There is a moment most people with regulation difficulties know well — where something happens and the response is immediate, total, and completely out of proportion to what the situation seemed to call for. Or the opposite: a flatness, a numbing, an inability to access feeling or motivation at all. Emotional regulation therapy in Newmarket and Aurora addresses what is actually happening in those moments — and helps you build a different relationship with your emotional experience.
What Is Emotional Dysregulation?
Emotional regulation is the capacity to experience and respond to emotions in a flexible, proportionate way — to feel feelings without being overwhelmed by them, and to act from a place of choice rather than pure reaction. It is not about feeling less, or being calmer, or having better control. It is about having more range.
Dysregulation is what happens when that range is lost. The nervous system gets stuck at one extreme or the other — either firing intensely in response to relatively small triggers, or shutting down into numbness and disconnection. Both are the same nervous system, expressing the same underlying difficulty from different directions.
Emotional dysregulation is not a character flaw. It is almost always the result of a nervous system that learned to respond this way — often very early in life, when the conditions for regulation (a consistently calm, attuned caregiver) were not reliably available. The good news is that regulation is a capacity that can be built at any age, with the right therapeutic support. At Newmarket Therapy Centre and Aurora Village Therapy & Wellness Centre, we specialise in exactly this work.
Signs of Emotional Dysregulation
What We Treat with Regulation Therapy
Anger & Reactivity
Intense, fast anger responses that feel out of proportion — often followed by guilt and confusion about what just happened.
Emotional Overwhelm
Becoming flooded by emotion — unable to think clearly, communicate effectively, or act from a considered place.
Emotional Numbing
The opposite of overwhelm — a flatness, disconnection, or inability to access feelings that can feel like depression but is often a protective regulation strategy.
Shame Spirals
Intense, rapid-onset shame that feels annihilating — often triggered by perceived failure, criticism, or rejection, and very difficult to recover from.
Relationship Dysregulation
Emotional responses that consistently damage close relationships — including fear of abandonment, jealousy, intense conflict, or the inability to repair after rupture.
Burnout & Exhaustion
When chronic emotional demands have depleted the system — and the result is an inability to regulate, motivate, or find meaning in previously engaging activities.
Regulation is not about feeling less. It is about having more room — more space between the trigger and the response, more access to the full range of what it means to be human.
Newmarket Therapy Centre & Aurora Village TherapyTherapeutic Approaches
Emotional regulation therapy at Newmarket Therapy Centre draws on several evidence-based approaches, often used in combination. The right blend depends on your particular presentation, history, and goals.
Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT)
DBT was specifically developed to address emotional dysregulation and is the most evidence-based skills training approach for this presentation. The four DBT modules — mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotional regulation, and interpersonal effectiveness — build the practical capacity to navigate intense emotional states without acting in ways that make things worse.
Learn about DBT →Somatic & Nervous System Work
Dysregulation is a nervous system phenomenon — and somatic approaches work directly with the physiological patterns underneath the emotional ones. By building the body's capacity to settle, discharge, and move through activation, somatic work addresses dysregulation at the level where it actually lives.
Learn about Somatic Therapy →Neurofeedback
For dysregulation with a strong neurological component — where the brain's regulatory circuits have become chronically over- or under-activated — neurofeedback trains the brain toward greater flexibility and stability. Particularly effective for ADHD-related dysregulation, trauma-driven reactivity, and presentations that have not fully responded to talk therapy.
Learn about Neurofeedback →Internal Family Systems (IFS)
IFS understands dysregulated responses as the behaviour of protective parts — parts that learned to react this way because it was necessary at some point. Rather than trying to suppress these parts, IFS builds a relationship with them: understanding what they are afraid of, and gradually helping them learn that the danger has passed.
Learn about IFS →Regulation Therapy in Newmarket & Aurora
Emotional regulation therapy is available in person across our three York Region locations and online for clients anywhere in Ontario. No diagnosis is required to access this work — if your emotional responses are affecting your life and relationships, that is enough.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ready to Take the Next Step?
Our intake team will match you with the right regulation-specialist therapist in Newmarket or Aurora. No commitment required.
Newmarket: (289) 500-8039 · Aurora: (289) 272-0200

