CBT Therapy for Nighttime Anxiety: Calm Evenings, Restful Sleep
Evenings are supposed to be the soft landing after a long day. For many people, they are anything but. The quiet reveals worries you managed to ignore at work. The clock starts to feel like a judge. Your body, so ready for rest a few hours ago, suddenly acts like it is being chased. That combination of wired mind and tired body is the hallmark of nighttime anxiety, and it is stubborn. The good news is that CBT therapy offers a precise set of tools that fit this problem well. When used with consistency, those tools turn frantic evenings into a predictable glide toward sleep. I have sat with hundreds of clients who describe the same pattern: fine until dinner, restless after dishes, chest tight in bed, then a long debate with the ceiling. Some have clear sources of stress. Others do not understand why nighttime brings dread. They want specifics that work in real apartments with real partners and pets and neighbors upstairs. That is what this guide covers, including how CBT therapy connects to anxiety therapy more broadly, how trauma therapy intersects with sleep, and where accelerated resolution therapy and IFS therapy can help when traditional methods stall. Why nighttime anxiety hits harder An anxious brain prefers noise and motion. Distraction keeps catastrophic thoughts at bay during the day. When the evening gets quiet, unprocessed concerns bubble up. There is also a biological setup that makes nighttime anxiety likely. As cortisol falls and melatonin rises, the nervous system should shift toward rest. If you have trained your body to associate bed with worry, that same transition can feel unsafe. The mind jumps in with scanning thoughts, the sympathetic system revs up, and suddenly your bed carries the same physiological footprint as a deadline. I also see a second loop take hold. Worry about not sleeping becomes its own fuel. Thoughts like, If I do not fall asleep in 10 minutes, tomorrow will be ruined, drive adrenaline. Adrenaline stalls sleep. The clock confirms your fear. One bad night becomes a two week stretch, then a story about being a broken sleeper. That story can be changed. The CBT frame, applied to evenings CBT therapy starts with a simple map. Thoughts, feelings, and behaviors influence each other. Change any one of them in a focused way, and the others shift. In practice, anxiety therapy in the evening often targets three levers: Cognitive work, which turns vague dread into testable thoughts and then revises those thoughts with evidence. Behavioral work, which trains your brain to pair bed with sleep again and channels worry into safer times. Physiological work, which teaches your body to downshift predictably. Sophisticated techniques are useful, but the win usually comes from doing ordinary techniques with unusual consistency. That means setting a repeatable evening plan, rehearsing it, and being patient for two to four weeks while your nervous system learns the new pattern. A short example from practice A client, let us call her Maya, dreaded the stretch between 9 and midnight. She scrolled news for distraction and slipped into bed when she felt exhausted, which was often past 1. She told herself that tomorrow would implode if she did not sleep now. Some nights she took a hot shower at midnight and felt briefly better, then woke again at 3:30. We made four changes. She anchored her wake time at 6:45 daily. She created a small wind down routine that began at 9:45: lights at 50 percent, chamomile tea, a 15 minute novel, then a ten minute body scan. She set a 20 minute “worry time” at 6 pm with a notepad for practical planning and repetitive fears. Finally, if she was not asleep after about 20 to 30 minutes in bed, she got up and read in a dim corner until she was sleepy again. In ten days, she reported fewer middle of the night wake ups. By week three, the bedtime dread had shifted to annoyance, which is easier to live with. The routine did the heavy lifting, not a heroic mantra. The cognitive piece: unhooking from catastrophic thoughts Nighttime anxiety loves global, absolute thoughts. Everyone else is sleeping. I am failing at something basic. Tomorrow will be a disaster. They feel true because they fit the moment. Cognitive restructuring does not try to paste a happy thought over a scary one. It checks whether the thought, as stated, is accurate and helpful, then edits it to something you can act on. The move that helps most in the evening is called “specific, testable, and fair.” Take Tomorrow will be a disaster. Ask, What is the measurable claim here? Maybe, I will make three errors in tomorrow’s client meeting or I will snap at my kids in the morning. Now you have something you can test and, more importantly, plan for. You might decide to outline your first two talking points before bed, set a 5 minute buffer before the meeting to breathe, and tell your partner you need 10 quiet minutes in the kitchen before the morning rush. The revised thought could become, If I sleep poorly, I might be at 70 percent tomorrow. With a plan, I can still meet the standard that matters. That kind of thought does not shoot adrenaline into your veins. One more cognitive trap is clock watching. The number on the clock becomes a threat signal. You respond as if chased. When clients cover the clock and use time cues instead, their body calms. A time cue might be, If I am awake long enough to feel my thoughts loop three times, I will get up and read. That replaces judgment with a simple decision rule. Behavioral anchors that retrain the brain CBT for insomnia has a core insight: bed should only be for sleep and sex. If your bed becomes a desk, a therapy office, and a worry chamber, your body will bring wakefulness to the sheets. The method called stimulus control interrupts that conditioning. It asks you to keep wakeful activities out of bed and to leave bed when sleep does not come. Many people resist this at first. They do not want to “reward” insomnia by getting up. In practice, staying in bed while anxious rewards the anxiety with hours of attention. Walking to the sofa with a boring book and a low lamp gives your body a chance to reset. The return to bed then re-pairs the bed with sleepiness. Another behavioral pillar is a consistent wake time, even after a rough night. This one is rarely fun. You will want to sleep in to escape fatigue. But if you do, you borrow clarity from tonight and pay it back tomorrow with interest. Holding the wake time steady builds sleep drive that night. If you need to nap, keep it short, ideally 15 to 25 minutes, and finish before mid afternoon. Finally, there is the “worry time” I mentioned earlier. Setting aside 15 to 25 minutes before dinner for structured worry makes it easier to defer rumination at 11 pm. This is not a free form vent. You capture the worry, write the concrete problem, and note the next action or acceptance statement. If the worry shows up later, you can say, Scheduled for tomorrow at 6 pm. The brain relaxes when it trusts the problem will be handled. A simple evening framework you can test this week Here is a compact routine many clients use as a starter. Try it for 14 nights before judging. Fix your wake time within a 30 minute window, seven days a week. Start a 45 to 60 minute wind down before your target bedtime, with screens off or on blue light minimum. Keep bed for sleep and sex only, leaving if you feel stuck awake after about 20 to 30 minutes and returning when sleepy. Run a daily “worry time” before dinner where you list concerns and the first next step for each. Do a brief, repeatable relaxation practice in bed, like a 4 minute breath count or a 10 minute body scan. Physiological downshifts that work at night Relaxation is a crowded field. In session, I ask clients to audition a few techniques for two nights each and keep the one their body adopts most easily. The winners are simple. A breath pattern that restores balance without lightheadedness is 4 6 or 4 7. Inhale for 4, exhale for 6 or 7. The slightly longer exhale engages the parasympathetic system. Start with five rounds, pause, check in, and do five more if helpful. A body scan is not a mystical exercise. It is a checklist, from toes to scalp, that tells your muscles to stand down. I like a slow, neutral narration. “Left calf softens. Right calf softens. Lower back widens. Shoulder blades drop one notch.” Any time your mind lifts off, you start again at the toes without judgment. Predictable repetition is the point. Temperature shortcuts matter too. A warm bath 60 to 90 minutes before bed raises core temperature and then helps it fall a few tenths of a degree, which promotes sleepiness. Some people hate baths. A 10 minute warm shower can help, paired with a brief cool rinse for the hands and feet as you step out. If aches or restlessness drive your anxiety, nesting with pillows under knees, between ankles, or along your side can reduce background discomfort enough to let cognitive tools work. Do not let the perfect setup become a ritual you cannot sleep without. Two or three predictable comforts suffice. When trauma joins the room Many people with nighttime anxiety carry unresolved stress or trauma. They may not think of what they went through as trauma, but their body remembers it in the dark. Night is a cue for vulnerability. If you fit this description, your nervous system may respond to quiet with scans for threat. CBT therapy still helps, especially the parts that reduce catastrophic thinking and recondition bed as safe. But there are cases where anxiety therapy alone needs reinforcement. Trauma therapy tools become crucial in these cases. Approaches like accelerated resolution therapy and IFS therapy can process the raw material that drives nighttime activation. Accelerated resolution therapy uses imaginal exposure and eye movements to reconsolidate distressing images and sensations. Sessions are often focused and time limited, which aligns well with clients who are functioning during the day but haunted at night. IFS therapy offers a way to map the parts of you that protect, exile, or overwhelm. An IFS lens can uncover why a vigilant part refuses to let you sleep, then negotiate with it. I have watched clients sleep better not because they practiced more techniques, but because a previously isolated part of them no longer sounded the alarm at 2 am. If nightmares, flashbacks, or panic surges define your nights, consider a blended plan. Use the evening CBT structure for predictability and target the traumatic roots during weekly therapy. That two track approach works better than forcing CBT to carry work it was not built to do alone. On medication, caffeine, and timing Clients often ask about medication. For short stretches, sleep aids or anxiety medication can break a cycle and give you a platform to practice behavioral skills. The evidence base suggests that CBT for insomnia matches medications in the short term and usually outperforms them in durability. If a prescriber is involved, align the plan so the medicine supports habit building rather than replaces it. Caffeine is the predictable saboteur. I suggest a personal experiment: keep a two week log and move your last dose of caffeine earlier by 30 to 60 minutes every few days until you hit an early afternoon cut off. Many people learn that a 2 pm espresso is fine but a 3:30 cup is not, or that they sleep best when caffeine ends before noon. Decaf after lunch usually helps, but remember it still has a little caffeine. Alcohol seems helpful but fragments sleep. The trade off you face is a quicker onset of sleep against more awakenings and lighter sleep cycles later in the night. People prone to anxiety often feel the 3 am rebound. Try limiting to one drink with dinner and none within three hours of bed. The difference is often noticeable within a week. What to do during those awake windows If you wake in the middle of the night, make a gentle plan. Decide on a default activity now, before you are exhausted. Watching calming TV, reading paper pages, or listening to a familiar podcast at low volume can help. Keep lights low and avoid energizing content. If your mind wants to solve a problem, you can promise it five minutes at your next scheduled worry time and return to a neutral anchor like the breath count. Here is a compact in-bed sequence that many clients master: Place a hand on your belly and a hand on your chest. Breathe so the belly hand rises more than the chest hand. Mentally say “in, two, three, four” and “out, two, three, four, five, six.” After five rounds, scan from toes to knees to hips to shoulders, relaxing each as if you are loosening straps. If your mind insists on talking, repeat a short, boring phrase, such as “quiet now,” with each exhale. If you feel stuck awake, go to your designated chair and read under a dim lamp until your eyes get heavy, then return to bed. Tracking progress without feeding anxiety Measurements cut both ways. Tracking sleep in an app can motivate. It can also create a new obsession. I ask clients to track three items for two weeks, then reduce to weekly check ins. Bedtime range, not a precise minute. Wake time, steady within a 30 minute window. Subjective restfulness on a 1 to 5 scale. The trend matters more than any single night. If your averages improve every 7 to 10 days, your plan is working. If they do not, adjust one variable at a time. Move the wind down earlier by 15 minutes, tighten the wake time, or enforce the get out of bed rule more consistently. Troubleshooting the common snags You might follow the steps and still hit walls. A few patterns show up often. People who describe their bedtime as the only me time of the day will resist earlier wind down because it feels like giving up that window. The fix is to schedule me time earlier, even 20 minutes between work and dinner, so bedtime is not carrying the full weight of your needs. Highly analytical clients try to think their way to sleep. Cognitive tools help them avoid catastrophizing, but the final descent requires surrender. Frame the last 10 minutes in bed as practice, not problem solving. Your job is to repeat the breath and scan, not to evaluate whether it is working. Couples complicate things. If your partner watches a show in bed or needs the room icy while you prefer warmth, negotiate. Many pairs sleep better when they optimize the environment for sleep first and closeness second, then add a morning coffee ritual or evening cuddle on the sofa for connection. Parents are, frankly, in a different chapter. If your toddler wakes at 2 am, you will not engineer perfect cycles. You can still hold the wake time steady and use micro restorative moments. A ten minute midday chair rest with light music can carry surprising power. Temporary imperfection is not failure, it is adaptation. When to escalate care A light layer of nighttime anxiety usually yields to two to four weeks of CBT structure. If after a month you still dread bedtime daily, if panic attacks wake you several nights a week, or if you carry a history of trauma that comes alive at night, bring in more support. This is where integrative anxiety therapy shines. A therapist trained in CBT for insomnia plus accelerated resolution therapy or IFS therapy can tailor a plan that addresses both behavior and root causes. If depression is present, or if you have symptoms like snoring with daytime sleepiness that could indicate sleep apnea, a medical evaluation belongs in the plan. Good sleep sits at the intersection of psychology and physiology. Respect both. Building a personal template you will actually use One client, Marco, loved structure at work but rebelled against rules at home. We built a https://cruzbgjk660.lowescouponn.com/cbt-therapy-for-health-professionals-managing-compassion-fatigue-and-anxiety template that felt like a set of options, not orders. Monday through Thursday he kept a steady wake time and a short wind down. Friday and Saturday he slid the bedtime window by an hour and allowed a late dinner with friends, but he set an alarm to start winding down. Sunday he returned to the weekday plan. He called it his 80 percent routine. It worked because it matched his life. Another client kept a small ritual basket by the bed. Inside were a paper book, earplugs, an eye mask, and a lavender hand cream. She did not use all of them every night. The act of choosing one item cued her nervous system to expect rest. That is the spirit of CBT work at night. You craft a pattern your body learns to trust. A grounded way to start tonight Change tends to happen when it is specific and small. Choose two levers today. Fix your wake time and schedule a 20 minute worry time before dinner. Tomorrow, add the 45 minute wind down. Next week, practice the leave bed if stuck rule. Let your progress be uneven and steady, not perfect. Most people who stick with this end up sleeping better than they did even before they “had insomnia,” because they replace lucky sleep with durable sleep. CBT therapy is not a pep talk. It is a set of experiments that tip the balance toward calm. Layer in accelerated resolution therapy or IFS therapy if trauma keeps the night loud. Respect the basics: light down, temperature down, screens low, stimulants early. Honor the reality of your life and the humans you share it with. With time, your evenings can become what they are meant to be, a gentle ramp into the quiet your body craves.
Name: Erika's Counseling
Address: 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405
Phone: 208-593-6137
Website: https://www.erikascounseling.com/
Email: [email protected]
Hours:
Sunday: Closed
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Wednesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Thursday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Friday: Closed
Saturday: Closed
Open-location code (plus code): 43QM+G5 Uintah, Utah, USA
Map/listing URL: https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4
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Erika's Counseling provides counseling and coaching for women, with support around anxiety, trauma, depression, grief, burnout, chronic stress, and major life transitions.
The practice is led by Erika Beck, LCSW, and the official site says therapy services are available in Utah and Idaho.
The website describes a whole-person approach that may include CBT, ERP, ACT, ART, IFS, mindfulness, compassion-focused therapy, and nervous-system-informed care depending on the client’s needs.
For local visitors, the matching public listing places Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A in Uintah, Utah.
The practice focuses on creating a supportive, nonjudgmental setting where women can build coping skills, regulate emotions, and work through hard seasons with practical guidance.
If you are looking for a Uintah-based counseling office while also needing therapy licensed for Utah or Idaho, the site and listing provide a clear local starting point.
To ask about a free 15-minute consult, call 208-593-6137 or visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/.
For map directions and current listing hours, see https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4.
Popular Questions About Erika's Counseling
What does Erika's Counseling offer?
Erika's Counseling offers counseling and coaching for women. The site highlights support for anxiety, depression, trauma, grief and loss, burnout, chronic stress, self-esteem, body image, boundaries, communication, and life transitions.
Who leads the practice?
The website identifies Erika Beck, LCSW, as the therapist behind the practice.
What therapy approaches are mentioned on the site?
The official site mentions Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART), Internal Family Systems (IFS), Polyvagal Theory, mindfulness-based therapy, and compassion-focused therapy.
Who is this practice designed to serve?
The site is written primarily for women, and it also mentions support for moms as well as anxiety coaching for teen and tween girls and their parents.
Where can Erika's Counseling provide therapy?
The website says Erika Beck is licensed to provide therapy in Utah and Idaho.
What does the site say about counseling versus coaching?
The counseling-versus-coaching page explains that therapy is for mental health treatment and can address past, present, and future concerns, while coaching is presented as forward-focused support for problem-solving, values, goals, and growth from a more stable starting point.
Where is the Uintah office and what hours are listed?
The public listing shows Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405. Listed hours are Tuesday through Thursday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM, with Sunday, Monday, Friday, and Saturday marked closed.
How can I contact Erika's Counseling?
Call tel:+12085936137, email [email protected], visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/, or follow https://www.instagram.com/erikabeckcoaching/.
Landmarks Near Uintah, UT
Uintah City Park — Uintah City describes this as a central community park with trees, sports courts, a playground, a baseball field, and picnic space. If you are near the park or city center, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah office is a practical local reference point for directions.
Mouth of Weber Canyon — Uintah City says the community sits at the mouth of Weber Canyon. If you travel the canyon corridor regularly, the listed Uintah office provides a clear nearby therapy location reference.
Weber River — The city history page notes that Uintah is bordered by the Weber River on the south and west. If you use the river side of town as a local point of reference, the public map listing can help with routing to the office.
Uintah Bench — Uintah City notes the Uintah Bench to the north of town. If you are coming from bench-area neighborhoods and roads, the practice’s Uintah address gives you a simple local destination to work from.
Wasatch Mountains — The city history page places the Wasatch Mountains to the east of Uintah. If you live along the foothill side of the area, Erika's Counseling remains part of that same local Uintah setting.
Historic 25th Street — Visit Ogden describes Historic 25th Street as a major destination for shops, events, art strolls, and local activity. If you split time between Uintah and downtown Ogden, the Uintah office remains within the same broader local area.
Ogden Union Station — Ogden’s Union Station and museum district remains one of the area’s best-known landmarks. If you use Union Station or west downtown Ogden as a directional anchor, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah address is a useful nearby point of reference.
Hill Aerospace Museum — The official museum site presents Hill Aerospace Museum as a major visitor destination with free admission and extensive aircraft exhibits. If you commute through the Hill AFB corridor, the Uintah office is a helpful local therapy reference for route planning.
Ogden Nature Center — The Ogden Nature Center is a well-known education and wildlife destination in Ogden. If you are near west Ogden or use the nature center area as a landmark, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah location is still a recognizable nearby option.
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Read more about CBT Therapy for Nighttime Anxiety: Calm Evenings, Restful SleepAccelerated Resolution Therapy vs EMDR: Key Differences for Trauma Recovery
Therapy for trauma is not one-size-fits-all. Two methods, Accelerated Resolution Therapy and EMDR, both rely on eye movements and structured protocols to reduce distress linked to painful memories. They share a few roots yet feel different in the room, ask different things of clients, and move at different speeds. If you are weighing them for yourself or for someone you treat, the distinctions matter. I will lay out what typically happens in each, who tends to benefit, and what the evidence supports. I will also share practical details you only learn from sitting chairside, such as what to do when clients cannot tolerate details, how to handle dissociation, and how to fold these approaches into CBT therapy, IFS therapy, and anxiety therapy without losing the thread. What each approach sets out to do EMDR, developed by Francine Shapiro in the late 1980s, helps the brain reprocess distressing memories so that they become less vivid and less charged. The core idea, called adaptive information processing, is that unprocessed experiences get stuck, and bilateral stimulation such as eye movements can jumpstart natural integration. EMDR uses a structured eight phase protocol. Much of the work occurs while the client is recalling a target memory, following the clinician’s fingers or another bilateral cue, and noticing shifts in images, body sensations, and beliefs. Accelerated Resolution Therapy, created by Laney Rosenzweig around 2008, also uses lateral eye movements yet leans heavily on imagery techniques to reconsolidate the memory network. ART is more directive. After eliciting the target image and distress, the therapist guides the client to replace distressing scenes with preferred imagery and to resolve body sensations through stepwise eye movement sets. Clients do not have to verbalize details unless they want to. The goal is to keep the factual memory but erase the intense physiological charge, which often lifts symptoms quickly. A simple way to hold the difference: EMDR emphasizes reprocessing through the client’s own associative pathways, while ART blends reprocessing with guided imagery rescripting that is rapid, concrete, and often highly visual. What a session actually feels like In EMDR, after history taking and preparation, the clinician selects a target memory with the client, clarifies a negative cognition and a desired positive cognition, then measures baseline distress and belief strength. From there, the client brings up the worst part of the memory and tracks bilateral stimulation while reporting brief snapshots of what arises. The therapist keeps the process moving, focusing on nonjudgmental noticing rather than steering the content. Sets of eye movements usually last 30 to 60 seconds. Many clients describe a spontaneous flow of related images and sensations. Some cry or tremble, others feel heat move through their chest. When distress falls to near zero, the therapist installs the positive cognition and scans the body for residue. An ART session usually begins with a quick orienting practice to show the client how the eye movements feel. The therapist asks for the target problem and a snapshot of the worst moment, then checks the level of distress. The client holds the image while following the therapist’s fingers for a brief set. If distress spikes, the therapist quickly shifts to a soothing set, like watching a mental movie while relaxing the face and breath. From there the therapist actively directs imagery rescripting. For example, they may ask the client to watch the scene on a movie screen and change the ending, or to float above the moment and then swap the image with a preferred one that meets the same need. ART includes a technique called voluntary image replacement, where the new image is rehearsed until the old one loses its grip. Body sensations are targeted directly, such as moving a knot of fear from the stomach out through the hands. Throughout, clients can keep the storyline private. The therapist checks distress repeatedly, aiming for a complete drop before wrapping up. Both protocols ask the nervous system to hold dual attention, a foot in the memory and a foot in the present. The difference is in degree. EMDR lets the network unfold on its own, while ART takes the wheel and drives toward a specific endpoint. How they work under the hood Neither method relies on suggestion or forgetting. The memory remains, yet it stores differently. There are three widely discussed mechanisms. First, working memory load. Tracking a moving stimulus taxes the brain’s resources, which makes vivid recollection compete with the task. The memory loses some of its punch after repeated sets. This appears to be part of why nightmares cool and flashbacks lose intensity. Second, orienting response. Bilateral stimulation and smooth pursuit eye movements cue the brain to toggle between arousal and safety. When the client revisits the worst moments while the body is kept in relative calm, the association between the memory and the danger alarm weakens. Third, reconsolidation. When a memory is reactivated, it becomes temporarily labile. If during that window the person experiences new information that contradicts the old learning, the brain can update the network before it locks again. EMDR allows new associations to arise naturally. ART introduces explicit new imagery that competes with and overrides the distress cues. In practice I have seen clients forget the old visceral details not because anything was erased, but because the new version, practiced with strong sensory detail, becomes the most accessible route. This also explains why both approaches can slot into anxiety therapy and trauma therapy plans that use CBT therapy or IFS therapy. In CBT terms, both create corrective learning under conditions of safety, which strengthens new appraisals. In IFS terms, they can help unburden parts by giving them fresh experiences while the Self stays present, curious, and calm. Speed, dosing, and scope This is where clients often make their choice. ART is built for speed. A single episode of assault, a gruesome medical memory, or a car crash can often resolve to zero distress in one to three ART sessions. I have had veterans walk in with daily intrusive images and walk out after two sessions reporting only a dim recollection. Not every case is that rapid, yet the method is optimized for quick, complete symptom relief on a defined problem. EMDR can also be fast for single incident trauma, though the middle phases typically take longer. Many clients need six to twelve sessions to thoroughly process a target and its related experiences, sometimes more. Complex trauma, prolonged abuse, and attachment injuries usually require a longer course with careful preparation, both because there are many targets and because dissociation or parts conflicts may surface. The scope matters. ART is excellent for specific problems with a strong image and discrete body sensations. It can be adapted to broader themes, but it shines when the therapist and client can name a clear fear image, grief image, or shame scene. EMDR scales well from single events to complex webs. The network approach lets the system surface targets you might not have expected, such as a forgotten school humiliation that keeps a present day fear alive. What the research supports EMDR has a large evidence base. Dozens of randomized controlled trials and multiple meta analyses over the past three decades show EMDR reduces PTSD symptoms with effect sizes comparable to trauma focused CBT. It is recommended by the World Health Organization, the American Psychological Association, and the Department of Veterans Affairs as an evidence based treatment for PTSD. EMDR also has growing support for other conditions, including panic disorder and complicated grief, though the strongest data remain for trauma. ART’s evidence base is smaller but promising. Early studies in military and civilian populations found significant improvements in PTSD symptoms, depression, and anxiety, often after two to four sessions. A handful of randomized trials and several quasi experimental studies suggest large within group effect sizes and good durability at follow up. Researchers have also examined ART for complicated grief and moral injury with encouraging results. That said, the number of independent replications and head to head comparisons is still limited. If you are a clinician in a system that requires the most established methods, EMDR will check more boxes. If you have latitude to use emerging evidence, ART is reasonable when delivered by trained clinicians, particularly for discrete trauma memories or intrusive images that do not budge with talk therapy. Client experience: what tends to fit whom Some clients do not want to speak their trauma aloud. ART accommodates that preference. I have worked with first responders who could not bring themselves to describe the call that haunts them. https://holdenvxqi242.almoheet-travel.com/trauma-therapy-for-first-responders-the-role-of-accelerated-resolution-therapy Keeping details private allowed them to engage fully. ART also suits highly visual clients who can picture a scene clearly and take direction well. EMDR appeals to clients who prefer a less directive process and are willing to track what arises without heavy coaching. It can be ideal for those who want to understand their patterns, not just defang a single memory. People with complex trauma often benefit from the thorough preparation phases, which build affect tolerance, future templates, and resources before deep dives. Both methods require enough stability to tolerate distress during reactivation. People with active psychosis, mania, uncontrolled seizures, ongoing intoxication, or fragile medical conditions need careful screening and adaptations. Dissociation is not a contraindication, yet it must be recognized and managed. In EMDR I spend time strengthening dual awareness and containment skills before targeting the worst scenes. In ART I slow down, use more soothing sets, and anchor in the present between each imagery shift. A tale of two cases A 28 year old nurse came to therapy after a horrific ICU shift during the pandemic. A specific image replayed every night while she tried to sleep. She had tried standard anxiety therapy and sleep hygiene without relief. We used ART. In the first session she held the image while following my hand. Her distress surged, then settled. I prompted her to imagine the moment from a safe balcony, then to replace the worst snapshot with a new image that honored the patient and affirmed her competence. We rehearsed the new scene until her stomach unclenched. Two days later she reported that the old image would not stick. She could recall the facts, but it no longer invaded. A 42 year old man with a history of childhood neglect presented with severe irritability, nightmares, and mistrust. He also had panic when his partner did not reply to texts. We used EMDR. Preparation took several sessions, including establishing a calm place and practicing grounding. Targeting began with a recent fight, which linked to a chain of earlier experiences. Over several months we processed a dozen memories. He noticed grief and anger move through, then, slowly, a new belief took hold: I am worthy of care. The relationship stabilized, and his startle responses dropped. Either approach could have helped either person. In my experience the match between method and problem saved time and reduced suffering. The role of imagery, meaning, and parts ART’s voluntary image replacement is not superficial. Skeptics sometimes worry it might amount to wishful thinking, but that misses the depth of the process. The new imagery is anchored in felt safety and chosen meaning. When the client imagines walking back into a bedroom where they once froze, now with full strength in their legs, that experience writes into the body memory. If the new image ignores the truth, it will not stick. If it honors the need that went unmet, the nervous system often grabs it. This is compatible with IFS therapy. I often invite a part that holds fear to choose the new image. The part feels seen and gets what it longed for, which dissolves resistance. EMDR also attends to meaning, though with fewer explicit directives. As the network unfolds, clients spontaneously connect dots. A teacher’s sarcasm flashes through, then a belief forms: I was not the problem. The brain reorganizes. Many clients value this emergent insight. Again, IFS integrates cleanly. If a protector part tries to shut down processing, we pause, listen, and address its concerns before resuming sets. CBT therapy fits with both. Before, during, and after reprocessing, cognitive skills help clients label catastrophizing, take behavioral steps, and reinforce new appraisals. The difference is that with ART and EMDR, cognitive change is not forced. It follows somatic relief. Practical details that often shape the decision Training and availability. EMDR training is widespread. Many communities have several EMDR trained clinicians, and supervision groups are easy to find. ART training is available in many regions, yet fewer clinicians are certified. If you need a specific method, check the provider’s training level, not just a line on a website. Session length. ART often uses 60 to 90 minute sessions. EMDR ranges from 50 to 90 minutes, depending on the setting. Longer blocks can be efficient, though insurance coverage sometimes nudges clinicians toward standard hours. Insurance and coding. Both are billed under psychotherapy codes rather than unique procedure codes. Coverage hinges on diagnosis, medical necessity, and the clinician’s credential, not the brand of therapy. EMDR may satisfy institutional requirements more easily because of its extensive evidence base. Telehealth. Both methods adapt to video. For EMDR I use on screen light bars or bilateral audio tones, or I guide the client to self tap. For ART I demonstrate hand movements on camera, or we switch to lateral gaze shifts on a fixed target. Video lag can be a nuisance, so I keep cues simple and check eye fatigue. Privacy is non negotiable. No reprocessing if roommates are nearby. Safety and aftercare. I ask clients to schedule sessions at times that leave a buffer for rest. Sleep often deepens the gains, and fatigue can follow intense sets. A light meal, hydration, and a walk help. I give a simple one page aftercare sheet with grounding tips and a note that transient dreams can occur for a few nights. Side effects and edge cases Short term spikes in distress are common and not a sign of failure. That said, there are predictable edge cases. Clients with migraines sometimes report eye strain. I shorten sets and switch to tapping. People with a trauma history and chronic pain may find that reprocessing shifts pain sensations temporarily. I normalize this, pace carefully, and coordinate with their medical team. If a client becomes more detached during sets, I assume dissociation and pause. Orientation to the room, feet on the floor, a cold drink, or a brief naming of five colors can reset. In ART, if imagery does not come easily, I slow to concrete sensory details. What color is the wall. Is the door wood or metal. In EMDR, if the client keeps analyzing rather than noticing, I coach them to let the mind drift and to report what flickers, even if it seems irrelevant. How to choose when both are options Below is a brief comparison from the vantage point of client fit and workflow. If you want a fast, directive method that does not require speaking details, ART often fits better. If you prefer a less directive, exploratory process with a large evidence base for complex trauma, EMDR often fits better. For single incident, image heavy memories with high physiological charge, ART may be more efficient. For broad, tangled histories where you expect many linked targets, EMDR’s network model scales well. If you plan to integrate with IFS therapy or CBT therapy, both integrate smoothly, with ART leaning more on imagery skills and EMDR leaning more on emergent associations. A simple decision checklist for clients and clinicians Can the client tolerate recalling details aloud. If not, lean ART. Is the problem a discrete event or a web of experiences. Discrete points toward ART, webs point toward EMDR. What training and supervision are available locally. Competence beats brand. Does the client prefer clear direction or open ended exploration. Match the method to preference. Is there time pressure, such as a deployment date or court date. ART’s typical speed can be an asset. Integrating with other therapies rather than choosing a silo You do not need to pick a camp and stay there. Many of my trauma therapy cases use a braided approach. A client may spend two sessions on ART to neutralize a nightmare image, then the next month use EMDR to reprocess a chain of attachment memories that fuel relationship panic. CBT therapy supports behavioral activation and exposure plans as the nervous system calms. IFS therapy helps negotiate with parts that fear change. Anxiety therapy techniques, such as interoceptive exposure for panic, become easier as the background alarm drops. When integrating, sequence matters. I start by stabilizing sleep and daily rhythms if they are in free fall. Next I target the worst intrusive images with ART to reduce immediate suffering. With that relief in place, we can step into EMDR for deeper relational themes without risking overwhelm. Throughout, we track objective change, not just narratives. Fewer nightmares, less startle, more time in the grocery store aisle without scanning for exits. What success looks like and how to measure it Clients tend to know when it has worked. The old images do not stick, and their bodies react differently. Objective measures help confirm the change. I use brief scales such as the PCL for PTSD symptoms, a zero to ten Subjective Units of Distress rating on target memories, sleep logs, and simple exposure tasks such as driving past the crash site without detouring. In ART, success in session looks like distress falling to zero when the client calls up the once intolerable snapshot. They can imagine the scene while staying calm, and their body scan is clean. In EMDR, success looks similar, yet the positive cognition also feels fully true and holds during future checks. People often report that upsets in daily life no longer spiral into the old belief. Durability matters. Follow ups at one, three, and six months are ideal. Most clients retain gains. If a stressor reignites symptoms, booster sessions are brief. The nervous system remembers the path back to calm. Cost, access, and making the first appointment count Clinicians trained in EMDR are easier to find through established directories. ART provider lists exist, though coverage is patchier outside urban hubs. Either way, ask about current training level, recent experience with your kind of problem, and how they manage dissociation. If you carry complex trauma, ask about their preparation practices and whether they have a safety plan for between session spikes. At intake, bring a prioritized list of targets. For ART, write down the worst snapshot of each memory you want to address. For EMDR, jot the core belief that arises with each event, even if the words are rough. Tell the therapist about medical eye issues, seizure history, and any active substances. Ask about session length and whether extended sessions are available. If cost is a barrier, community clinics, veterans’ services, and university training centers may offer reduced fees. Some clinicians will schedule occasional longer sessions to speed progress, which can lower total cost over a course of care. Do not underestimate telehealth. If privacy at home is feasible, it expands your options. A grounded way to decide Both Accelerated Resolution Therapy and EMDR can calm the storms that follow trauma. The brain wants to heal. These methods give it a safe lane to do so. Let the problem you want to solve, the way you like to work, and the expertise available to you guide the choice. When the fit is right, you will feel it quickly in your sleep, your startle, and your ability to walk past the places that used to grip you.
Name: Erika's Counseling
Address: 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405
Phone: 208-593-6137
Website: https://www.erikascounseling.com/
Email: [email protected]
Hours:
Sunday: Closed
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Wednesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Thursday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Friday: Closed
Saturday: Closed
Open-location code (plus code): 43QM+G5 Uintah, Utah, USA
Map/listing URL: https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4
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Erika's Counseling provides counseling and coaching for women, with support around anxiety, trauma, depression, grief, burnout, chronic stress, and major life transitions.
The practice is led by Erika Beck, LCSW, and the official site says therapy services are available in Utah and Idaho.
The website describes a whole-person approach that may include CBT, ERP, ACT, ART, IFS, mindfulness, compassion-focused therapy, and nervous-system-informed care depending on the client’s needs.
For local visitors, the matching public listing places Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A in Uintah, Utah.
The practice focuses on creating a supportive, nonjudgmental setting where women can build coping skills, regulate emotions, and work through hard seasons with practical guidance.
If you are looking for a Uintah-based counseling office while also needing therapy licensed for Utah or Idaho, the site and listing provide a clear local starting point.
To ask about a free 15-minute consult, call 208-593-6137 or visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/.
For map directions and current listing hours, see https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4.
Popular Questions About Erika's Counseling
What does Erika's Counseling offer?
Erika's Counseling offers counseling and coaching for women. The site highlights support for anxiety, depression, trauma, grief and loss, burnout, chronic stress, self-esteem, body image, boundaries, communication, and life transitions.
Who leads the practice?
The website identifies Erika Beck, LCSW, as the therapist behind the practice.
What therapy approaches are mentioned on the site?
The official site mentions Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART), Internal Family Systems (IFS), Polyvagal Theory, mindfulness-based therapy, and compassion-focused therapy.
Who is this practice designed to serve?
The site is written primarily for women, and it also mentions support for moms as well as anxiety coaching for teen and tween girls and their parents.
Where can Erika's Counseling provide therapy?
The website says Erika Beck is licensed to provide therapy in Utah and Idaho.
What does the site say about counseling versus coaching?
The counseling-versus-coaching page explains that therapy is for mental health treatment and can address past, present, and future concerns, while coaching is presented as forward-focused support for problem-solving, values, goals, and growth from a more stable starting point.
Where is the Uintah office and what hours are listed?
The public listing shows Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405. Listed hours are Tuesday through Thursday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM, with Sunday, Monday, Friday, and Saturday marked closed.
How can I contact Erika's Counseling?
Call tel:+12085936137, email [email protected], visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/, or follow https://www.instagram.com/erikabeckcoaching/.
Landmarks Near Uintah, UT
Uintah City Park — Uintah City describes this as a central community park with trees, sports courts, a playground, a baseball field, and picnic space. If you are near the park or city center, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah office is a practical local reference point for directions.
Mouth of Weber Canyon — Uintah City says the community sits at the mouth of Weber Canyon. If you travel the canyon corridor regularly, the listed Uintah office provides a clear nearby therapy location reference.
Weber River — The city history page notes that Uintah is bordered by the Weber River on the south and west. If you use the river side of town as a local point of reference, the public map listing can help with routing to the office.
Uintah Bench — Uintah City notes the Uintah Bench to the north of town. If you are coming from bench-area neighborhoods and roads, the practice’s Uintah address gives you a simple local destination to work from.
Wasatch Mountains — The city history page places the Wasatch Mountains to the east of Uintah. If you live along the foothill side of the area, Erika's Counseling remains part of that same local Uintah setting.
Historic 25th Street — Visit Ogden describes Historic 25th Street as a major destination for shops, events, art strolls, and local activity. If you split time between Uintah and downtown Ogden, the Uintah office remains within the same broader local area.
Ogden Union Station — Ogden’s Union Station and museum district remains one of the area’s best-known landmarks. If you use Union Station or west downtown Ogden as a directional anchor, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah address is a useful nearby point of reference.
Hill Aerospace Museum — The official museum site presents Hill Aerospace Museum as a major visitor destination with free admission and extensive aircraft exhibits. If you commute through the Hill AFB corridor, the Uintah office is a helpful local therapy reference for route planning.
Ogden Nature Center — The Ogden Nature Center is a well-known education and wildlife destination in Ogden. If you are near west Ogden or use the nature center area as a landmark, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah location is still a recognizable nearby option.
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Read more about Accelerated Resolution Therapy vs EMDR: Key Differences for Trauma RecoveryCBT Therapy Worksheets: A Practical Anxiety Therapy Toolkit
Anxiety does not ask for permission. It spikes during a staff meeting, under fluorescent lights in a grocery store, or while you try to sleep. In the therapy room, we tame anxiety by building skills that travel outside the office. Worksheets provide structure for that work. They turn the fog of worry into legible steps, a place where you can observe, test, and change what anxiety does to you. I have used CBT therapy worksheets with hundreds of clients, from college students with test anxiety to executives who wake at 3 a.m. With heart-in-throat dread. The worksheets are not homework for homework’s sake. They are rehearsal spaces where new habits take shape, week after week, until the brain starts to expect calm rather than panic. When used well, they bridge talking and doing. They let you pause long enough to choose. Why worksheets work when anxiety runs the show Anxiety speeds everything up. Thoughts race, body sensations surge, and you start solving imagined disasters instead of present tasks. A good worksheet slows the moment. You move from raw fear to observable data, then to specific experiments that retrain your nervous system. Over time, these small, repeated shifts recalibrate threat detection. The practice does not erase danger, it teaches your attention to notice what is safe and useful right now. CBT therapy is a good match for anxiety therapy because it emphasizes three targets: thoughts, behaviors, and body responses. Worksheets organize those targets into steps. The thought record pulls distorted predictions into view. The exposure plan breaks avoidance patterns into graded tasks. The activity schedule counters the inertia that anxiety feeds. When you trace your symptoms through this structure, patterns become measurable. Anxiety loses its fog machine. An anchor exercise: The five-part thought record If I could only hand out one worksheet for anxiety, it would be the thought record. I have watched this page of boxes rescue people from avoidant spirals, help them sleep, and change how they talk to themselves during conflict. The version below is simple enough to use on a phone note or a small notebook page. Capture the moment: Write the situation, time, and place in one or two sentences. Include who was there. Name the emotion: Rate anxiety from 0 to 100. Add any other feelings like shame, anger, or sadness. Find the automatic thought: Write the sentence your mind said. Quote it as if it were on a ticker. Test the thought: List facts for and against it. Add a likely alternative, then rate your belief in each. Choose an action: One small behavior you will do in the next 24 hours that fits the alternative view. That is the skeleton. What brings it alive is detail. For example, a client of mine, Maya, wrote the following after she received a terse email: “My boss hates me. If I push back, I will lose my job.” Anxiety 85 out of 100. Facts for: He has been short by email before. He called a project behind last week. Facts against: He thanked me twice in the last month. My last review was strong. Two projects finished early. Alternative thought: He is stressed. I can ask for context. Belief in the automatic thought dropped from 85 to 40. She chose to draft a clarifying reply after lunch rather than ruminate. Her anxiety fell to 35 by evening. The magic is not positivity. It is precision. When you require your brain to produce evidence for catastrophic predictions, it often comes up thin. A believable alternative slides in and makes room for action. Behavioral tools that break the avoidance cycle Anxiety learns from what you do more than what you think. If you avoid something, relief arrives instantly, which teaches your system that avoidance works. Over weeks and months, life caves inward. Resuming action, carefully and repeatedly, rewires that loop. One of the most effective ways to do this work is a graded exposure ladder. I build these collaboratively, usually over two sessions. Let’s say crowded places trigger panic. The ladder might start with standing outside a small shop for two minutes, then walking one aisle, then visiting at a quieter time, then staying through one wave of anxiety without leaving. We anchor each rung to measurable criteria: time, distance, or steps. We predict anxiety levels before, track the peak, then watch the decline. The column on the right is always for discoveries. Clients usually learn that anxiety rises, peaks, and falls on its own. That evidence changes the next week’s choices. Activity scheduling serves a different purpose. Anxiety can drain energy and narrow behavior to safety moves. A weekly schedule that includes one or two master achievable tasks each day, plus a small dose of pleasure or meaning, nudges the nervous system toward engagement. The point is not to keep busy. It is to feed the system experiences that contradict the anxious brain’s thesis that the world is only threat. Worry time is a quiet powerhouse. You set aside a 15 to 30 minute window, at the same time each day, solely for worry. During the day, when worries surge, you write them on a capture sheet and return to the current task, promising your brain you will worry later. When worry time arrives, you worry on purpose, or plan, or discard. This structure respects the mind’s habit of forecasting while refusing to let it hijack the day. Grounding and body-based resets CBT is often thought heavy, but anxiety lives in the body. Worksheets that pair cognitive skills with somatic grounding work best. I keep a one-page menu of resets that clients practice until the moves feel familiar. Box breathing for four counts on each side, paced exhale breathing for six out and four in, cold water on the face, and a five-sense scan that names three items you can see, two you can feel, and one you can hear. The worksheet cues when to use which tool: before a meeting, during an exposure, after a nightmare. Anxiety spikes less when your body trusts you to steer it. For clients with trauma histories, the body work comes first. A nervous system that expects harm will not respond to evidence-based disputation until it feels safer. Trauma therapy principles apply: go slow, stay within the window of tolerance, track dissociation cues, and anchor to present time. A page that lists early signs of flooding and the top three anchors that work for you can prevent white-knuckle exposure. A compact toolkit you can print or keep on your phone Here is a set of worksheets that, used together, cover most presentations of anxiety. They form a simple flow: notice, test, act, and reflect. I encourage people to start with two and expand to four over the first month. Quick scan card: A small card with four prompts, used in the moment. What am I noticing right now, from 0 to 100? What is the automatic thought? What is one piece of evidence for and against? What is my next helpful action in the next 10 minutes? The card fits in a wallet or the notes app header, and it trains a short pattern interrupt. Full thought record: The five-part form above, used for situations that stick. Completing two or three per week is realistic, not every day. Exposure ladder: A one-page ladder with space for eight rungs, SUDS ratings from 0 to 100 before, peak, and after, and a discoveries column. You build one ladder per theme, such as crowds, driving, or performance. Activity and meaning scheduler: A weekly grid where you place no more than two must-do items per day, plus one 20 to 60 minute block for meaning or pleasure. You track energy, mood, and anxiety scores in a small row at the bottom. Worry capture and worry time: Two columns, day-long captures on the left, and the evening worry window notes on the right. Each item is labeled action, postpone, or discard. The point is not to fill boxes. It is to improve your life outside the paper. Bringing in IFS therapy when thoughts are not the whole story Sometimes a person fills out a textbook-perfect thought record and still feels hijacked. That often means the fear belongs to a younger or more protected part of the system that does not respond to logic. IFS therapy, or Internal Family Systems, pairs well with CBT in those moments. A short IFS-informed worksheet can help you identify parts at play and soften their grip without getting lost in narrative. I use three prompts: Which part of me is activated right now, and how old does it feel. What is it protecting me from. How does it want me to act. Then we add a column for what I call the adult advisor voice. From that steadier vantage, you validate the part’s intent, name current reality, and negotiate a small experiment. For instance, a client’s eleven-year-old part demanded perfection on a presentation and panicked at slides with any risk. The adult voice thanked it for caring about safety, reminded it of current competence, and asked it to watch while the adult practiced a version at 80 percent polish. The anxiety did not vanish, but the system allowed rehearsal. On paper, the negotiation was visible and repeatable. This integration makes CBT more humane. When the mind offers catastrophic thoughts, we test them. When a protective part wants to run or fight, we befriend it and ask for cooperation. The worksheet formalizes both. Accelerated Resolution Therapy as a reset when fear is sticky There are cases where anxiety hinges on vivid images, intrusive memories, or stuck bodily sensations that do not budge through standard cognitive work. Accelerated Resolution Therapy, or ART, can move that kind of material quickly. ART is a structured, therapist-guided protocol that uses sets of lateral eye movements while you visualize and then reconsolidate distressing images. Within a few sessions, the emotional charge drops, often dramatically. People keep the facts, but the sting and the body zap lose strength. While ART is conducted in session, a simple pre and post worksheet supports it. Before, clients rate distress, list triggers, and name the image that loops. After each ART session, they track sleep, body tension, and trigger frequency for a week, and they revisit one or two everyday activities that used to provoke anxiety. By pairing ART with CBT worksheets, clients can consolidate gains. The reconsolidated memory reduces the surge, and the thought and behavior work fills the space with healthier patterns. ART is not for self use in the same way a thought record is. It belongs in a therapy relationship, especially within trauma therapy where nervous systems can swing wide. Yet its effects often unlock CBT progress. If a grocery store aisle used to light up an image of a collapsing parent, ART might dampen that image, and the exposure ladder becomes realistic instead of punishing. Adapting the toolkit for specific anxiety profiles Panic attacks: The sheet that helps most is a panic cycle diagram, drawn in simple arrows. Sensation, interpretation, fear amplification, safety behaviors, and short-term relief. Underneath, you list what you will do at the first sign of a spike: slow exhale, bring attention to soles of feet, remind yourself of the cycle, and ride the wave for two to five minutes. After each episode, write a two-sentence debrief: what rose first, what helped, what surprised you. Data across five or six episodes shows patterns and erodes fear of the fear. Social anxiety: A behavioral experiment worksheet works well here. You deliberately test beliefs like people will think I am boring if there are pauses. You set up a small experiment: ask two follow-up questions in a conversation and allow a one-second pause. Predict anxiety, predict others’ reactions, then observe real reactions. Over ten experiments, beliefs shift. This is harder work than it looks on paper. A therapist’s presence helps design doable tests and interpret ambiguous data gently rather than harshly. Generalized worry: The worry time page does the heavy lift, supported by a problem-solving page that distinguishes between solvable and hypothetical worries. Solvable gets a next-action plan with dates. Hypothetical worries get postponed to worry time, then either reframed or set down. Pair this with a values worksheet so that daily actions do not become a series of safety moves. If a value is community and you have not attended anything in months, one 30 minute coffee becomes a target. Health anxiety: A checking log prevents reassurance spirals. You write down each time you search symptoms, ask for reassurance, or body scan. You track relief duration. Most people see that checking buys relief for minutes, not hours. The exposure ladder includes days without checking plus scheduled check-ins with a doctor at rational intervals. Performance anxiety: The thought record pairs with a rehearsal plan that includes deliberate mistakes. You intentionally mispronounce a word in practice or leave a minor slide imperfect. You discover that the world does not end, and your delivery often improves when you stop chasing 100 percent. The worksheet captures those discoveries, so the next event starts at a lower baseline. Making the work stick: how to use worksheets without resenting them Some people love forms. Many do not. The goal is not to create a new anxiety about doing the work perfectly. I ask clients to plan for B minus effort and make the tools portable. Take photos of handouts. Keep a running thought record in the same phone note, labeled by date, and star the ones that felt like breakthroughs. Embed the work in routines you already have, like five minutes after brushing your teeth at night or during a bus commute. A short consent with yourself helps. You are choosing to externalize your process for a season so that your brain can see itself. That season rarely lasts forever. Once patterns change, you can use mini versions, like a one-sentence alternative thought or a mental exposure rung, without writing it out. Edge cases, cautions, and judgment calls Worksheets should not become an avoidance of emotional contact. Someone with complex trauma may fill out pristine thought records to stay far from grief, anger, or fear. If that is you, fold in IFS therapy elements, include a feelings column that allows more than anxiety, and consider trauma therapy paced containment before heavy exposure work. On the other extreme, a client may chase sensation with exposure intensity and tip into flooding. The worksheet guardrail here is the window of tolerance. Rate arousal not only as anxiety, but also as dissociation or shutdown. If either spikes, back down one rung or increase grounding. Small consistent steps heal faster than heroic surges. Perfectionists will want to complete every box. You do not need to. A messy thought record that captures the core distortion and a credible alternative does more than a perfect one written after the surge has passed. If you only have time for the quick scan card, use it. Done consistently, it shapes the next week’s choices. Medication can support this work. A person taking an SSRI may find it easier to do exposure and thought testing steadily enough to have cumulative effect. Others prefer therapy alone. The worksheets serve either path. What they demand is repetition. A brief, real-world case mosaic Three snapshots. Ravi, 29, avoided driving on highways after a near miss. We built an exposure ladder with eight rungs, from sitting in a parked car at an on-ramp to driving one exit during off-peak hours. He paired each session with paced exhale breathing. By week five, he could drive two exits with anxiety peaking at 55 instead of 90 and falling to 20 within eight minutes. The discoveries column read: My hands sweat and then dry. Trucks feel big but stay in their lanes. Relief comes https://lanemdzk631.iamarrows.com/accelerated-resolution-therapy-in-trauma-therapy-myths-vs-facts faster when I do not leave. Nina, 41, had social anxiety tied to old school bullying. Thought records did little. We added an IFS therapy page that mapped a teenage protector who wanted her invisible. The adult advisor voice negotiated five small social experiments across two weeks. After each, a belief rating shifted. People are scanning for my failures softened from 80 to 40. She still felt the teenager’s tug but did not obey it as quickly. Omar, 34, had panic surges in grocery aisles, tied to a memory of his father collapsing when he was 12. ART work reduced the image’s intensity from 9 to 2 in two sessions. With that charge down, his exposure ladder moved. The worksheet notes showed that aisles still felt edgy, but he could stay through one surge and breathe without leaving. He started finishing weekly shops again, a small freedom with big ripple effects. Building your personal stack The exact set you keep should fit your patterns. If your anxiety is mostly future-focused worry with few surges, lean on worry time and problem-solving with one weekly thought record. If you live with quick spikes, keep the quick scan card on your phone’s home screen and one exposure ladder in progress. If trauma colors your fear, add a signs-of-flooding page and an IFS parts check-in so that you do not bulldoze younger protectors. If intrusive images drive your distress, talk with a therapist about accelerated resolution therapy and use tracking sheets to consolidate gains. Progress shows up in numbers first, then in the texture of your days. Anxiety reduces from 80 to 60 during a staff meeting, then you catch a joke your colleague makes, then you speak once without rehearsing the sentence ten times in your head. The worksheets do not win those moments for you. They make the practice visible enough to repeat. Final thoughts from the therapy chair I do not care whether your forms are pretty. I care whether you can cook dinner again, call your sister, take the subway, sleep through the night, or send the email you have been avoiding. CBT therapy worksheets give you a scaffold to do hard things on purpose. Over weeks, the scaffold becomes scenery. Anxiety still visits, but now you have a map, a toolkit, and proof that your nervous system can learn. That proof is the heart of anxiety therapy, and it is worth the ink.
Name: Erika's Counseling
Address: 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405
Phone: 208-593-6137
Website: https://www.erikascounseling.com/
Email: [email protected]
Hours:
Sunday: Closed
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Wednesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Thursday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Friday: Closed
Saturday: Closed
Open-location code (plus code): 43QM+G5 Uintah, Utah, USA
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Erika's Counseling provides counseling and coaching for women, with support around anxiety, trauma, depression, grief, burnout, chronic stress, and major life transitions.
The practice is led by Erika Beck, LCSW, and the official site says therapy services are available in Utah and Idaho.
The website describes a whole-person approach that may include CBT, ERP, ACT, ART, IFS, mindfulness, compassion-focused therapy, and nervous-system-informed care depending on the client’s needs.
For local visitors, the matching public listing places Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A in Uintah, Utah.
The practice focuses on creating a supportive, nonjudgmental setting where women can build coping skills, regulate emotions, and work through hard seasons with practical guidance.
If you are looking for a Uintah-based counseling office while also needing therapy licensed for Utah or Idaho, the site and listing provide a clear local starting point.
To ask about a free 15-minute consult, call 208-593-6137 or visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/.
For map directions and current listing hours, see https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4.
Popular Questions About Erika's Counseling
What does Erika's Counseling offer?
Erika's Counseling offers counseling and coaching for women. The site highlights support for anxiety, depression, trauma, grief and loss, burnout, chronic stress, self-esteem, body image, boundaries, communication, and life transitions.
Who leads the practice?
The website identifies Erika Beck, LCSW, as the therapist behind the practice.
What therapy approaches are mentioned on the site?
The official site mentions Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART), Internal Family Systems (IFS), Polyvagal Theory, mindfulness-based therapy, and compassion-focused therapy.
Who is this practice designed to serve?
The site is written primarily for women, and it also mentions support for moms as well as anxiety coaching for teen and tween girls and their parents.
Where can Erika's Counseling provide therapy?
The website says Erika Beck is licensed to provide therapy in Utah and Idaho.
What does the site say about counseling versus coaching?
The counseling-versus-coaching page explains that therapy is for mental health treatment and can address past, present, and future concerns, while coaching is presented as forward-focused support for problem-solving, values, goals, and growth from a more stable starting point.
Where is the Uintah office and what hours are listed?
The public listing shows Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405. Listed hours are Tuesday through Thursday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM, with Sunday, Monday, Friday, and Saturday marked closed.
How can I contact Erika's Counseling?
Call tel:+12085936137, email [email protected], visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/, or follow https://www.instagram.com/erikabeckcoaching/.
Landmarks Near Uintah, UT
Uintah City Park — Uintah City describes this as a central community park with trees, sports courts, a playground, a baseball field, and picnic space. If you are near the park or city center, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah office is a practical local reference point for directions.
Mouth of Weber Canyon — Uintah City says the community sits at the mouth of Weber Canyon. If you travel the canyon corridor regularly, the listed Uintah office provides a clear nearby therapy location reference.
Weber River — The city history page notes that Uintah is bordered by the Weber River on the south and west. If you use the river side of town as a local point of reference, the public map listing can help with routing to the office.
Uintah Bench — Uintah City notes the Uintah Bench to the north of town. If you are coming from bench-area neighborhoods and roads, the practice’s Uintah address gives you a simple local destination to work from.
Wasatch Mountains — The city history page places the Wasatch Mountains to the east of Uintah. If you live along the foothill side of the area, Erika's Counseling remains part of that same local Uintah setting.
Historic 25th Street — Visit Ogden describes Historic 25th Street as a major destination for shops, events, art strolls, and local activity. If you split time between Uintah and downtown Ogden, the Uintah office remains within the same broader local area.
Ogden Union Station — Ogden’s Union Station and museum district remains one of the area’s best-known landmarks. If you use Union Station or west downtown Ogden as a directional anchor, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah address is a useful nearby point of reference.
Hill Aerospace Museum — The official museum site presents Hill Aerospace Museum as a major visitor destination with free admission and extensive aircraft exhibits. If you commute through the Hill AFB corridor, the Uintah office is a helpful local therapy reference for route planning.
Ogden Nature Center — The Ogden Nature Center is a well-known education and wildlife destination in Ogden. If you are near west Ogden or use the nature center area as a landmark, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah location is still a recognizable nearby option.
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Read more about CBT Therapy Worksheets: A Practical Anxiety Therapy ToolkitAccelerated Resolution Therapy vs EMDR: Key Differences for Trauma Recovery
Therapy for trauma is not one-size-fits-all. Two methods, Accelerated Resolution Therapy and EMDR, both rely on eye movements and structured protocols to reduce distress linked to painful memories. They share a few roots yet feel different in the room, ask different things of clients, and move at different speeds. If you are weighing them for yourself or for someone you treat, the distinctions matter. I will lay out what typically happens in each, who tends to benefit, and what the evidence supports. I will also share practical details you only learn from sitting chairside, such as what to do when clients cannot tolerate details, how to handle dissociation, and how to fold these approaches into CBT therapy, IFS therapy, and anxiety therapy without losing the thread. What each approach sets out to do EMDR, developed by Francine Shapiro in the late 1980s, helps the brain reprocess distressing memories so that they become less vivid and less charged. The core idea, called adaptive information processing, is that unprocessed experiences get stuck, and bilateral stimulation such as eye movements can jumpstart natural integration. EMDR uses a structured eight phase protocol. Much of the work occurs while the client is recalling a target memory, following the clinician’s fingers or another bilateral cue, and noticing shifts in images, body sensations, and beliefs. Accelerated Resolution Therapy, created by Laney Rosenzweig around 2008, also uses lateral eye movements yet leans heavily on imagery techniques to reconsolidate the memory network. ART is more directive. After eliciting the target image and distress, the therapist guides the client to replace distressing scenes with preferred imagery and to resolve body sensations through stepwise eye movement sets. Clients do not have to verbalize details unless they want to. The goal is to keep the factual memory but erase the intense physiological charge, which often lifts symptoms quickly. A simple way to hold the difference: EMDR emphasizes reprocessing through the client’s own associative pathways, while ART blends reprocessing with guided imagery rescripting that is rapid, concrete, and often highly visual. What a session actually feels like In EMDR, after history taking and preparation, the clinician selects a target memory with the client, clarifies a negative cognition and a desired positive cognition, then measures baseline distress and belief strength. From there, the client brings up the worst part of the memory and tracks bilateral stimulation while reporting brief snapshots of what arises. The therapist keeps the process moving, focusing on nonjudgmental noticing rather than steering the content. Sets of eye movements usually last 30 to 60 seconds. Many clients describe a spontaneous flow of related images and sensations. Some cry or tremble, others feel heat move through their chest. When distress falls to near zero, the therapist installs the positive cognition and scans the body for residue. An ART session usually begins with a quick orienting practice to show the client how the eye movements feel. The therapist asks for the target problem and a snapshot of the worst moment, then checks the level of distress. The client holds the image while following the therapist’s fingers for a brief set. If distress spikes, the therapist quickly shifts to a soothing set, like watching a mental movie while relaxing the face and breath. From there the therapist actively directs imagery rescripting. For example, they may ask the client to watch the scene on a movie screen and change the ending, or to float above the moment and then swap the image with a preferred one that meets the same need. ART includes a technique called voluntary image replacement, where the new image is rehearsed until the old one loses its grip. Body sensations are targeted directly, such as moving a knot of fear from the stomach out through the hands. Throughout, clients can keep the storyline private. The therapist checks distress repeatedly, aiming for a complete drop before wrapping up. Both protocols ask the nervous system to hold dual attention, a foot in the memory and a foot in the present. The difference is in degree. EMDR lets the network unfold on its own, while ART takes the wheel and drives toward a specific endpoint. How they work under the hood Neither method relies on suggestion or forgetting. The memory remains, yet it stores differently. There are three widely discussed mechanisms. First, working memory load. Tracking a moving stimulus taxes the brain’s resources, which makes vivid recollection compete with the task. The memory loses some of its punch after repeated sets. This appears to be part of why nightmares cool and flashbacks lose intensity. Second, orienting response. Bilateral stimulation and smooth pursuit eye movements cue the brain to toggle between arousal and safety. When the client revisits the worst moments while the body is kept in relative calm, the association between the memory and the danger alarm weakens. Third, reconsolidation. When a memory is reactivated, it becomes temporarily labile. If during that window the person experiences new information that contradicts the old learning, the brain can update the network before it locks again. EMDR allows new associations to arise naturally. ART introduces explicit new imagery that competes with and overrides the distress cues. In practice I have seen clients forget the old visceral details not because anything was erased, but because the new version, practiced with strong sensory detail, becomes the most accessible route. This also explains why both approaches can slot into anxiety therapy and trauma therapy plans that use CBT therapy or IFS therapy. In CBT terms, both create corrective learning under conditions of safety, which strengthens new appraisals. In IFS terms, they can help unburden parts by giving them fresh experiences while the Self stays present, curious, and calm. Speed, dosing, and scope This is where clients often make their choice. ART is built for speed. A single episode of assault, a gruesome medical memory, or a car crash can often resolve to zero distress in one to three ART sessions. I have had veterans walk in with daily intrusive images and walk out after two sessions reporting only a dim recollection. Not every case is that rapid, yet the method is optimized for quick, complete symptom relief on a defined problem. EMDR can also be fast for single incident trauma, though the middle phases typically take longer. Many clients need six to twelve sessions to thoroughly process a target and its related experiences, sometimes more. Complex trauma, prolonged abuse, and attachment injuries usually require a longer course with careful preparation, both because there are many targets and because dissociation or parts conflicts may surface. The scope matters. ART is excellent for specific problems with a strong image and discrete body sensations. It can be adapted to broader themes, but it shines when the therapist and client can name a clear fear image, grief image, or shame scene. EMDR scales well from single events to complex webs. The network approach lets the system surface targets you might not have expected, such as a forgotten school humiliation that keeps a present day fear alive. What the research supports EMDR has a large evidence base. Dozens of randomized controlled trials and multiple meta analyses over the past three decades show EMDR reduces PTSD symptoms with effect sizes comparable to trauma focused CBT. It is recommended by the World Health Organization, the American Psychological Association, and the Department of Veterans Affairs as an evidence based treatment for PTSD. EMDR also has growing support for other conditions, including panic disorder and complicated grief, though the strongest data remain for trauma. ART’s evidence base is smaller but promising. Early studies in military and civilian populations found significant improvements in PTSD symptoms, depression, and anxiety, often after two to four sessions. A handful of randomized trials and several quasi experimental studies suggest large within group effect sizes and good durability at follow up. Researchers have also examined ART for complicated grief and moral injury with encouraging results. That said, the number of independent replications and head to head comparisons is still limited. If you are a clinician in a system that requires the most established methods, EMDR will check more boxes. If you have latitude to use emerging evidence, ART is reasonable when delivered by trained clinicians, particularly for discrete trauma memories or intrusive images that do not budge with talk therapy. Client experience: what tends to fit whom Some clients do not want to speak their trauma aloud. ART accommodates that preference. I have worked with first responders who could not bring themselves to describe the call that haunts them. Keeping details private allowed them to engage fully. ART also suits highly visual clients who can picture a scene clearly and take direction well. EMDR appeals to clients who prefer a less directive process and are willing to track what arises without heavy coaching. It can be ideal for those who want to understand their patterns, not just defang a single memory. People with complex trauma often benefit from the thorough preparation phases, which build affect tolerance, future templates, and resources before deep dives. Both methods require enough stability to tolerate distress during reactivation. People with active psychosis, mania, uncontrolled seizures, ongoing intoxication, or fragile medical conditions need careful screening and adaptations. Dissociation is not a contraindication, yet it must be recognized and managed. In EMDR I spend time strengthening dual awareness and containment skills before targeting the worst scenes. In ART I slow down, use more soothing sets, and anchor in the present between each imagery shift. A tale of two cases A 28 year old nurse came to therapy after a horrific ICU shift during the pandemic. A specific image replayed every night while she tried to sleep. She had tried standard anxiety therapy and sleep hygiene without relief. We used ART. In the first session she held the image while following my hand. Her distress surged, then settled. I prompted her to imagine the moment from a safe balcony, then to replace the worst snapshot with a new image that honored the patient and affirmed her competence. We rehearsed the new scene until her stomach unclenched. Two days later she reported that the old image would not stick. She could recall the facts, but it no longer invaded. A 42 year old man with a history of childhood neglect presented with severe irritability, nightmares, and mistrust. He also had panic when his partner did not reply to texts. We used EMDR. Preparation took several sessions, including establishing a calm place and practicing grounding. Targeting began with a recent fight, which linked to a chain of earlier experiences. Over several months we processed a dozen memories. He noticed grief and anger move through, then, slowly, a new belief took hold: I am worthy of care. The relationship stabilized, and his startle responses dropped. Either approach could have helped either person. In my experience the match between method and problem saved time and reduced suffering. The role of imagery, meaning, and parts ART’s voluntary image replacement is not superficial. Skeptics sometimes worry it might amount to wishful thinking, but that misses the depth of the process. The new imagery is anchored in felt safety and chosen meaning. When the client imagines walking back into a bedroom where they once froze, now with full strength in their legs, that experience writes into the body memory. If the new image ignores the truth, https://lanespdz879.theburnward.com/ifs-therapy-for-trauma-memories-unburdening-with-safety-and-care it will not stick. If it honors the need that went unmet, the nervous system often grabs it. This is compatible with IFS therapy. I often invite a part that holds fear to choose the new image. The part feels seen and gets what it longed for, which dissolves resistance. EMDR also attends to meaning, though with fewer explicit directives. As the network unfolds, clients spontaneously connect dots. A teacher’s sarcasm flashes through, then a belief forms: I was not the problem. The brain reorganizes. Many clients value this emergent insight. Again, IFS integrates cleanly. If a protector part tries to shut down processing, we pause, listen, and address its concerns before resuming sets. CBT therapy fits with both. Before, during, and after reprocessing, cognitive skills help clients label catastrophizing, take behavioral steps, and reinforce new appraisals. The difference is that with ART and EMDR, cognitive change is not forced. It follows somatic relief. Practical details that often shape the decision Training and availability. EMDR training is widespread. Many communities have several EMDR trained clinicians, and supervision groups are easy to find. ART training is available in many regions, yet fewer clinicians are certified. If you need a specific method, check the provider’s training level, not just a line on a website. Session length. ART often uses 60 to 90 minute sessions. EMDR ranges from 50 to 90 minutes, depending on the setting. Longer blocks can be efficient, though insurance coverage sometimes nudges clinicians toward standard hours. Insurance and coding. Both are billed under psychotherapy codes rather than unique procedure codes. Coverage hinges on diagnosis, medical necessity, and the clinician’s credential, not the brand of therapy. EMDR may satisfy institutional requirements more easily because of its extensive evidence base. Telehealth. Both methods adapt to video. For EMDR I use on screen light bars or bilateral audio tones, or I guide the client to self tap. For ART I demonstrate hand movements on camera, or we switch to lateral gaze shifts on a fixed target. Video lag can be a nuisance, so I keep cues simple and check eye fatigue. Privacy is non negotiable. No reprocessing if roommates are nearby. Safety and aftercare. I ask clients to schedule sessions at times that leave a buffer for rest. Sleep often deepens the gains, and fatigue can follow intense sets. A light meal, hydration, and a walk help. I give a simple one page aftercare sheet with grounding tips and a note that transient dreams can occur for a few nights. Side effects and edge cases Short term spikes in distress are common and not a sign of failure. That said, there are predictable edge cases. Clients with migraines sometimes report eye strain. I shorten sets and switch to tapping. People with a trauma history and chronic pain may find that reprocessing shifts pain sensations temporarily. I normalize this, pace carefully, and coordinate with their medical team. If a client becomes more detached during sets, I assume dissociation and pause. Orientation to the room, feet on the floor, a cold drink, or a brief naming of five colors can reset. In ART, if imagery does not come easily, I slow to concrete sensory details. What color is the wall. Is the door wood or metal. In EMDR, if the client keeps analyzing rather than noticing, I coach them to let the mind drift and to report what flickers, even if it seems irrelevant. How to choose when both are options Below is a brief comparison from the vantage point of client fit and workflow. If you want a fast, directive method that does not require speaking details, ART often fits better. If you prefer a less directive, exploratory process with a large evidence base for complex trauma, EMDR often fits better. For single incident, image heavy memories with high physiological charge, ART may be more efficient. For broad, tangled histories where you expect many linked targets, EMDR’s network model scales well. If you plan to integrate with IFS therapy or CBT therapy, both integrate smoothly, with ART leaning more on imagery skills and EMDR leaning more on emergent associations. A simple decision checklist for clients and clinicians Can the client tolerate recalling details aloud. If not, lean ART. Is the problem a discrete event or a web of experiences. Discrete points toward ART, webs point toward EMDR. What training and supervision are available locally. Competence beats brand. Does the client prefer clear direction or open ended exploration. Match the method to preference. Is there time pressure, such as a deployment date or court date. ART’s typical speed can be an asset. Integrating with other therapies rather than choosing a silo You do not need to pick a camp and stay there. Many of my trauma therapy cases use a braided approach. A client may spend two sessions on ART to neutralize a nightmare image, then the next month use EMDR to reprocess a chain of attachment memories that fuel relationship panic. CBT therapy supports behavioral activation and exposure plans as the nervous system calms. IFS therapy helps negotiate with parts that fear change. Anxiety therapy techniques, such as interoceptive exposure for panic, become easier as the background alarm drops. When integrating, sequence matters. I start by stabilizing sleep and daily rhythms if they are in free fall. Next I target the worst intrusive images with ART to reduce immediate suffering. With that relief in place, we can step into EMDR for deeper relational themes without risking overwhelm. Throughout, we track objective change, not just narratives. Fewer nightmares, less startle, more time in the grocery store aisle without scanning for exits. What success looks like and how to measure it Clients tend to know when it has worked. The old images do not stick, and their bodies react differently. Objective measures help confirm the change. I use brief scales such as the PCL for PTSD symptoms, a zero to ten Subjective Units of Distress rating on target memories, sleep logs, and simple exposure tasks such as driving past the crash site without detouring. In ART, success in session looks like distress falling to zero when the client calls up the once intolerable snapshot. They can imagine the scene while staying calm, and their body scan is clean. In EMDR, success looks similar, yet the positive cognition also feels fully true and holds during future checks. People often report that upsets in daily life no longer spiral into the old belief. Durability matters. Follow ups at one, three, and six months are ideal. Most clients retain gains. If a stressor reignites symptoms, booster sessions are brief. The nervous system remembers the path back to calm. Cost, access, and making the first appointment count Clinicians trained in EMDR are easier to find through established directories. ART provider lists exist, though coverage is patchier outside urban hubs. Either way, ask about current training level, recent experience with your kind of problem, and how they manage dissociation. If you carry complex trauma, ask about their preparation practices and whether they have a safety plan for between session spikes. At intake, bring a prioritized list of targets. For ART, write down the worst snapshot of each memory you want to address. For EMDR, jot the core belief that arises with each event, even if the words are rough. Tell the therapist about medical eye issues, seizure history, and any active substances. Ask about session length and whether extended sessions are available. If cost is a barrier, community clinics, veterans’ services, and university training centers may offer reduced fees. Some clinicians will schedule occasional longer sessions to speed progress, which can lower total cost over a course of care. Do not underestimate telehealth. If privacy at home is feasible, it expands your options. A grounded way to decide Both Accelerated Resolution Therapy and EMDR can calm the storms that follow trauma. The brain wants to heal. These methods give it a safe lane to do so. Let the problem you want to solve, the way you like to work, and the expertise available to you guide the choice. When the fit is right, you will feel it quickly in your sleep, your startle, and your ability to walk past the places that used to grip you.
Name: Erika's Counseling
Address: 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405
Phone: 208-593-6137
Website: https://www.erikascounseling.com/
Email: [email protected]
Hours:
Sunday: Closed
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Wednesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Thursday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Friday: Closed
Saturday: Closed
Open-location code (plus code): 43QM+G5 Uintah, Utah, USA
Map/listing URL: https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4
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Erika's Counseling provides counseling and coaching for women, with support around anxiety, trauma, depression, grief, burnout, chronic stress, and major life transitions.
The practice is led by Erika Beck, LCSW, and the official site says therapy services are available in Utah and Idaho.
The website describes a whole-person approach that may include CBT, ERP, ACT, ART, IFS, mindfulness, compassion-focused therapy, and nervous-system-informed care depending on the client’s needs.
For local visitors, the matching public listing places Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A in Uintah, Utah.
The practice focuses on creating a supportive, nonjudgmental setting where women can build coping skills, regulate emotions, and work through hard seasons with practical guidance.
If you are looking for a Uintah-based counseling office while also needing therapy licensed for Utah or Idaho, the site and listing provide a clear local starting point.
To ask about a free 15-minute consult, call 208-593-6137 or visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/.
For map directions and current listing hours, see https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4.
Popular Questions About Erika's Counseling
What does Erika's Counseling offer?
Erika's Counseling offers counseling and coaching for women. The site highlights support for anxiety, depression, trauma, grief and loss, burnout, chronic stress, self-esteem, body image, boundaries, communication, and life transitions.
Who leads the practice?
The website identifies Erika Beck, LCSW, as the therapist behind the practice.
What therapy approaches are mentioned on the site?
The official site mentions Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART), Internal Family Systems (IFS), Polyvagal Theory, mindfulness-based therapy, and compassion-focused therapy.
Who is this practice designed to serve?
The site is written primarily for women, and it also mentions support for moms as well as anxiety coaching for teen and tween girls and their parents.
Where can Erika's Counseling provide therapy?
The website says Erika Beck is licensed to provide therapy in Utah and Idaho.
What does the site say about counseling versus coaching?
The counseling-versus-coaching page explains that therapy is for mental health treatment and can address past, present, and future concerns, while coaching is presented as forward-focused support for problem-solving, values, goals, and growth from a more stable starting point.
Where is the Uintah office and what hours are listed?
The public listing shows Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405. Listed hours are Tuesday through Thursday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM, with Sunday, Monday, Friday, and Saturday marked closed.
How can I contact Erika's Counseling?
Call tel:+12085936137, email [email protected], visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/, or follow https://www.instagram.com/erikabeckcoaching/.
Landmarks Near Uintah, UT
Uintah City Park — Uintah City describes this as a central community park with trees, sports courts, a playground, a baseball field, and picnic space. If you are near the park or city center, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah office is a practical local reference point for directions.
Mouth of Weber Canyon — Uintah City says the community sits at the mouth of Weber Canyon. If you travel the canyon corridor regularly, the listed Uintah office provides a clear nearby therapy location reference.
Weber River — The city history page notes that Uintah is bordered by the Weber River on the south and west. If you use the river side of town as a local point of reference, the public map listing can help with routing to the office.
Uintah Bench — Uintah City notes the Uintah Bench to the north of town. If you are coming from bench-area neighborhoods and roads, the practice’s Uintah address gives you a simple local destination to work from.
Wasatch Mountains — The city history page places the Wasatch Mountains to the east of Uintah. If you live along the foothill side of the area, Erika's Counseling remains part of that same local Uintah setting.
Historic 25th Street — Visit Ogden describes Historic 25th Street as a major destination for shops, events, art strolls, and local activity. If you split time between Uintah and downtown Ogden, the Uintah office remains within the same broader local area.
Ogden Union Station — Ogden’s Union Station and museum district remains one of the area’s best-known landmarks. If you use Union Station or west downtown Ogden as a directional anchor, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah address is a useful nearby point of reference.
Hill Aerospace Museum — The official museum site presents Hill Aerospace Museum as a major visitor destination with free admission and extensive aircraft exhibits. If you commute through the Hill AFB corridor, the Uintah office is a helpful local therapy reference for route planning.
Ogden Nature Center — The Ogden Nature Center is a well-known education and wildlife destination in Ogden. If you are near west Ogden or use the nature center area as a landmark, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah location is still a recognizable nearby option.
Read story →
Read more about Accelerated Resolution Therapy vs EMDR: Key Differences for Trauma RecoveryIFS Therapy for Grief: Making Space for Loss and Love
Grief is not a single feeling. It is a landscape built from memories, what ifs, should haves, and moments when the world goes quiet. Some people describe a chest that feels two sizes too small, others a fog that never lifts. The common thread is that grief rarely moves in a straight line. IFS therapy, or Internal Family Systems, gives a precise yet compassionate map for that landscape. Instead of trying to silence grief or force it into a calendar, IFS invites you to meet the parts of you that carry love, loss, anger, and fear, then helps them find a fuller relationship with one another. I have sat with many clients who thought they were doing grief wrong. They worried that they were crying too much, or not at all. They wondered why the anger flared six months after the funeral, or why the guilt showed up when life began to look normal again. With an IFS lens, those seemingly contradictory reactions make sense. They are different parts, each with a job, each with a reason for being there. What IFS Really Offers in Grief Work IFS therapy starts with a simple observation: our inner life is plural. We speak that way naturally. Part of me wants to call my mother, part of me wants to crawl back to bed, part of me wants to move on. In IFS, those parts are not symptoms to be flattened. They are subpersonalities with intentions, beliefs, and protective strategies. Behind them, IFS describes a core Self that is calm, compassionate, and curious. Self is not a technique or a mood. It is a steady quality of presence that can hold every part without judgment. For grief, this matters. After a loss, protector parts often sprint to the front. One might keep you busy with work, another might numb you with scrolling or wine, a third might criticize you to prevent others from doing it first. These strategies made sense at some point, often long before the loss you are facing now. They are not the enemy. They simply need a trustworthy leader. IFS helps that Self leadership come forward. When people first try IFS, they often ask, will this make my grief bigger? The honest answer is that grief may become clearer, which can feel stronger at first. But clarity is not the same as overwhelm. When Self is present, even intense emotions become workable. In session and between sessions, you learn to approach each inner part with curiosity, ask what it is afraid would happen if it stopped its strategy, and offer it a new role that better serves your life now. How Grief Organizes Parts After a death or major loss, the internal system often organizes around three broad roles. These are not rigid categories, but the pattern is common enough that it helps to name it. Exiles are the young, vulnerable parts that carry the raw pain. They hold the heartbreak, the missed goodbyes, the helplessness of not being able to fix it. Exiles often carry early attachment wounds that the recent loss awakens. Managers try to prevent the exiles from being triggered. They schedule, overachieve, keep people at a distance, or demand perfection. They prefer control to chaos. Firefighters react when an exile’s pain breaks through. They use quick relief strategies: bingeing, drinking, rage, risky sex, compulsive caretaking. Their goal is to douse the flame now, even if tomorrow burns brighter. If you have felt confused by your own swings, this model clarifies the why. After a week of holding everything together, a part flips the table and you watch five hours of shows you barely enjoy. Or after a few drinks, a wave of sorrow takes you down for the night. Instead of diagnosing yourself as weak or broken, you can see a system doing its best with limited tools. That shift alone lowers shame enough for change to begin. The Working Relationship Between Self and Parts Practically, IFS therapy builds a relationship between Self and each part that is showing up. This is not positive self-talk pasted over pain. It is a sustained, internal conversation where you ask a part for permission to get to know it better, you witness its story, and you help it update based on the present. Many protectors genuinely do not know that you have more capacity now. They are operating with an outdated map. With grief, the Self to part relationship often needs extra patience. Protectors may say, if I let you near the sadness, you will never get out of bed again. Or, if we remember the good times, we will fall apart. The first rounds of therapy often focus on earning trust with these protectors. You track how they help, you thank them for their service, and you make small agreements. Ten minutes a day to check in with sadness, not two hours. Three minutes to look at a photo album, then a walk outside. Keep promises, and protectors soften. A Brief Vignette A client I will call Lila lost her younger brother to an overdose. She came in six months after the funeral, exhausted and angry at herself for snapping at friends. The first time we paused to notice her inner world, a managerial part presented as a tight band around her head. Its job was to keep her functional. If she dissolved, the part believed her parents would not survive another heartbreak. Once we built trust with that manager, a firefighter part emerged. It binged late at night and scrolled through her brother’s old playlists. It carried a belief that feeling anything fully would make her forget him. When both parts felt heard and respected, they allowed us to approach the exile who carried the moment she found him unconscious. That younger part was frozen, expecting blame. We stayed with her at the speed she could handle. Lila did not “get over it.” Her system learned to let love and loss exist in the same room without shutting the lights off. Making Space for Love While Honoring Loss People often assume grief is the opposite of love. In practice, grief is an expression of love, shaped by absence. If we try to eliminate grief, we often end up dampening love as well. IFS offers a different path. It helps protectors learn to trust that remembering does not equal drowning. It helps exiles receive comfort and contact from Self, rather than staying stranded in memories no one else can see. I have seen clients create simple rituals that increase this space. A father who lost his daughter lights a candle on her birthday and invites his protective part to sit nearby, not on duty, just present. A woman who ended a 20 year marriage keeps one photo from their favorite hike and thanks the part that panics at the sight of it, then asks that part to let the beauty in for thirty seconds. That kind of practice builds tolerance for the truth that love did not end, it changed form. Where IFS Meets Other Modalities IFS therapy is not the only approach that helps people grieve. Each modality brings strengths, and the best therapy adapts to the person in front of us. CBT therapy can be especially helpful for catching thinking traps that amplify suffering, like catastrophizing about future holidays or all-or-nothing beliefs about moving on. Simple cognitive tools can interrupt spirals so that parts feel safer stepping back. Anxiety therapy frequently enters the picture because loss wakes up fears about safety, the future, and belonging. Panic parts may misread physical sensations as danger, especially when sleep and appetite are disrupted. Grounding work, slow breathing, and interoceptive awareness help the system recalibrate. Inside an IFS frame, those are not generic skills, https://marcorqii933.lucialpiazzale.com/cbt-therapy-for-workplace-performance-build-focus-reduce-anxiety they are agreements with protectors to support the body while we do deeper work. Trauma therapy overlaps with grief when the death or separation was sudden, violent, or happened in a context already marked by threat. Memory reconsolidation tools, like accelerated resolution therapy, can reduce the intensity of intrusive images and nightmares. I often sequence care this way: first, enough nervous system stability so that protectors trust we will not be flooded, then targeted trauma processing for the worst images or moments, then IFS work with the meanings and relationships that remain. Clients report that after ART lowers the visual shock of a memory, their parts can approach it with far more openness. Grief does not end, but it stops hijacking the day. The Anatomy of an IFS Grief Session The first sessions set the tone. We map the parts that show up around the loss, learn their jobs, and name their fears. I pay close attention to bodily cues. A clenched jaw, a hollow gut, eyes that dart away when certain names arise. Protections live in the body, not just in words. When the system is ready, we ask a protector for permission to approach an exile. If permission is not granted, we work with the protector until it softens. When contact happens, it is often quiet. Images emerge, sometimes vividly, sometimes as a felt sense. We track them with care. A key IFS move is unblending. If anger fills the room, I might ask, can you sense that the angry part is near, and also sense that you are the one noticing it? This is not detachment. It is a precise separation that lets Self be with the feeling, rather than becoming it. People learn to do this on their own over time, which is one of the biggest gifts of IFS for grief. When the anniversary date arrives or a song catches you in the grocery aisle, you can step into Self, greet the parts that are activated, and choose what honors them without losing the rest of your day. A Short Self Check-In You Can Practice On hard days, a few minutes of internal contact can prevent hours of spinning. Try this gentle sequence, respecting your limits and pausing if anything feels too much. Sit where your body can rest. Notice three places that feel neutral or slightly good, like the support of the chair or warmth in your hands. Ask inside, which part wants attention first? Welcome whatever shows up, even if it is numbness. See if you can sense some distance from that part. I am noticing a sad part in my chest, and I am here with it. Ask the part what it is afraid would happen if it stepped back 10 percent. Listen, and do not argue. Thank it for sharing. If it allows, offer comfort to any younger feeling that appears. Imagine giving it warmth, breath, or a safe place to rest. End by thanking all parts for trying to help. If any step feels too intense, shift to something external, like a glass of water or a short walk. Self compassion includes knowing when to stop. When Grief Intersects With Daily Life Loss rarely waits for a clear calendar. Work deadlines, school pickups, bills, and medical appointments weave through the weeks. In therapy, I encourage clients to build grief windows, small, predictable times when the system can soften without fearing collapse. Fifteen minutes after dinner a few nights a week to journal, look at photographs, or simply sit quietly. Paradoxically, containers allow more feeling, not less, because protectors trust there is a lid. Sleep often takes a hit, especially in the first three months. I treat rest as grief care, not a luxury. Simple sleep hygiene helps, but for many, a part wakes in the dark with fear or longing. When that happens, we do an abbreviated IFS check-in. Name the part, thank it for waking you to keep you safe or to remember, ask what it needs until morning. Hand on chest, a few slow exhales, sometimes a phrase like, I will come back to this at 9 a.m., helps the body accept the truce. Social life can get complicated. People mean well and say clumsy things. A manager part may want to educate everyone, a firefighter may want to stop answering texts. I often help clients create a few stock phrases that align with their parts’ needs. Thank you for thinking of me. Talking about it is hard right now, but I appreciate you reaching out. Or, I would like to share a story about him, do you have a few minutes? Clear asks lower the burden on parts that are tired of guessing. Special Situations That Shape the Work Not all grief shares the same texture. A few patterns change the course of therapy. Sudden or violent loss often intertwines grief with terror. In those cases, the first task is safety. We work with the nervous system, sometimes use accelerated resolution therapy to soften the most painful images, and only then approach the deeper meanings. Ambiguous loss includes disappearances, estrangements, and illnesses that change a person but do not end their life. Parts get stuck hoping and bracing at the same time. IFS helps them negotiate a way to hold uncertainty without freezing the whole system. Complicated grief, now often called prolonged grief disorder, features persistent impairment and a sense of being stuck beyond culturally expected time frames. That is not moral failure. It often reflects exiles that have never had a chance to be fully witnessed, or protectors so burdened that they cannot release their posts. Intensive IFS work, paired with CBT therapy strategies to reengage in life, helps these systems thaw. Moral injury appears when the loss involves a choice or action that conflicts with a person’s values, common in medical settings, war, or caretaking decisions. Shame protectors can be brutal. IFS provides a careful route to meet the part that blames, understand its logic, and then contact the deeper pain beneath it. Rituals of repair, community acknowledgment, and sometimes spiritual support round out the work. Anticipatory grief arises when a loss is expected, such as during terminal illness. It carries bursts of love and dread. Scheduling grief windows, family conversations, and legacy projects helps parts feel less at the mercy of time. Even small acts matter, like recording a voice message or writing a short letter. Working With Images and Objects Grief is sensory. A sweater, a voicemail, a trail you walked together, these carry a charge. In IFS, we approach meaningful objects with consent from protectors. We might place the object on a table and notice the distance that feels safe, then shorten or lengthen it based on the body’s response. If a voicemail is too raw, we listen to ten seconds with one hand on the heart and the other on the abdomen, then stop. Over sessions, many people can engage more, not because they force it, but because their parts trust that Self will set boundaries. I also invite creation of new images that honor the relationship in a way that the body can hold. A client imagined building a bench in an internal garden, a place she and her brother could meet without the hospital smell. That image became a resource, not a bypass, something to visit on anniversaries or when panic rose. Measuring Progress Without Turning Grief Into a Project Progress in grief therapy is tricky. There is no trophy for finishing. I look for quieter signs: increased capacity to be with emotion without shutting down or acting out, more flexible access to Self, willingness of protectors to negotiate rather than command, spontaneous moments of warmth when remembering, less panic about surges, and more choice in daily life. Clients sometimes want numbers. Reasonable metrics exist, like hours of sleep restored, days at work completed, panic attacks decreased from daily to weekly, or the ability to visit a meaningful place for fifteen minutes instead of two. Those guideposts help protectors feel we are not drifting. Common Parts That Appear in Grief Naming parts helps them feel seen. These show up frequently. The Historian, keeps stories and dates, fears forgetting will erase the person. The Guard, scans for judgment or pity, prevents exposure. The Stoic, carries culture or family rules about not crying, believes strength equals silence. The Rebel, pushes against expectations, might reject rituals or traditions that feel empty. The Tender One, wants to hold photos, tell stories, or curl up with a sweater for hours. If any of these sound familiar, try greeting them as you would a neighbor who shows up at your door. You do not have to let them take over your house, but you can listen, learn their needs, and invite them to sit while you decide what comes next. Misconceptions and Risks IFS is sometimes misunderstood as navel gazing, or as a way to blame parts for real-world problems. In practice, it is the opposite. By building a respectful internal culture, people become more effective in the external one. Another worry is that parts language will make grief more complicated. The reality is that the language makes explicit what most people already feel. It gives you handles to hold while climbing a steep hill. Risks focus mainly on pacing. Going too fast toward traumatic exiles can overwhelm the system and strengthen protectors. Good IFS work honors consent at every step. If you ever feel pushed, say so. The therapist’s job is to help you lead, not to perform cures. How to Choose a Therapist and What to Ask Not every clinician is trained in IFS therapy, and among those who are, experience with grief varies. Ask how they integrate IFS with other tools. If panic or flashbacks are active, ask whether they also practice trauma therapy approaches or collaborate with providers who do. If rumination is high, ask how they use CBT therapy strategies to unwind loops. If images from the loss are intrusive and intense, ask about accelerated resolution therapy or other memory processing options. Early sessions should feel collaborative. You should hear your therapist name protectors with respect, not as obstacles to be removed. They should check for permission before approaching vulnerable material and help you notice and trust Self energy. If the fit is off, it is not a failure. Sometimes a different style or specialization serves you better. For Clinicians: Practical Notes From the Room Clinicians often ask about sequencing and dosage. In my practice, I begin with mapping and unblending basics, then short, titrated witnessing of exiles. I do not chase catharsis. I look for coherence. If a firefighter erupts after a deep session, I take that as data. We update agreements and narrow the window next time. Ritualizing endings in session matters. A minute of integration can save hours of fallout. I also document the inner system’s agreements in simple language. On rough days, clients can read, We agreed to two ten minute check-ins this week, no photo albums after 9 p.m., text Rosa if panic spikes. When grief touches secondary losses, like identity or livelihood, I name them directly. Parts are less reactive when the scope of loss is acknowledged. With families, I treat the room as a multi-part system. Each member has parts that will not match the others’ timing. We practice witnessing without fixing, and I give families brief IFS-informed scripts, such as, A part of me wants to give advice, and another part can sit and listen. Which would you prefer? A Final Word on Making Space Grief presses on the borders of a life. IFS therapy helps you redraw those borders with more truth and more kindness. The goal is not to move on, but to move with. When your parts no longer need to protect you from your own heart, love takes its rightful place. Some days that looks like steady work and an early bedtime. Other days it looks like piecing together a memory as carefully as a watchmaker, letting the second hand tick in your palm. If you are in the early weeks, surviving may be the entire task. If you are years out and feel stuck, you are not behind. Systems learn in their own time. With patient attention, a clear map, and a willingness to meet each part as it is, space opens. In that space, loss and love can share the same table. You get to choose what you serve them, and how long they stay.
Name: Erika's Counseling
Address: 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405
Phone: 208-593-6137
Website: https://www.erikascounseling.com/
Email: [email protected]
Hours:
Sunday: Closed
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Wednesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Thursday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Friday: Closed
Saturday: Closed
Open-location code (plus code): 43QM+G5 Uintah, Utah, USA
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🤖 Explore this content with AI:
💬 ChatGPT
🔍 Perplexity
🤖 Claude
🔮 Google AI Mode
🐦 Grok
Erika's Counseling provides counseling and coaching for women, with support around anxiety, trauma, depression, grief, burnout, chronic stress, and major life transitions.
The practice is led by Erika Beck, LCSW, and the official site says therapy services are available in Utah and Idaho.
The website describes a whole-person approach that may include CBT, ERP, ACT, ART, IFS, mindfulness, compassion-focused therapy, and nervous-system-informed care depending on the client’s needs.
For local visitors, the matching public listing places Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A in Uintah, Utah.
The practice focuses on creating a supportive, nonjudgmental setting where women can build coping skills, regulate emotions, and work through hard seasons with practical guidance.
If you are looking for a Uintah-based counseling office while also needing therapy licensed for Utah or Idaho, the site and listing provide a clear local starting point.
To ask about a free 15-minute consult, call 208-593-6137 or visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/.
For map directions and current listing hours, see https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4.
Popular Questions About Erika's Counseling
What does Erika's Counseling offer?
Erika's Counseling offers counseling and coaching for women. The site highlights support for anxiety, depression, trauma, grief and loss, burnout, chronic stress, self-esteem, body image, boundaries, communication, and life transitions.
Who leads the practice?
The website identifies Erika Beck, LCSW, as the therapist behind the practice.
What therapy approaches are mentioned on the site?
The official site mentions Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART), Internal Family Systems (IFS), Polyvagal Theory, mindfulness-based therapy, and compassion-focused therapy.
Who is this practice designed to serve?
The site is written primarily for women, and it also mentions support for moms as well as anxiety coaching for teen and tween girls and their parents.
Where can Erika's Counseling provide therapy?
The website says Erika Beck is licensed to provide therapy in Utah and Idaho.
What does the site say about counseling versus coaching?
The counseling-versus-coaching page explains that therapy is for mental health treatment and can address past, present, and future concerns, while coaching is presented as forward-focused support for problem-solving, values, goals, and growth from a more stable starting point.
Where is the Uintah office and what hours are listed?
The public listing shows Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405. Listed hours are Tuesday through Thursday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM, with Sunday, Monday, Friday, and Saturday marked closed.
How can I contact Erika's Counseling?
Call tel:+12085936137, email [email protected], visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/, or follow https://www.instagram.com/erikabeckcoaching/.
Landmarks Near Uintah, UT
Uintah City Park — Uintah City describes this as a central community park with trees, sports courts, a playground, a baseball field, and picnic space. If you are near the park or city center, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah office is a practical local reference point for directions.
Mouth of Weber Canyon — Uintah City says the community sits at the mouth of Weber Canyon. If you travel the canyon corridor regularly, the listed Uintah office provides a clear nearby therapy location reference.
Weber River — The city history page notes that Uintah is bordered by the Weber River on the south and west. If you use the river side of town as a local point of reference, the public map listing can help with routing to the office.
Uintah Bench — Uintah City notes the Uintah Bench to the north of town. If you are coming from bench-area neighborhoods and roads, the practice’s Uintah address gives you a simple local destination to work from.
Wasatch Mountains — The city history page places the Wasatch Mountains to the east of Uintah. If you live along the foothill side of the area, Erika's Counseling remains part of that same local Uintah setting.
Historic 25th Street — Visit Ogden describes Historic 25th Street as a major destination for shops, events, art strolls, and local activity. If you split time between Uintah and downtown Ogden, the Uintah office remains within the same broader local area.
Ogden Union Station — Ogden’s Union Station and museum district remains one of the area’s best-known landmarks. If you use Union Station or west downtown Ogden as a directional anchor, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah address is a useful nearby point of reference.
Hill Aerospace Museum — The official museum site presents Hill Aerospace Museum as a major visitor destination with free admission and extensive aircraft exhibits. If you commute through the Hill AFB corridor, the Uintah office is a helpful local therapy reference for route planning.
Ogden Nature Center — The Ogden Nature Center is a well-known education and wildlife destination in Ogden. If you are near west Ogden or use the nature center area as a landmark, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah location is still a recognizable nearby option.
Read story →
Read more about IFS Therapy for Grief: Making Space for Loss and LoveCBT Therapy for Health Conditions: Reducing Anxiety with Chronic Illness
Living with a chronic illness changes the shape of a day. Pain may dictate the morning, appointments pull at the afternoon, and the evening brings choices between rest and the things that make life feel like yours. Anxiety often threads through all of it. It does not only show up as worry about the future. It amplifies symptoms, narrows attention to every twitch or flutter, and pushes decisions toward either overdoing it or doing nothing at all. In clinic rooms, I have heard people say, If I could turn down the volume on fear, I would have more life to live inside what my body can do. Cognitive behavioral therapy, or CBT therapy, is one reliable way to find that volume knob. This is not about thinking your way out of illness. Your symptoms are real, your limits deserve respect, and medical care sits at the center. The goal is to help your mind stop fighting a shadow version of your condition so you can manage the one you have with steadier hands. How CBT therapy meets the body CBT therapy looks at the loop between thoughts, feelings, physical sensations, and actions. Chronic illness makes that loop tighter and faster. A sudden stab of abdominal pain can light up the thought something is seriously wrong, which spikes adrenaline, which sharpens the pain, which confirms the thought. People shift their behavior to cope, often in understandable ways. They might avoid activity, overcheck vitals, or scour the internet late at night. These responses bring short relief but can increase disability over time. Skillful CBT does not ask you to pretend symptoms away. It asks you to become an excellent observer and experimenter. You learn to notice the first thoughts that jump in, test them against evidence, and change small behaviors that give the body a chance to reset. The change is usually incremental at first. Over weeks, small patterns add up to less alarm and more choice. I think of it as building two toolkits. The first helps you in the moment. The second helps you shape your days so symptoms take up less space. Interpreting symptoms without either denial or disaster Illness scares us because it carries uncertainty. A skipped heartbeat, a short burst of dizziness, a flare of joint pain, all may have benign explanations or signal a problem. Anxiety hates uncertainty, so it pushes for certainty fast, often by imagining the worst. In CBT we slow this down. We use probabilities, not possibilities, and we pair them with action plans. Say a person with inflammatory bowel disease feels a sharp cramp after a new food. The first thought may be This is a flare and I will end up in the hospital again. Their heart races, they cancel dinner plans, and monitor bowel movements for hours. Two weeks later, the memory of that scare drives them to a narrower diet that increases malnutrition risk. A CBT approach would map that sequence, then ask for a different test. What happened the last five cramps like this? How long did they last? What are my doctor’s red flags that would change what I do? The person might decide to pause, practice a 60 second slow breathing set, take the prescribed antispasmodic, and watch for two hours while continuing the evening at home. They keep a note of the outcome. Over time, this breaks the link between any cramp and a catastrophe. The same principle applies to post exertional symptoms, orthostatic lightheadedness, bladder urgency, or neuropathic zaps. You learn your body’s patterns, define your true medical red flags with your clinicians, and make experiments that build confidence. Anxiety therapy at its best teaches you to step away from all or nothing thinking and into practical ranges. A week from the clinic Consider a composite example drawn from several patients I have seen. Jenna is 34 with rheumatoid arthritis and a history of panic attacks, made worse after a rough COVID infection last year. She works part time, takes methotrexate and a biologic, and wakes most mornings with stiffness above a 6 out of 10. Her heart races whenever a new joint aches. She reads lab results obsessively and has reduced walks with friends because she is afraid a flare will strike far from home. We started with a symptom and activity log, three lines twice a day, not a dissertation. Morning: stiffness 7, mood 4, key action stretch 10 minutes. Afternoon: stiffness 4, mood 5, key action walked to mailbox, worry spike at 3 pm. This gave us data we could use in session and something small enough that she could keep up on bad days. Within two weeks we saw a pattern. On days she sat most of the morning, her afternoon pain was worse than on mornings when she did a short, gentle routine. We added a pacing plan and a two sentence script for changing plans without shame. We also practiced body scan skills that helped her distinguish inflammatory ache from the hot, buzzy feeling of adrenaline that shows up with panic. Jenna’s exposures were careful. She feared https://franciscoihtg198.overblog.fr/2026/05/accelerated-resolution-therapy-for-survivors-of-abuse-gentle-trauma-therapy.html going out alone in case a joint locked. We did graded trips, starting with a five minute loop around the block carrying her phone and a water bottle. She learned to tolerate the flutter of panic without reading it as danger. After four weeks she asked a friend to join for a slow park stroll. She still has flares. She now reads them earlier and does not add a panic spiral on top. What tends to help quickly When symptoms spike and fear tightens the chest, you need moves that are short, portable, and evidence based. The following are the early wins I reach for in practice. One minute breath training: in through the nose for four, out for six, ten cycles. The longer exhale stimulates the vagus nerve and lowers arousal. Three column thought check: situation, automatic thought, more balanced thought. Keep it on a card in your wallet. Worry postponement: schedule a 15 minute worry window at 7 pm. When worry hits at noon, jot it down and return to the task. This does not erase worry, it puts a fence around it. Micro exposure: do a 10 percent version of the feared activity, then step back and record what happened to symptoms and fear over 10 minutes. Values anchor: a sentence that names what you are trying to live toward, not just away from. I want to be a present parent for 20 calm minutes after work, even on high pain days. Each of these can be learned in a session and practiced across a week. None requires a perfect day or an empty schedule. Patients often report a tangible drop in fear within the first two weeks if they practice daily. Where medical advice and CBT meet I never ask a patient to experiment in ways that contradict their medical plan. In fact, CBT works best when grounded in clear medical guidance. Early sessions often include clarifying the difference between yellow and red flags for that person’s condition. For example, a migraine patient might have a yellow flag of neck stiffness and sensitivity to light that calls for hydration, medication, and dark rest. A red flag of sudden worst headache of life or new neurologic deficit calls for urgent evaluation. Once those lines are drawn, CBT exposures and activity scheduling can proceed with less fear. Activity pacing deserves special mention. Many people either push hard on good days and crash for two, or underdo for fear of triggering symptoms. We aim for a middle lane. One practical method is to set a baseline of reliable activity you can do on 4 out of 5 days without worsening the next day’s symptoms. Then increase by small increments, say 5 to 10 percent per week, while watching for trends, not single day spikes. If you live with post exertional malaise, increases may need to be even gentler, and exposures should focus more on tolerating interoceptive sensations than on raising physical load. Medication and CBT often support each other. An SSRI or SNRI can lower the floor of anxiety so CBT skills stick. Short acting anxiolytics have a place but can complicate exposure work if used every time fear rises. Discuss timing with your prescriber. Working with flare days and uncertainty Flare days ask for flexible rules. Here are strategies I have seen hold up under stress. Before a flare, write a one page flare plan that includes your meds, nonpharmacologic steps, signals to watch, and what to tell work or family. Add two or three activities that are possible with high symptoms, such as a favorite podcast, a gentle stretch sequence, or a call with a friend who knows not to fix things. On the day, shave down goals but do not zero them out. One load of laundry split into three steps, a five minute walk to the mailbox instead of a mile, email your boss a brief check in instead of finishing the report. These choices keep the day from becoming only about illness and help prevent the slump that follows total avoidance. Uncertainty never fully leaves. CBT teaches you to carry it differently. If you notice yourself seeking the tenth reassurance of the day, switch to a behavior you have chosen ahead of time, like a grounding exercise or a short task that signals value, such as prepping vegetables for dinner. If you find yourself deep in health forums at midnight, install a blocker on those sites after 10 pm for a month, then review whether your sleep improved and your worry fell. You are not trying to be perfect. You are practicing stewardship over attention. Health anxiety versus appropriate vigilance Some people fear that any mental health work will make them careless. That fear makes sense, especially if doctors dismissed you in the past. The marker I use in practice is this: are your actions driven more by what you value and what your clinicians recommend, or by what would make fear go away fastest. Appropriate vigilance listens to your care team, uses tracking in measured ways, and acts on clear thresholds. Health anxiety loops through checking, avoidance, or repeated reassurance in ways that keep fear in charge. CBT helps you notice which voice you are following in a given hour. For example, a patient with Type 1 diabetes needs to monitor glucose closely. CBT would not ask them to check less than their endocrinologist advises. It might ask them to notice whether they are checking a fifth time in ten minutes because fear spiked, then practice a grounding skill first. If a person with POTS limits all upright time because standing brings on dizziness, CBT would build graded upright exposures with compression, fluids, and support from their cardiologist, so their nervous system relearns that mild dizziness is uncomfortable but tolerable. When trauma sits behind the symptoms Chronic illness and trauma often travel together. Some people lived through medical trauma after misdiagnosis or frightening procedures. Others carry trauma from unrelated events that primes the nervous system to fire fast. When trauma is present, trauma therapy complements CBT. Accelerated resolution therapy uses imagery rescripting and sets of eye movements to process distressing memories rapidly. I have seen patients who dreaded the infusion center rework the mental movie of a past reaction so they could receive needed treatment with less dread. Internal Family Systems, or IFS therapy, offers a way to relate to the protective parts that avoid appointments or drive compulsive researching. Naming a vigilant part that tries to keep you safe, then inviting it to collaborate, often reduces internal battles. Both approaches can be paired with CBT’s behavioral experiments. The sequence matters. If a memory triggers flashbacks every time you see a clinic hallway, you may need trauma work before exposure to hospital environments will stick. A caution. Not every spike of fear is trauma. Not every difficult hospital memory requires formal trauma therapy. Good assessment helps. A clear sign is when your reaction is bigger than the situation calls for and you feel yanked back to a past scene. Another is when you avoid helpful care because of old fear, not current risk. If you are not sure, ask your therapist to help you sort it. Tech that helps without taking over Digital tools can support CBT if used with boundaries. A simple timer can structure pacing blocks. Wearables help some patients notice trends, like heart rate rises during early panic that settle after breathing practice. Be careful, though, not to flood yourself with data you cannot interpret. I generally recommend one tracker at a time and a plan for how you will use the data. For example, track step count for four weeks to set a baseline, then adjust pacing. Or log pain twice daily for six weeks to see if a new medication helps. If a device raises your anxiety, set it aside for a trial period and see what happens. For caregivers who want to help Caregivers often ask how to support without becoming the anxiety police. The best help feels collaborative. Ask what signals your person wants you to notice and what response they prefer. Some want a gentle reminder to use a skill. Others want a quiet presence beside them while they practice. Learn the red flags together so you are not tempted to escalate every symptom. Notice your own nervous system too. Caregiving stress is real, and caregivers deserve their own steadying practices. Measuring progress when symptoms ebb and flow Progress rarely looks like a straight line. It helps to choose two or three metrics you can track over months. Consider time spent doing valued activities per week, number of reassurance checks per day, or minutes to recover from a symptom spike. Many patients see a 20 to 40 percent reduction in fear driven behaviors within 8 to 12 sessions when they practice between appointments. Some will need longer, especially when illness activity is high. Your charts will wobble. If you keep practicing, the wobble evens out. When setbacks come, we review rather than judge. Did you change two variables at once, like starting a new job and increasing activity. Did sleep slide. Did an infection hit. These checks protect against the story that you failed, and replace it with a plan for the next two weeks. Finding a therapist who understands health conditions Look for someone comfortable sitting at the junction of medicine and psychology. Training matters, but so does practical experience. In an initial call, ask about their work with your condition and how they coordinate with medical teams. If they only speak in abstractions, keep looking. If they blame symptoms on stress alone, keep looking. The right therapist will take your body seriously and still ask you to try small, brave things. Questions that can help you screen a therapist: How do you adapt CBT when symptoms fluctuate day to day. How do you coordinate with my specialist or primary care doctor. How do you distinguish appropriate medical monitoring from anxiety driven checking. What is your approach when trauma memories surface during health care. How will we measure whether therapy is helping. If you cannot find local support, telehealth opens options. Search for clinicians who list health psychology, rehabilitation psychology, or specific conditions along with CBT therapy, anxiety therapy, or trauma therapy in their profiles. Some clinicians integrate modalities. I often combine CBT with elements of IFS therapy to work with protective parts that resist change, or with accelerated resolution therapy when a medical memory keeps hijacking the body. Edge cases and judgment calls Some conditions demand careful tailoring. People with myalgic encephalomyelitis or chronic fatigue syndrome may experience post exertional malaise after minor activity. Traditional exposure that gradually increases physical effort can worsen symptoms if applied bluntly. With ME or CFS I emphasize energy conservation, orthostatic support, and interoceptive exposure that focuses on tolerating sensations of fatigue and lightheadedness without pushing exertion. Patients with autonomic instability may need seated or recumbent practice during early exposures. For severe pain conditions, exposures may aim at feared movements within a safe range set by a physiotherapist, not big lifts in activity. The same creative thinking applies to irritable bowel syndrome, endometriosis, or long COVID. The principle stays constant. Work with the body you have, not the one you wish you had, and keep your experiments small, honest, and reversible. Health literacy, cultural background, and access shape what is possible. Asking a patient to prep elaborate meals during a flare ignores the realities of time and budget. Suggesting thirty minutes of mindfulness daily to someone working two jobs is unrealistic. Five minute practices tucked into commutes or lunch breaks are more sustainable. Progress that respects context lasts. The mindset that steadies the path CBT is not a one time fix. It is a way of moving through days with a chronic condition so that fear does not run the show. The stance is curious, not combative. You track, you test, you learn, and you build a life that contains both your illness and your values. On good days, you widen the circle a bit. On tough days, you fall back on the moves that keep you steady. Over time, most people find that anxiety no longer dictates every choice, that symptoms are not amplified by constant alarm, and that relationships and work stop orbiting around what the body might do next. I have watched patients go from skipping family gatherings to attending for an hour and leaving before fatigue steals the rest of the week. I have seen people sleep through the night again because they stopped checking their pulse ten times before bed. I have sat beside someone as they received chemotherapy without the crushing panic that used to accompany the beeps and smells of the infusion room. These are not miracles. They are the results of clear thinking, practiced skills, and therapy that respects both biology and lived experience. If anxiety has layered itself over your condition, consider CBT therapy as a core part of your plan. If trauma shadows your care, add trauma therapy or targeted work such as accelerated resolution therapy. If inner conflict keeps you stuck, IFS therapy can help you bring protective parts into cooperation. Pair these with medical care you trust. Ask for help when you need it, practice when you can, and give yourself credit for each small shift. A body with limits can still learn to rest from fear.
Name: Erika's Counseling
Address: 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405
Phone: 208-593-6137
Website: https://www.erikascounseling.com/
Email: [email protected]
Hours:
Sunday: Closed
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Wednesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Thursday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Friday: Closed
Saturday: Closed
Open-location code (plus code): 43QM+G5 Uintah, Utah, USA
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Erika's Counseling provides counseling and coaching for women, with support around anxiety, trauma, depression, grief, burnout, chronic stress, and major life transitions.
The practice is led by Erika Beck, LCSW, and the official site says therapy services are available in Utah and Idaho.
The website describes a whole-person approach that may include CBT, ERP, ACT, ART, IFS, mindfulness, compassion-focused therapy, and nervous-system-informed care depending on the client’s needs.
For local visitors, the matching public listing places Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A in Uintah, Utah.
The practice focuses on creating a supportive, nonjudgmental setting where women can build coping skills, regulate emotions, and work through hard seasons with practical guidance.
If you are looking for a Uintah-based counseling office while also needing therapy licensed for Utah or Idaho, the site and listing provide a clear local starting point.
To ask about a free 15-minute consult, call 208-593-6137 or visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/.
For map directions and current listing hours, see https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4.
Popular Questions About Erika's Counseling
What does Erika's Counseling offer?
Erika's Counseling offers counseling and coaching for women. The site highlights support for anxiety, depression, trauma, grief and loss, burnout, chronic stress, self-esteem, body image, boundaries, communication, and life transitions.
Who leads the practice?
The website identifies Erika Beck, LCSW, as the therapist behind the practice.
What therapy approaches are mentioned on the site?
The official site mentions Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART), Internal Family Systems (IFS), Polyvagal Theory, mindfulness-based therapy, and compassion-focused therapy.
Who is this practice designed to serve?
The site is written primarily for women, and it also mentions support for moms as well as anxiety coaching for teen and tween girls and their parents.
Where can Erika's Counseling provide therapy?
The website says Erika Beck is licensed to provide therapy in Utah and Idaho.
What does the site say about counseling versus coaching?
The counseling-versus-coaching page explains that therapy is for mental health treatment and can address past, present, and future concerns, while coaching is presented as forward-focused support for problem-solving, values, goals, and growth from a more stable starting point.
Where is the Uintah office and what hours are listed?
The public listing shows Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405. Listed hours are Tuesday through Thursday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM, with Sunday, Monday, Friday, and Saturday marked closed.
How can I contact Erika's Counseling?
Call tel:+12085936137, email [email protected], visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/, or follow https://www.instagram.com/erikabeckcoaching/.
Landmarks Near Uintah, UT
Uintah City Park — Uintah City describes this as a central community park with trees, sports courts, a playground, a baseball field, and picnic space. If you are near the park or city center, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah office is a practical local reference point for directions.
Mouth of Weber Canyon — Uintah City says the community sits at the mouth of Weber Canyon. If you travel the canyon corridor regularly, the listed Uintah office provides a clear nearby therapy location reference.
Weber River — The city history page notes that Uintah is bordered by the Weber River on the south and west. If you use the river side of town as a local point of reference, the public map listing can help with routing to the office.
Uintah Bench — Uintah City notes the Uintah Bench to the north of town. If you are coming from bench-area neighborhoods and roads, the practice’s Uintah address gives you a simple local destination to work from.
Wasatch Mountains — The city history page places the Wasatch Mountains to the east of Uintah. If you live along the foothill side of the area, Erika's Counseling remains part of that same local Uintah setting.
Historic 25th Street — Visit Ogden describes Historic 25th Street as a major destination for shops, events, art strolls, and local activity. If you split time between Uintah and downtown Ogden, the Uintah office remains within the same broader local area.
Ogden Union Station — Ogden’s Union Station and museum district remains one of the area’s best-known landmarks. If you use Union Station or west downtown Ogden as a directional anchor, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah address is a useful nearby point of reference.
Hill Aerospace Museum — The official museum site presents Hill Aerospace Museum as a major visitor destination with free admission and extensive aircraft exhibits. If you commute through the Hill AFB corridor, the Uintah office is a helpful local therapy reference for route planning.
Ogden Nature Center — The Ogden Nature Center is a well-known education and wildlife destination in Ogden. If you are near west Ogden or use the nature center area as a landmark, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah location is still a recognizable nearby option.
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Read more about CBT Therapy for Health Conditions: Reducing Anxiety with Chronic IllnessAccelerated Resolution Therapy in Group Trauma Therapy: Pros and Cons
Trauma groups have a way of revealing patterns that stay hidden in one to one work. The moment a veteran hears another vet name the same nightmare, or a survivor watches someone else’s hands shake at the same beat of a memory, something shifts. Accelerated resolution therapy, or ART, was designed as a brief, focused trauma therapy that uses eye movements, imagery, and rescripting to rapidly reduce distress. Over the past decade, more clinicians have asked whether ART can be adapted for group settings to leverage that collective momentum. The short answer is yes, with careful structure and a clear understanding of what group formats can, and cannot, safely carry. I have integrated ART into trauma therapy groups for specific use cases, and I have pulled it back when the group center could not hold the intensity. There are meaningful advantages, there are real risks, and there are details that determine which side wins out. Where ART fits in the trauma therapy landscape ART sits in the family of memory reconsolidation methods that use bilateral stimulation, typically eye movements guided by the therapist’s hand. The client brings up a targeted memory, tracks the therapist’s hand or a visual target, and alternates between imagery, body sensations, and cognitive shifts. A core move in ART is Voluntary Image Replacement, where the client intentionally replaces a distressing scene with a preferred image that preserves facts while changing the emotional charge. The goal is not to erase history, it is to uncouple triggers from nervous system overdrive. Unlike more open ended trauma therapies, ART tends to be highly scripted, time bound, and symptom focused. Many clients report marked relief within three to five sessions. In practice, I have seen reductions in nightmares, startle response, and panic around specific cues after one to three sessions, then incremental gains as we revisit related targets. Where does that leave group work? Group therapy excels at normalization, shame reduction, mutual regulation, and skills practice. ART excels at precise, experiential reprocessing of specific memories. The overlap is not automatic. To make them work together, you need formats that protect privacy during the intense moments, and you need a disciplined group frame that channels emotion without spilling trauma content into open sharing that other members did not consent to carry. What “group ART” really means There is no single group protocol for accelerated resolution therapy. What clinicians call group ART usually falls into two patterns. The first approach, a hybrid, uses the group for psychoeducation, readiness work, and post processing, while keeping the core ART sets one to one. A typical 90 minute meeting might include fifteen minutes of grounding and education, three pairs rotating through 20 minute individual ART mini sessions in side rooms or telehealth breakouts, and a closing circle focused on integration. Members do not recount trauma details in the group. They share shifts, images they are comfortable disclosing, or skills they used. The second approach resembles a fishbowl: one member volunteers for a live ART session while others observe with clear rules. Observers track their own body sensations, practice containment skills, and witness the arc from activation to relief. There is no pressure to disclose content. After the session, the group debriefs on process, not story. This method can be powerful, but it requires strong screening, a stable group, and a facilitator who can titrate the intensity and protect boundaries in real time. Both models can be done in person or via telehealth. Telehealth adds flexibility and reduces logistical costs, but it demands a higher bar for privacy, tech readiness, and safety planning if someone becomes overwhelmed off camera. Why consider ART in a group format at all I used to think of ART as something that belonged solely inside the therapy dyad. Over time, certain patterns kept nudging me to widen the frame. Clients who had done months of CBT therapy for anxiety and still spiked around a few trauma linked triggers often needed a catalytic push. ART offered that push, but they returned to crowded lives where they felt alone with the changes. Folding ART into a group gave them a place to normalize rapid shifts, get accountability around homework, and borrow motivation from peers who were taking similar risks, for example sleeping with the lights off again, driving past a crash site, or trusting a new partner with a boundary conversation. Group rhythm also reduces avoidance. Traumatized nervous systems are brilliant at skipping hard steps. When the calendar includes a predictable ART window inside a supportive group, people show up. The social contract trims the avoidance curve. When cost is a barrier, short ART segments embedded in group care can stretch a budget. A sliding scale group plus two or three targeted individual sessions can produce more movement than sporadic one to one therapy across many months. For community clinics with waitlists, hybrid groups can reach more people without diluting fidelity. The core advantages clinicians actually see The first gain is speed. ART is already a brief model. In a well structured group, momentum accelerates because members rehearse regulation skills together, see others shift in real time, and receive social reinforcement for brave work. I have tracked reductions of 30 to 60 percent on self rated distress scales for targeted symptoms across four to six weeks in mixed trauma cohorts, with the usual caveat that individual trajectories vary. The second gain is generalization. ART targets discrete memories, yet many clients report ripple effects: less hypervigilance in crowds, less intrusive imagery at bedtime, an easier time taking feedback at work. Hearing others name parallel gains makes those effects stick. The third gain is stabilization. ART asks clients to ride waves of activation while staying anchored. Group based grounding drills make that ask more credible. Members practice paced breathing, orienting, and dual awareness with witnesses who cheer small wins, like uncurling https://beckettcanu340.fotosdefrases.com/accelerated-resolution-therapy-and-cbt-therapy-can-they-work-together fists or keeping eyes open during a tough set. Finally, shame tends to drop. Shame is social in its roots, so it heals faster with healthy social contact. Group ART formats that protect privacy while celebrating courage often undercut the internal narrative that says, I am too much, I am broken. The risks people underestimate Group therapy magnifies. That is its gift and its risk. Trauma content, even hinted at, can overwhelm others in the room. One person’s dissociation can ripple. A tearful disclosure can tug for caretaking, pulling the group away from their own tasks. If the frame is loose, members may feel pressured to disclose or compete in suffering. ART itself can surface strong somatic reactions, from nausea to shaking to numbness. In a private office, I can narrow my focus to one body. In a group space, I need a plan for what happens if two people spike at once. Without clear containment, clients might leave dysregulated, then associate that crash with the therapy, or with the group as a whole. Confidentiality risk increases too. Even when people avoid trauma details, the fact that someone is working on a particular theme, like childhood sexual abuse or combat, may become guessable over time. Not everyone in a community wants that known, even in a clinical group. Finally, not every trauma presentation suits ART, and not every ART candidate suits group ART. Complex dissociation, active substance dependence with frequent blackouts, recent psychosis, and severe current suicidality require a depth of one to one stabilization that a group cannot provide. There are exceptions with tight safeguards, but you should start narrow and expand only after trust and regulation show up reliably. A frank pros and cons snapshot Pros: efficient symptom relief, social reinforcement, cost effectiveness, improved stabilization skills, reduced shame, and increased adherence to between session tasks. Cons: risk of vicarious activation among peers, confidentiality strain, uneven pacing inside a mixed group, higher demand on facilitator bandwidth, and the possibility of rapid change outpacing someone’s broader support system. Formats that work better than others Closed cohorts beat open drop in groups for ART. People need time to learn each other’s tells and to practice containment together. Four to eight members is a sweet spot. Fewer than four and the energy sags. More than eight and you will spend your time tracking microcrises instead of doing therapy. Session length matters. Sixty minutes is too tight for check in, an ART segment, and debrief without rushing. Ninety minutes lets you close loops, which protects sleep that night. Two hours can work for intensive days, as long as you build in breaks and snacks. Sequence matters too. I favor four phases across six to ten meetings: Phase 1: Orientation, consent, and basic skills. Name what ART is and is not. Practice grounding. Establish hand signals for overwhelm. Discuss confidentiality limits and the rule of no trauma details in open share. Phase 2: Brief assessment and target setting. Each person identifies one to three targets with the facilitator outside group, then brings a word label, not the story, to the group. For example, blue pickup, kitchen tile, the ditch. Peers practice hearing labels without leaning toward content. Phase 3: ART work periods. Rotate individuals through short ART sets while the group engages in parallel regulation tasks. In telehealth, use breakout rooms for dyadic work. In person, set up quiet corners or a second facilitator for splits. If you use a fishbowl, limit to one live session per meeting and debrief carefully. Phase 4: Integration and relapse prevention. Map shifts, test triggers safely, plan for milestones that may surface echoes of the trauma, anniversaries, holidays, medical exams. Reinforce sleep hygiene and gentle movement to help the nervous system absorb change. Guardrails that make or break safety Screening is the first guardrail. Use a structured intake to flag active psychosis, current domestic violence with no safety plan, recent suicide attempts, and severe dissociation. Those clients may benefit from preparatory one to one work before any group exposure. Ask directly about blackouts, amnesia, and substance use patterns, not just diagnoses. Consent is the second guardrail. Explain that accelerated resolution therapy often moves quickly, that images can shift in surprising ways, and that tears or shaking are normal and time limited. Emphasize that no one is required to disclose content to peers, ever. Paint a picture of a typical session so there are no surprises. Real time containment is the third guardrail. Before the first ART set, teach two or three concrete tools: orienting to five colors in the room, paced exhale breathing, and a physical anchor, such as pressing feet into the floor. When someone spikes, you want muscle memory to kick in. Finally, aftercare prevents avoidable crashes. Encourage a light meal after group, a brief walk, and a ban on alcohol for several hours. Ask members to pause major life decisions for a day or two after big shifts. Provide a way to check in if a symptom flares overnight. How this plays with CBT therapy, IFS therapy, and anxiety therapy Group ART does not exist in a vacuum. It fits well alongside CBT therapy, particularly the behavioral pieces. When someone neutralizes the terror attached to a car accident scene using ART, CBT helps them plan graded exposure to driving again, track safety behaviors, and measure gains. The group can celebrate concrete steps, like adding ten minutes of highway time, and call out subtle avoidance, like always choosing the slow lane. IFS therapy, or Internal Family Systems, brings a respectful language for parts that appear during ART. Many clients notice a younger part surfacing in imagery or a protective manager bracing against change. In a group, you can normalize this without launching into content. Invite members to notice which part is present, thank it for trying to help, and ask what it needs to feel safe during the next set. That small move reduces inner conflict that might otherwise stall progress. For clients whose primary complaint is anxiety rather than trauma, ART can target the first panic memory or a vivid future scene that triggers dread. In a mixed anxiety therapy group, reserve ART sets for cases with clear imagery and high physiological charge, then use CBT or acceptance based approaches for more diffuse worry. Do not try to force ART onto problems that lack sensory anchors. It frustrates clients and undermines credibility. Who benefits most, and who should wait Likely to benefit soon: adults with one to three focal traumatic memories, such as a crash, assault, or medical emergency, who can visualize easily, tolerate brief activation, and use basic self regulation skills. Needs more prep: people with complex trauma histories who dissociate under moderate stress, clients with chaotic living situations that undercut sleep and nutrition, and anyone in current danger where symptom reduction might blunt protective vigilance before safety is secured. What outcomes to expect, and how to measure them Expect heterogeneity. In a typical eight week cohort, two to three members may report dramatic relief around targeted triggers, two to three report moderate improvement, and one or two make smaller gains or decide to continue individually. Symptom scores often mirror that pattern. Use brief measures that do not consume the session: a 0 to 10 Subjective Units of Distress rating for the target, a two item sleep check, and a weekly functional metric like time spent driving, time spent in crowds, or number of workdays completed. Look beyond numbers. Watch for qualitative shifts: a member who starts to sit with back to the door without rehearsing it, a calm voice while discussing logistics of an anniversary date that usually spirals. Track setbacks without panic. Spikes can occur around session three to four when new targets surface. Name that as expected and plan accordingly. A case vignette, with identifying details changed A community clinic ran a closed six member group for adults after serious accidents. Ages ranged from 24 to 58. All had completed at least three individual sessions of stabilization. We met weekly for 90 minutes. The frame included no trauma details in open share, and each member had a crisis plan documented. By week two, members had selected labels for targets, for example overpass, brakes, blue sedan. We did ten minute ART sets in a side room with me and an assistant while the main room practiced paced breathing and gentle neck stretches, then rotated. One member dissociated lightly during a set, eyes glazed, speech slowed. The assistant paused the set, guided orienting, and we returned to neutral imagery before closing. In the main room, members reported a felt buzz and named their own anchors aloud, which helped the dissociating member rejoin without shame. By week five, four members reported driving on previously avoided routes with distress under 3 on a 0 to 10 scale. Sleep improved for three, unchanged for two. One younger member hit a wall around a courtroom date, and we pivoted to an IFS informed check in with a protector part that feared losing control. That allowed a final ART set to proceed safely. At discharge, two members requested a booster one to one session around medical settings, which the clinic provided. Six weeks later, phone follow ups found gains holding for five of six, with one planning additional therapy as legal proceedings moved forward. Telehealth, privacy, and the nuts and bolts Telehealth group ART is workable if you do not compromise on privacy. Each member should be in a room with a closed door, headphones on, and a camera that shows eyes and hands. Have them place a printed STOP sign within reach to hold up if they need an immediate pause, since audio can lag. Use breakout rooms for individual sets and a co facilitator to monitor the main room. Keep a backup phone number for each member in case of disconnects. Ask everyone to have a grounding object nearby, such as a textured ball or a scented cloth, and a plan for a brief post session walk. Document consent that is specific to telehealth risks and to the group format. Note who is in the home, and build a simple code phrase for I need help that does not alert others nearby if privacy is thin. Training, supervision, and fidelity ART is a protocol based model. If you plan to adapt it for groups, get trained in the standard individual protocol first and practice until you can run it cleanly while tracking a room. If possible, co lead your first groups with another ART trained clinician. Debrief after each session. Review tapes if members consent. Keep an eye on drift, such as letting trauma details seep into group process or skipping the cooldown phase when the schedule slips. Supervision helps, especially around tricky countertransference. Group ART can evoke a rescuer part in therapists. You will want to jump in, to fix, to show the whole group how powerful the method is. That pressure pushes the pace too fast. A good supervisor will help you respect the slow parts without losing faith in the method. Cost, access, and equity ART trainings cost money, and not every clinic can fund them. That said, once a team is trained, hybrid groups stretch clinician time well. For clients, group models often reduce out of pocket costs by a third to a half compared to the same number of one to one hours. Offer scholarships when possible, and schedule groups at varied times so shift workers and caregivers can attend. Consider language access. Imagery based therapies can cross language barriers with skilled interpreters, but you will need extra time and careful pacing. Equity also means not overselling. Communities that have been over promised and under served deserve plain talk about what ART can do, what it cannot, and what support exists if gains wobble. A practical readiness checklist for prospective group members I can describe my trauma in a single label without sharing details, for example parking lot or siren. I can use at least two grounding techniques that bring my distress down within five minutes. I have a safe place to go after group and a plan for gentle self care that night. I understand that others’ stories may activate me, and I agree to use my anchors instead of leaving suddenly. I consent to brief individual ART work during group time and know I can opt out at any point without penalty. Final thoughts from the room When ART and group therapy meet with care, the combination can feel like shifting gears on a steep hill. The engine catches, the climb eases, and the view opens. The method is not magic, and it will not suit every trauma or every season of recovery. But in the right container, with clear rules and steady hands, accelerated resolution therapy inside a group can turn isolated victories into shared momentum. Treat the structure as medicine. Hold confidentiality like crystal. Integrate CBT therapy for skills and exposure, borrow IFS therapy for respectful inner negotiations, and use the group’s human warmth to cool shame and spark courage. What matters most is not the acronym you choose, but the discipline to match the tool to the moment, to the person, and to the room you have built together.
Name: Erika's Counseling
Address: 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405
Phone: 208-593-6137
Website: https://www.erikascounseling.com/
Email: [email protected]
Hours:
Sunday: Closed
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Wednesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Thursday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Friday: Closed
Saturday: Closed
Open-location code (plus code): 43QM+G5 Uintah, Utah, USA
Map/listing URL: https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4
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Erika's Counseling provides counseling and coaching for women, with support around anxiety, trauma, depression, grief, burnout, chronic stress, and major life transitions.
The practice is led by Erika Beck, LCSW, and the official site says therapy services are available in Utah and Idaho.
The website describes a whole-person approach that may include CBT, ERP, ACT, ART, IFS, mindfulness, compassion-focused therapy, and nervous-system-informed care depending on the client’s needs.
For local visitors, the matching public listing places Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A in Uintah, Utah.
The practice focuses on creating a supportive, nonjudgmental setting where women can build coping skills, regulate emotions, and work through hard seasons with practical guidance.
If you are looking for a Uintah-based counseling office while also needing therapy licensed for Utah or Idaho, the site and listing provide a clear local starting point.
To ask about a free 15-minute consult, call 208-593-6137 or visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/.
For map directions and current listing hours, see https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4.
Popular Questions About Erika's Counseling
What does Erika's Counseling offer?
Erika's Counseling offers counseling and coaching for women. The site highlights support for anxiety, depression, trauma, grief and loss, burnout, chronic stress, self-esteem, body image, boundaries, communication, and life transitions.
Who leads the practice?
The website identifies Erika Beck, LCSW, as the therapist behind the practice.
What therapy approaches are mentioned on the site?
The official site mentions Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART), Internal Family Systems (IFS), Polyvagal Theory, mindfulness-based therapy, and compassion-focused therapy.
Who is this practice designed to serve?
The site is written primarily for women, and it also mentions support for moms as well as anxiety coaching for teen and tween girls and their parents.
Where can Erika's Counseling provide therapy?
The website says Erika Beck is licensed to provide therapy in Utah and Idaho.
What does the site say about counseling versus coaching?
The counseling-versus-coaching page explains that therapy is for mental health treatment and can address past, present, and future concerns, while coaching is presented as forward-focused support for problem-solving, values, goals, and growth from a more stable starting point.
Where is the Uintah office and what hours are listed?
The public listing shows Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405. Listed hours are Tuesday through Thursday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM, with Sunday, Monday, Friday, and Saturday marked closed.
How can I contact Erika's Counseling?
Call tel:+12085936137, email [email protected], visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/, or follow https://www.instagram.com/erikabeckcoaching/.
Landmarks Near Uintah, UT
Uintah City Park — Uintah City describes this as a central community park with trees, sports courts, a playground, a baseball field, and picnic space. If you are near the park or city center, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah office is a practical local reference point for directions.
Mouth of Weber Canyon — Uintah City says the community sits at the mouth of Weber Canyon. If you travel the canyon corridor regularly, the listed Uintah office provides a clear nearby therapy location reference.
Weber River — The city history page notes that Uintah is bordered by the Weber River on the south and west. If you use the river side of town as a local point of reference, the public map listing can help with routing to the office.
Uintah Bench — Uintah City notes the Uintah Bench to the north of town. If you are coming from bench-area neighborhoods and roads, the practice’s Uintah address gives you a simple local destination to work from.
Wasatch Mountains — The city history page places the Wasatch Mountains to the east of Uintah. If you live along the foothill side of the area, Erika's Counseling remains part of that same local Uintah setting.
Historic 25th Street — Visit Ogden describes Historic 25th Street as a major destination for shops, events, art strolls, and local activity. If you split time between Uintah and downtown Ogden, the Uintah office remains within the same broader local area.
Ogden Union Station — Ogden’s Union Station and museum district remains one of the area’s best-known landmarks. If you use Union Station or west downtown Ogden as a directional anchor, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah address is a useful nearby point of reference.
Hill Aerospace Museum — The official museum site presents Hill Aerospace Museum as a major visitor destination with free admission and extensive aircraft exhibits. If you commute through the Hill AFB corridor, the Uintah office is a helpful local therapy reference for route planning.
Ogden Nature Center — The Ogden Nature Center is a well-known education and wildlife destination in Ogden. If you are near west Ogden or use the nature center area as a landmark, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah location is still a recognizable nearby option.
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Read more about Accelerated Resolution Therapy in Group Trauma Therapy: Pros and ConsCBT Therapy for Health Professionals: Managing Compassion Fatigue and Anxiety
Compassion is a renewable resource until it isn’t. Most health professionals learn early how to keep moving when the pager keeps chirping and the waiting room keeps filling. The cost shows up later, often quietly. Charting takes twice as long. Sleep stays shallow even on off nights. Conversations at home shrink to monosyllables because there is nothing left to give. That is the terrain of compassion fatigue: a thinning of empathy mixed with exhaustion and guilt. Anxiety threads through it, sometimes as a racing mind, sometimes as a gnawing sense that something was missed. CBT therapy offers a practical toolkit that fits the way clinicians think. It deals in testable hypotheses and real-time experiments, then pairs those with sharper skills for attention, emotion regulation, and behavior change. Used well, it helps healthcare workers restore clarity, reclaim steadier energy, and set boundaries that protect their capacity to care. Integrated alongside trauma-focused work like accelerated resolution therapy or IFS therapy when needed, it can support recovery without demanding long sabbaticals or dramatic life changes. The quiet cost of caregiving Burnout and compassion fatigue are cousins, not twins. Burnout sounds like cynicism and depersonalization. Compassion fatigue feels more like grief fatigue. You still care, and that is part of the pain. The signs differ across roles. An ICU nurse might notice a reflex to avoid families at the bedside because every conversation seems to ask for comfort that feels out of reach. A primary care physician starts dreading refill requests because each one opens the door to a complicated story in a 15-minute slot. A therapist hears their own voice go flat midway through an eighth session in a row. Anxiety adds friction to every decision. In high-acuity settings, a small uptick in anxiety can heighten vigilance and save lives. When anxiety gets sticky, it pushes toward overchecking, overdocumenting, and overaccommodating. That pattern looks responsible from the outside. On the inside it drains momentum. Most clinicians can tolerate intensity. What erodes capacity is the chronic load of small, unresolved alarms. What compassion fatigue looks like in practice It rarely announces itself. Instead, it drips into habits. The resident who used to debrief cases now says, “Let’s just move on.” The social worker keeps snacks in the bottom drawer but forgets to eat them. The home health nurse who solved problems with humor starts skipping case conferences. Sleep fragmentation, irritability, a thin skin for criticism, a habit of replaying difficult interactions after hours, the sense that off days are for recovery rather than living, all of these are part of the picture. The cycle can be tightened by moral stress: the feeling of being responsible for outcomes while lacking the authority, time, or resources to change them. Clinicians often delay help until something cracks. They hesitate because everyone is strained, because they know the system is the problem as much as the person, because there is pride in endurance. CBT therapy does not ask people to stop caring. It helps them direct care where it matters and stop feeding the loops that amplify distress. Why CBT therapy fits the clinical mind Cognitive behavioral therapy works by mapping the links among thoughts, emotions, physiology, and behavior, then testing changes in one link to shift the whole loop. For a clinician trained to look for patterns and modifiers, that model feels familiar. The work is structured but agile. You develop shared language for distorted thoughts, use brief targeted behavioral experiments, and build relapse-prevention plans with the same attention you would bring to a discharge summary. There is a misconception that CBT is only for “thoughts.” Good CBT begins with function. If charting procrastination spikes at 3 p.m., that is a behavior problem ripe for graded activation, cueing, and friction reduction. If the pre-rounds heart rate goes up and sleep goes down before a string of on-call nights, that is an autonomic regulation problem. Thoughts are levers, not the whole engine. Core CBT skills adapted for clinicians In healthcare, time is sliced thin. Skills have to be portable and tolerable even on chaotic days. I teach micro-practices that fit into three-minute windows, then longer skills reserved for debriefs or therapy sessions. One anchor is situational mapping. On paper or a small note on a phone, capture a loop: trigger, quick thoughts, body signals, behaviors, results. For example, trigger: late add-on consult. Thought: “If I push back, I’ll be labeled unhelpful.” Body: jaw tight, shallow breath. Behavior: say yes, skip lunch. Result: resentful, slower thinking by 4 p.m. The map suggests leverage points: renegotiate timing, name workload constraints without apology, plan food earlier. In CBT language, we identify beliefs about reputation and rules, then we test them against data. Another anchor is values-guided choice. Compassion fatigue shrinks values to one: be useful. That is a recipe for depletion. Clarify the other values already present, like fairness, learning, or presence with family. When choices collide, name the trade. “I can complete two high-quality notes by 5 p.m. Or finish four with standard templates and leave on time to see my kids. Today, values tilt to family.” Aligning behavior with named values reduces wasteful rumination about the “right” choice. A third is cognitive defusion, borrowed from acceptance-based work but used within CBT. Notice sticky thoughts as mental events, not commands. “If I don’t double-chart this, someone will question my care” becomes “I am having the thought that my reputation depends on redundancy.” That slight distance opens room to choose a behavior based on policy and priorities, not a surge of fear. A brief CBT micro-practice for the end of a hard encounter Name the moment: What just happened, in one neutral sentence. Spot the cue: Which thought or body sensation is shouting the loudest. Run a 30-second test: Slow the exhale, lengthen posture, relax jaw, then see if the urge shifts by at least 10 percent. Choose a one-step action: Send the secure message, delegate one task, or schedule when you will revisit the issue. Close the loop: Jot one sentence about what helped, to reinforce the skill. This five-step reset takes under three minutes. It does not resolve system strain, but it prevents spirals that steal an hour later. Working with anxiety: exposure ladders that respect risk Exposure therapy is often misread as reckless. In healthcare, we do not ask someone to stop double-checking insulin at the bedside. We do look at the 12 extra micro-checks added by worry, like rereading the same three sentences in a note five times. Build an exposure ladder tailored to clinical realities. Start with a low-risk behavior, such as sending a standard message without a third reread, then track outcomes for one week. Gradually raise the bar only where patient safety and policy are preserved. Many clinicians carry performance-based anxiety that flares around evaluations, handoffs, or difficult families. Rehearsal helps, but full relief comes from testing feared predictions. “If I say I cannot add this patient, the consultant will shut me out for weeks.” Test it. Choose one situation to state capacity clearly with language that fits the culture. Track the response. In my experience, about half of the feared social consequences do not occur. Of the half that do, the fallout is usually smaller than predicted and shorter than the worry budget allotted. Sleep-focused CBT tweaks are also vital. Shift workers often benefit from anchoring wake time on off days, using a 90-minute wind-down even if bedtime shifts, and avoiding chasing perfect sleep. Paradoxical intention, lying in bed and allowing yourself to stay awake, can defuse the effortful struggle. A simple rule helps: protect performance sleep on nights before procedures or full clinics, but let other nights be “good enough.” When trauma stories linger: integrating trauma therapy modalities Not all distress in healthcare is anxiety or burnout. Some is trauma, direct or secondary. A code that ends with a familiar face, a patient assault, repeated exposure to traumatic narratives in therapy sessions, a preventable death that haunts rounds, these can leave sensory-laden memories and sudden spikes in arousal. Classic CBT can reduce avoidance and challenge trauma-related beliefs like “It was my fault” or “The world is not safe.” For many clinicians, adding a trauma therapy that targets imagery and body memory accelerates relief. Accelerated resolution therapy uses guided imagery and sets of lateral eye movements to help the brain reconsolidate painful memories. A typical session runs 60 to 90 minutes. You activate the memory just enough to work with it, then use imagery rescripting and physiological calming while the memory is “unstuck.” The result, when it works, is that the factual memory remains, but the image loses its sting. I have used ART with clinicians after sentinel events. Two to four sessions often reduce intrusions and nightmares by noticeable margins. It is not magic. Complex trauma or moral injury can require longer work, and it should be delivered by a trained practitioner. IFS therapy offers another route by helping people relate differently to the parts of themselves that carry burdens. The perfectionist part that keeps charting until midnight, the protector part that goes numb when families cry, the critic that replays errors at 2 a.m., all have jobs they took on for good reasons. In IFS therapy, you learn to access a steadier core state, then approach these parts without fusing with them. That stance softens internal battles and can make CBT skills stick because the parts no longer sabotage them. IFS is not a quick fix, but even a few sessions can change the tone of self-talk, which cascades into better decisions on shift. These tools complement each other. Use CBT therapy to map loops and change behavior. Layer in accelerated resolution therapy when a specific memory fuels reactivity. Use IFS therapy to heal the internal coalition so changes last. The sequence should match the person. If nightmares dominate, target them first. If overwork habits are bleeding into medical risk, start with behavior change while validating the deeper story. Team and system factors: using CBT without blaming yourself Clinicians work inside constraints. A packed schedule, limited staffing, rigid documentation requirements, they are not thought errors. CBT shines when it respects reality, then finds levers that matter. That often means shifting the question from “How do I feel better?” to “What problems are solvable today?” and “Which are tolerable with a buffer?” Buffers include time boundaries, communication templates, and escalation pathways. A simple message such as “Given current panel demands, I can see the patient tomorrow morning or offer a telehealth slot at 4:30. Which do you prefer?” preserves access without sliding into an open-ended yes. A cueing system for breaks, scheduled like medications, helps normalize pauses. Many teams use 7-minute micro-huddles twice per shift to redistribute load. These are behavior changes embedded in the system, supported by cognitive shifts about permission and priority. Two brief case sketches A composite of several hospitalists: after a difficult mortality review, he starts documenting every differential in full paragraphs to defend against imagined judgment. Notes double in length. Sleep drops to five hours. We mapped the loop: https://holdenvxqi242.almoheet-travel.com/cbt-therapy-for-health-conditions-reducing-anxiety-with-chronic-illness trigger, belief about accountability, safety behavior of overdocumentation, exhaustion. The behavioral experiment was to return to standard templates for low-risk admissions for one week, track any concerns from colleagues, and use a two-sentence addendum only when uncertainty remained. Result: no negative feedback, 90 minutes saved per day, and a small but clear rise in confidence. He paired this with two sessions of accelerated resolution therapy targeting the images from the mortality review. Nighttime intrusions decreased from nightly to once a week. A composite of an oncology nurse: she dreads entering a particular room because the family’s grief is overwhelming. She avoids longer interactions, which increases her guilt and rumination after shift. We used graded exposure, starting with scheduled three-minute presence in the room, focusing on breath pacing and one validating sentence, then exiting as planned. We combined it with IFS-informed work to meet the internal protector that goes numb as a survival tactic. Over four weeks, she reported less anticipatory dread and found a reliable script that allowed presence without merging with the family’s pain. Measurement and progress you can feel Clinicians like numbers. They also need measures that mean something in lived experience. I often track: Weekly hours of charting outside scheduled time, a proxy for boundary health. Sleep efficiency, roughly the ratio of hours asleep to hours in bed, estimated by a simple log rather than gadgets that guess. Rate of worry-driven checks, choosing one or two behaviors to count per day. Frequency and intensity of intrusions if trauma is active, using a 0 to 10 scale. A short self-report on compassion satisfaction, even just two questions: How useful did I feel today? How connected? You want trajectories more than perfect scores. A two-point drop in average worry intensity over three weeks matters. The goal is a life that works, not a self-report that hits zero anxiety. How to start: a personal care protocol that fits shift work Choose one pain point that wastes the most energy, not five. Make a one-week experiment that trims it by 20 percent. Book a standing 30-minute slot, same day and time each week, as your clinical debrief with yourself or a trusted colleague. Protect it like a procedure. Add a three-minute breath and posture reset after the most stressful daily event, for example after family calls, then track compliance, not perfection. Identify one supervisor or peer who can help renegotiate workload in plain language, and schedule the conversation. If trauma images or spikes dominate, consult an experienced trauma therapy provider and plan two to four focused sessions while continuing CBT work. Treat this as a protocol, not a wish list. Put it in your calendar. Review it every two weeks. Adjust like you would a medication that helped some but not enough. Boundaries, values, and moral injury Some distress does not resolve with skills because it reflects a clash between values and constraints. When a clinician believes a patient deserves a certain level of care and the system blocks it, the result can be moral injury, not just stress. CBT helps label unhelpful beliefs, but it should not be used to talk yourself out of appropriate anger. The work here is to parse what you can change, what you can protect, and where you might need to take principled action. Sometimes the boundary is internal: say no more often, stop apologizing for respecting limits, drop the reputation project. Sometimes the boundary is collective: advocate for safer ratios, push for protected documentation time, create backup rules that prevent noble but dangerous overextension. I have seen teams that write these into shared agreements. For example, no one stays more than 30 minutes past scheduled end time without team discussion. That is a structural CBT move, changing contingencies to make the healthier choice the easier one. Telehealth realities and micro-dosing skills on shift Telemedicine compresses cues. You have fewer body signals from patients, more screen fatigue, and blurred lines between home and clinic. CBT can be adapted. Set a visual boundary: a different chair, a light, or a simple pre- and post-session ritual that tells your nervous system the shift has started and ended. Use scripts to manage time respectfully, such as time checks at the midpoint. For anxiety, insert 15-second micro-pauses between visits, eyes off screens, a few shoulder rolls, one longer exhale. They seem trivial until you stack 20 of them in a day. For in-person shift work, place small anchors in locations you frequent: a tactile cue on a badge reel reminding you to drop your shoulders, a phrase on a sticky note that captures a value, like “clear, kind, brief.” Make these automatic. The best CBT interventions are the ones you remember under stress because they require no setup. When CBT meets a wall If you are doing the work and still feel stuck, consider three possibilities. First, untreated depression can flatten motivation so much that behavioral change stalls. Screening and, when indicated, medication or a focused depression protocol may be necessary. Second, trauma reactions might be driving the bus. If your body leaps to full alert at cues that make no sense to others, or if images hijack your day, prioritized trauma therapy is warranted. Third, system traps might be too tight. No amount of skill will fix a 1:12 nurse-to-patient ratio on a heavy unit. In those situations, the task becomes strategic: preserve energy, document what you need for advocacy, and plan an exit if change is not forthcoming. It also helps to examine the meta-belief many clinicians carry: “I should be able to handle this alone.” That belief keeps people isolated and ashamed. When you name it as just a belief, you can test the opposite. Ask for support, even small pieces. Join a consultation group. Share one specific burden with a colleague. In my experience, strong clinicians do not burn out because they are weak. They burn out because they are reliable, and reliability attracts endless demand. Resources and training notes Finding the right therapist matters. Look for someone comfortable with healthcare culture who can speak your language without pathologizing your coping. Search for clinicians trained in CBT therapy who also have experience with trauma therapy modalities. If intrusive images are central, consider a provider trained in accelerated resolution therapy. If your distress feels like a civil war inside, where a harsh critic and a frantic fixer trade barbs at 3 a.m., IFS therapy might resonate. Self-guided work can help between sessions. Short CBT workbooks designed for professionals can be useful if they emphasize behavior experiments over long journaling. Digital tools that log worry checks or charting time can provide data without judgment. The guiding principle is fit: skills you will actually use that meet the moment you are in, not the ideal day you wish you had. A closing reflection for people who care for a living Compassion fatigue is not evidence that you chose the wrong field. It is proof that you have been showing up in hard conditions. Anxiety is not an enemy to eliminate, it is a signal to calibrate. CBT gives you dials. With practice, you can turn down the unhelpful loops, honor the values that brought you into this work, and leave enough energy for the rest of your life. Some days the victory is big, like sleeping through the night after months of middle-of-the-night charts. Some days it is small, like a steady breath before you speak to a grieving family. Those are not just coping tricks. They are acts of professional craft and self-respect, the same qualities that make you good at what you do.
Name: Erika's Counseling
Address: 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405
Phone: 208-593-6137
Website: https://www.erikascounseling.com/
Email: [email protected]
Hours:
Sunday: Closed
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Wednesday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Thursday: 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Friday: Closed
Saturday: Closed
Open-location code (plus code): 43QM+G5 Uintah, Utah, USA
Map/listing URL: https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4
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Erika's Counseling provides counseling and coaching for women, with support around anxiety, trauma, depression, grief, burnout, chronic stress, and major life transitions.
The practice is led by Erika Beck, LCSW, and the official site says therapy services are available in Utah and Idaho.
The website describes a whole-person approach that may include CBT, ERP, ACT, ART, IFS, mindfulness, compassion-focused therapy, and nervous-system-informed care depending on the client’s needs.
For local visitors, the matching public listing places Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A in Uintah, Utah.
The practice focuses on creating a supportive, nonjudgmental setting where women can build coping skills, regulate emotions, and work through hard seasons with practical guidance.
If you are looking for a Uintah-based counseling office while also needing therapy licensed for Utah or Idaho, the site and listing provide a clear local starting point.
To ask about a free 15-minute consult, call 208-593-6137 or visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/.
For map directions and current listing hours, see https://www.google.com/maps/place/Erika's+Counseling/@41.138781,-111.9171075,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x875307cd5b7b0049:0x18b6b07ca7fe6b35!8m2!3d41.138781!4d-111.9171075!16s%2Fg%2F11mzyjzcs4.
Popular Questions About Erika's Counseling
What does Erika's Counseling offer?
Erika's Counseling offers counseling and coaching for women. The site highlights support for anxiety, depression, trauma, grief and loss, burnout, chronic stress, self-esteem, body image, boundaries, communication, and life transitions.
Who leads the practice?
The website identifies Erika Beck, LCSW, as the therapist behind the practice.
What therapy approaches are mentioned on the site?
The official site mentions Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART), Internal Family Systems (IFS), Polyvagal Theory, mindfulness-based therapy, and compassion-focused therapy.
Who is this practice designed to serve?
The site is written primarily for women, and it also mentions support for moms as well as anxiety coaching for teen and tween girls and their parents.
Where can Erika's Counseling provide therapy?
The website says Erika Beck is licensed to provide therapy in Utah and Idaho.
What does the site say about counseling versus coaching?
The counseling-versus-coaching page explains that therapy is for mental health treatment and can address past, present, and future concerns, while coaching is presented as forward-focused support for problem-solving, values, goals, and growth from a more stable starting point.
Where is the Uintah office and what hours are listed?
The public listing shows Erika's Counseling at 6696 South 2500 East Ste 2A, Uintah, UT 84405. Listed hours are Tuesday through Thursday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM, with Sunday, Monday, Friday, and Saturday marked closed.
How can I contact Erika's Counseling?
Call tel:+12085936137, email [email protected], visit https://www.erikascounseling.com/, or follow https://www.instagram.com/erikabeckcoaching/.
Landmarks Near Uintah, UT
Uintah City Park — Uintah City describes this as a central community park with trees, sports courts, a playground, a baseball field, and picnic space. If you are near the park or city center, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah office is a practical local reference point for directions.
Mouth of Weber Canyon — Uintah City says the community sits at the mouth of Weber Canyon. If you travel the canyon corridor regularly, the listed Uintah office provides a clear nearby therapy location reference.
Weber River — The city history page notes that Uintah is bordered by the Weber River on the south and west. If you use the river side of town as a local point of reference, the public map listing can help with routing to the office.
Uintah Bench — Uintah City notes the Uintah Bench to the north of town. If you are coming from bench-area neighborhoods and roads, the practice’s Uintah address gives you a simple local destination to work from.
Wasatch Mountains — The city history page places the Wasatch Mountains to the east of Uintah. If you live along the foothill side of the area, Erika's Counseling remains part of that same local Uintah setting.
Historic 25th Street — Visit Ogden describes Historic 25th Street as a major destination for shops, events, art strolls, and local activity. If you split time between Uintah and downtown Ogden, the Uintah office remains within the same broader local area.
Ogden Union Station — Ogden’s Union Station and museum district remains one of the area’s best-known landmarks. If you use Union Station or west downtown Ogden as a directional anchor, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah address is a useful nearby point of reference.
Hill Aerospace Museum — The official museum site presents Hill Aerospace Museum as a major visitor destination with free admission and extensive aircraft exhibits. If you commute through the Hill AFB corridor, the Uintah office is a helpful local therapy reference for route planning.
Ogden Nature Center — The Ogden Nature Center is a well-known education and wildlife destination in Ogden. If you are near west Ogden or use the nature center area as a landmark, Erika's Counseling’s Uintah location is still a recognizable nearby option.
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Read more about CBT Therapy for Health Professionals: Managing Compassion Fatigue and Anxiety