Depression Therapy Newmarket | Mood Disorders | Newmarket Therapy Centre
Depression therapy Newmarket Ontario — Newmarket Therapy Centre

Newmarket Therapy Centre — Depression & Mood Disorders

Depression Therapy in Newmarket

Depression is not a failure of will or character. It is what happens when a person has had to withdraw — from feeling, from contact, from themselves. Therapy helps you find your way back.

Depression has many faces. For some people it arrives as a crushing weight — an inability to get out of bed, to feel anything, to imagine that things could be different. For others it is quieter: a flatness that has become so familiar it feels like personality. A withdrawal from people and experiences that once mattered. A sense of going through the motions without really being present in your own life.

What most descriptions of depression miss is this: the withdrawal is not random. It is a response. Something in a person's life — or their history — made full contact with the world feel too painful, too risky, or simply not worth the effort. Depression therapy in Newmarket helps you understand what that withdrawal has been protecting you from — and begin, slowly, to re-emerge.

Our registered therapists bring warmth, depth, and genuine clinical skill to this work. Sessions are available in person at our Newmarket and Aurora locations, and online anywhere in Ontario.

Person finding renewed life after depression therapy at Newmarket Therapy Centre

A Different Way of Understanding Depression

Depression as Withdrawal — Not Weakness

Depression is typically described as a disorder of mood, motivation, and thinking. We do not disagree — but we go deeper. We understand depression as what happens when a person has learned, often for very good reasons, that it is safer to pull back than to stay fully present and in contact with life. Understanding what drove that withdrawal is what makes recovery possible.

The Life That Quietly Narrowed

Depression rarely arrives all at once. More often it is a gradual narrowing — fewer invitations accepted, fewer feelings allowed, fewer risks taken. Over time the world that felt possible becomes smaller and smaller. Therapy helps you notice how this happened and begin to widen it again, one careful step at a time.

Feelings That Could Not Be Felt

Beneath depression there is almost always something that could not be fully experienced — grief that was never grieved, anger that felt too dangerous to express, a longing that felt too vulnerable to admit. When feelings cannot move through us, they do not disappear. They go underground. Therapy creates the safety to let them surface and finally move.

The Self That Turned Inward

Depression often involves a turning of energy inward — self-criticism, rumination, a relentless internal narrative that dissects and diminishes. What looks like laziness or negativity from the outside is often a person who has become their own harshest critic, cut off from the warmth and aliveness that connection with others and the world can bring.

The Deadening of Contact

One of the most painful aspects of depression is the deadening of experience — food loses taste, music loses meaning, people feel unreachable. This is not permanent damage. It is the nervous system protecting itself by dimming sensation. As therapy restores a sense of safety, aliveness gradually returns — often in small moments before it becomes sustained.

Depression as an Unfinished Story

Many people with depression are carrying an old story — about who they are, what they deserve, what is possible for them — that was formed in circumstances that no longer apply. Depression can be the weight of that unfinished story. Therapy helps you examine the story, understand where it came from, and discover that you are not obliged to keep living inside it.

The Body That Lost Its Aliveness

Depression is physical as well as psychological. Heaviness, slowness, difficulty moving, disrupted sleep, the absence of pleasure — these are real physiological experiences, not symptoms to be pushed through. Therapy that attends to the body as well as the mind reaches depression in a more complete way than talking alone.

Depression is not the absence of feeling. It is what happens when feeling has become too much to bear — and the self has learned to go quiet in response. Therapy helps you find your voice again.

Newmarket Therapy Centre

How We Work With Depression

Therapy Approaches for Depression in Newmarket

We do not apply a single method. Depression is too personal for that. We draw on a range of well-researched approaches, selected and woven together based on what your particular experience calls for.

Relational

Emotion-Focused Therapy (EFT)

Depression often involves emotions that have been blocked, suppressed, or simply never had space to be felt. EFT works by helping you access and process those underlying emotional experiences directly — not to be overwhelmed by them, but to move through them. When the feelings beneath depression are finally allowed to move, something shifts. Aliveness begins to return. This is relational, present-focused work that addresses what is actually sustaining the depression, rather than just its visible symptoms.

Learn about EFT at Newmarket Therapy Centre →
Cognitive

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)

Depression maintains itself partly through the stories the mind tells — about the self, the world, and the future. These stories are not random; they are learned, and they are changeable. CBT helps you identify the thought patterns and withdrawn behaviours that keep depression alive, and practise responding differently. It is structured, practical, and among the most thoroughly researched treatments for depression. For many people it provides the foothold needed to begin re-engaging with life.

Learn about CBT at Newmarket Therapy Centre →
Parts-Based

Internal Family Systems (IFS)

IFS understands depression not as a global state but as a configuration — a set of parts that have taken over the internal landscape, often to protect other parts that are carrying pain, shame, or grief. The depressed part, the critical inner voice, the withdrawn part — each has a history and a reason. IFS helps you meet these parts with curiosity rather than hostility, understand what they are carrying, and create the internal conditions for something other than depression to have space.

Learn about IFS at Newmarket Therapy Centre →
Body-Based

Somatic & Body-Informed Therapy

Depression is held in the body — in heaviness, in slowness, in a nervous system that has learned to dampen its own signals. Somatic approaches work with the body's experience of depression directly, helping to restore movement, sensation, and a felt sense of aliveness. This is not exercise or wellness advice. It is careful, attuned attention to the physical experience of depression, and it reaches places that thinking alone cannot access.

Brain-Based

Neurofeedback

For some people, depression has a neurological dimension — patterns of brain activity that have become entrenched and are difficult to shift through insight or behaviour alone. Neurofeedback works directly with these patterns, training the brain toward greater regulation and vitality. It is particularly helpful for depression that has not fully responded to therapy or medication, or where flatness, cognitive fog, and physical heaviness are the dominant experience.

Learn about Neurofeedback at Newmarket Therapy Centre →
Mindfulness

Mindfulness-Based Approaches

Depression pulls a person into the past — into rumination, regret, and a replaying of what went wrong or what was lost. Mindfulness practices build the capacity to be with present experience as it actually is, rather than lost in the mind's version of what has been or what might be. For people with recurring depression in particular, developing this capacity significantly reduces the risk of relapse — not by thinking differently, but by relating to thinking differently.

Therapist and client in depression therapy session at Newmarket Therapy Centre

The Process

What Depression Therapy Actually Looks Like

When you are depressed, starting anything — including therapy — can feel like an enormous effort. The process is designed to meet you exactly where you are. There is no pressure to perform wellness, and no expectation of how quickly things should change.

  • 01

    Being heard without an agenda

    Your therapist's first priority is to understand you — your history, how depression feels in your particular life, and what has brought you to this point. Nothing is rushed. There is no predetermined map.

  • 02

    Understanding what the withdrawal is about

    Together you begin to explore what your depression has been responding to — the feelings that could not be felt, the experiences that were not processed, the beliefs that formed when the world felt unsafe or you felt unworthy of it.

  • 03

    Re-emerging, at your own pace

    Recovery from depression is not linear, and it does not happen all at once. Therapy supports you through the gradual process of re-engaging — with feeling, with others, with the parts of life that depression has kept at a distance.

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 expectation of how you should be feeling or how quickly things should change.

Depth, Not Just Symptom Relief

We work with what is underneath the depression — not just how to manage it. Understanding what the withdrawal is responding to is what leads to lasting change.

In-Person & Online

Three locations across Newmarket and Aurora, and online sessions for anyone in Ontario — including when leaving home feels like too much.

Common Questions

Questions About Depression Therapy in Newmarket

How is your approach to depression therapy different?
Most depression therapy focuses on changing thoughts, increasing activity, and building coping skills — and these things genuinely help. We do all of that. But we also understand depression as a response — as what happens when a person has had to pull back from full contact with their feelings, their relationships, or their own sense of aliveness. Understanding what the withdrawal has been protecting you from is what leads to real and lasting recovery, rather than managed symptom reduction.
What if I have had depression for so long it feels like just who I am?
This is one of the most common things we hear, and one of the most important to address directly. Depression that has been present for a long time does begin to feel like personality — like a fundamental feature of who you are rather than something that happened to you. It is not. Beneath the depression there is a self that has not disappeared, only gone quiet. Therapy, particularly depth-oriented work, specialises in helping that self re-emerge — carefully, at its own pace.
Should I be on antidepressants before starting therapy?
Not necessarily, and this is a decision best made with your GP or psychiatrist. Therapy and medication work through different mechanisms and are often complementary — medication can reduce the intensity of symptoms enough to make the relational and emotional work of therapy more accessible. For mild to moderate depression, therapy alone is well-evidenced. For more severe presentations, combining both is often recommended. Your therapist can discuss this with you and, if appropriate, work collaboratively with your prescribing doctor.
I do not have the energy for therapy right now. Is that a reason not to start?
Lack of energy is one of the central features of depression — so if you waited until you had energy to start, you might wait indefinitely. Therapy for depression is specifically designed to meet people where they are, including at very low points. Sessions do not require you to perform or produce. You simply show up, as you are. Often the energy comes later, as the work begins to take effect — not before it.
How long does depression therapy usually take?
It depends significantly on the nature of the depression, how long it has been present, and what is beneath it. Some people experience meaningful shifts within a few months. Depression with deeper roots — in early experiences, relational patterns, or longstanding beliefs about the self — tends to take longer and is usually more thorough as a result. Your therapist will review progress regularly so you always have a clear sense of where you are.
Can I do depression therapy online?
Yes. Online therapy for depression is available to anyone in Ontario and is equally effective as in-person work for most presentations. For many people with depression — for whom leaving the house feels genuinely difficult — online sessions are not a compromise but a genuine advantage. Neurofeedback requires in-person attendance; all other approaches are available virtually.

Serving clients across York Region and beyond

NewmarketAurora Richmond HillBarrie BradfordEast Gwillimbury KeswickKing Oak RidgesHolland Landing StouffvilleSchomberg