms include: denial, repression, and rationalization. Psychodynamic therapists encourage people to speak freely about their emotions, desires, and fears. Being open may help uncover vulnerable feelings that have been pushed out of conscious awareness. According to psychodynamic theory, behavior is influenced by unconscious thought. Once painful feelings are brought forth and processed, the defense mechanisms are no longer needed and a person in treatment can start changing unhelpful patterns when coping with life’s challenges.
Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT)Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT) is an evidence-based practice used to help children, adolescents and their parents who have experienced a single or multiple traumatic events. This type of therapy combines cognitive and behavioral strategies to help people process their traumatic experiences, manage their distress, develop coping skills, and restore their sense of safety and well-being. TF-CBT focuses on education and skill-building, creating an environment of safety and trust, and using therapeutic activities to help people understand their responses and control their symptoms. Children are shown how perceptions may be distorted and are given the tools to redesign those perceptions. TF-CBT is a skills-based model, and it requires the child and parent to practice its components in order to be optimally effective. Parents and children are commonly asked to practice skills at home.
Individual Therapy
Couples Therapy
Family Therapy
Group Therapy
Home-based Therapy
Workshops/Educating
Therapist's Experience with Gap Year Students
With a deep understanding of the unique challenges faced by young adults, I am committed to fostering a supportive and empowering environment for them. I recognize the pressures of academic life, social transitions, and personal development, and I utilize evidence-based techniques to help students navigate these experiences.