Newmarket Therapy Centre — Family Therapy & Counselling
Family Therapy in Newmarket
Every family develops patterns. Some of them stop working. Therapy creates the space to see them clearly — and to find something different.
Families are systems — and like all systems, they develop patterns. Ways of communicating, managing conflict, sharing space, and distributing responsibility that work until they do not. Family therapy in Newmarket creates a neutral, structured space where those patterns become visible and something different becomes possible.
What brings families to therapy varies enormously. Sometimes it is sustained conflict that has everyone exhausted. Sometimes it is a young person who is struggling and the family does not know how to help. Sometimes it is a major transition — separation, loss, blending two households — that has destabilised something that once felt stable. Whatever the reason, therapy offers a way through that is less damaging than going it alone.
Our registered therapists work with families of all configurations — including blended families, single-parent households, and multi-generational families. Sessions are available in person at our Newmarket and Aurora locations, and online anywhere in Ontario.
What We Can Help With
Why Families Come to Therapy
Families rarely come to therapy because everyone agrees there is a problem. More often, one person is struggling and the whole system is affected — or the system itself has developed patterns that nobody chose but everyone is living inside.
The Conversation That Cannot Happen
In many families, there are things that cannot be said — truths, feelings, needs, fears — that have accumulated around them a kind of silence. Therapy creates conditions where those conversations can finally happen, with enough safety and enough structure that they do not collapse into the patterns that usually prevent them.
The Young Person Who Is Struggling
When a child or teenager is in difficulty, the whole family is affected — and family therapy addresses the relational context around the young person, not just the individual. Often the most effective support for a struggling young person is work that involves the whole family.
The Pattern Nobody Chose
Every family has recurring dynamics — roles people get cast in, conflicts that replay, silences that have their own weight. These patterns are usually nobody's fault. They emerged from the intersection of different histories, temperaments, and needs. Seeing them clearly, from the outside, is the first step to changing them.
Separation and What Comes After
Separation and divorce affect the whole family, including and especially the children. Family therapy supports a transition that protects everyone as much as possible — keeping co-parenting functional, helping children feel safe, and reducing the damage that conflict causes when it leaks into the spaces children occupy.
The Blended Family Finding Its Shape
Bringing two families together is genuinely complex — step-parents, step-siblings, loyalty conflicts, different rules and histories. Therapy helps a blended family develop its own identity and ways of being together, rather than trying to force a shape that does not fit.
Grief That the Family Is Carrying Alone
When a family experiences loss — death, illness, significant change — each person grieves differently, and often in isolation from the others. Family therapy creates a shared space to grieve together, reducing the disconnection that loss so easily produces.
In family therapy, the relationship is the client — not any one person in the room. The therapist's job is to help the relationship find what it cannot find on its own.
Newmarket Therapy Centre
How We Work
How We Approach Family Therapy
Family therapy draws on systemic thinking — the understanding that individuals are shaped by and shape the relationships and contexts they live inside. We look at the whole, not just the individual parts.
Systemic Family Therapy
The foundation of most family therapy work. Systemic approaches help families see their own patterns from the outside — the dynamics, the roles, the unspoken rules — and create conditions for something different to emerge. The therapist remains genuinely neutral, allied with the process rather than with any individual. Non-blaming, collaborative, and often powerfully illuminating.
Emotionally Focused Family Therapy
When hurt, disconnection, and reactivity are at the centre of family difficulty, emotionally focused approaches help family members understand and respond to each other's underlying emotional needs — particularly the attachment needs that drive so much of family conflict. This approach is grounded in decades of research and is particularly effective for families where emotional disconnection is the core issue.
Learn about Emotionally Focused Family Therapy at Newmarket Therapy Centre →Narrative Family Therapy
Narrative approaches help families separate themselves from the problem-saturated stories they have been living inside — and discover alternative stories about who they are as a unit and what they are capable of together. Particularly useful when the family has organised itself around a single member's 'problem,' which rarely tells the full story.
Cognitive Behavioural Family Therapy
When communication patterns and behavioural dynamics are the primary focus, CBT-informed family therapy helps family members identify the thinking and behavioural patterns that maintain difficulty — and practise alternatives. Practical, structured, and effective for families who want clear tools alongside insight.
Learn about Cognitive Behavioural Family Therapy at Newmarket Therapy Centre →
The Process
What Family Therapy Actually Looks Like
Family therapy is different from individual therapy in ways that matter. The therapist is not there to take sides or decide who is right. They are there to help the family see itself — and find what it cannot find without support.
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01
Understanding everyone's experience
Early sessions are about the therapist genuinely understanding each person's perspective — without aligning with any one of them. Every experience is taken seriously. No one is the identified problem, and no one is beyond consideration.
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02
Making the invisible visible
The therapist helps the family see its own patterns — the dynamics that play out in the room, the unspoken rules, the ways people have learned to protect themselves that inadvertently hurt others. Naming these is itself often relieving.
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03
Practising something different
New ways of communicating and responding are tried in the room, with support. What is practised there begins, over time, to transfer to home — gradually and imperfectly, which is how all real change works.
Our Practice
How We Work
Registered Practitioners
All therapists hold Master's-level credentials as Registered Psychotherapists or Registered Social Workers.
No Pressure, No Judgment
A confidential space where you are met exactly where you are — with no agenda and no pressure to perform.
Depth, Not Just Skills
We work with what is underneath the difficulty — not just how to manage it. Understanding what drives the problem is what leads to lasting change.
In-Person & Online
Three locations across Newmarket and Aurora, and online sessions for anyone in Ontario.
Common Questions
Questions About Family Therapy Therapy
Serving clients across York Region and beyond

