Empathetic Therapy: Highly Sensitive & Trauma Support

-individuals, couples, and families-

Supporting highly sensitive, neurodivergent, diverse, and traumatized clients with compassion and advocacy.

Bio pic of Jessie Sharp
Element Block with Js for Jessie Sharp Therapist, Intern

Jessie Sharp

"In the depths of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer.” — Albert Camus

  • Adults, Couples, Thruples, Families, Teens (16+)

  • Accepts insurance (Aetna, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, DMBA, EMI, PEHP, Regence, Select Health)

  • Sliding Scale Available

  • In-person in Sandy, UT

  • Telehealth in Utah

Good Fit For

  • Neurodiversity

  • Trauma/PTSD

  • Identity and Self-Exploration

  • Women’s Issues

  • Complex Relationship Dynamics

Approaches

  • Holistic

  • ACT - Acceptance and Commitment Therapy

  • CBT - Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

  • Social Justice

  • Systems Therapy

  • Compassion-Focused

  • Person-Centered

  • Feminist

  • Solution Focused

Other Specialties and Issues

  • Life transitions

  • Anxiety and depression

  • Family Conflict

  • Grief and loss

  • Divorce

  • Single Parents

  • Chronic stress

Therapy Style

My communication style is direct. While I possess deep empathy and will always hold a safe space to witness your story, I am here to challenge you therapeutically. I believe real growth happens at the intersection of radical acceptance and intentional change.

As a late-blooming, second-career therapist, I don’t just bring clinical training to our sessions—I bring a lifetime of lived experience. I am neurodivergent, and my practice is fueled by my special interests: deep research, questioning established norms, and combining facts with philosophy.

My Philosophy:

  • Holistic View: Your relational, emotional, physical, and systemic experiences all shape how you move through the world.

  • Inherent Wisdom: I believe you already possess the capacity for the change you seek; my job is to help you clear the path to your most authentic self.

  • The Foundation: Unconditional positive regard and non-judgment are the non-negotiables of my practice.

Together, we will work to reclaim the peace and joy you deserve.

Jessie’s Specialties

  • Life Transitions: Navigating significant changes, whether professional, personal, or relational.

  • Women's Issues: Supporting clients through challenges specific to the female experience; acknowledging the role of gender, power, and culture in your experiences and relationships.

  • Relationship Dynamics: Exploring complex relationships—whether with a partner, family members, or friends—to foster stronger connections and communication.

  • Identity and Self-Exploration: Helping clients understand how their personal history, background, and values shape their present, drawing on a foundation in identity and social studies.

Jessie’s Treatment Approach

Types of Therapy

(descriptions from Psychology Today)

  • Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) is an action-oriented approach that stems from traditional behavior therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy. Clients learn to stop avoiding, denying, and struggling with their inner emotions and, instead, accept that these deeper feelings are appropriate responses to certain situations that should not prevent them from moving forward in their lives. With this understanding, clients begin to accept their hardships and commit to making necessary changes in their behavior, regardless of what is going on in their lives and how they feel about it.

  • Cognitive-behavioral therapy stresses the role of thinking in how we feel and what we do. It is based on the belief that thoughts, rather than people or events, cause our negative feelings. The therapist assists the client in identifying, testing the reality of, and correcting dysfunctional beliefs underlying his or her thinking. The therapist then helps the client modify those thoughts and the behaviors that flow from them. CBT is a structured collaboration between therapist and client and often calls for homework assignments. CBT has been clinically proven to help clients in a relatively short amount of time with a wide range of disorders, including depression and anxiety.

  • Compassion-Focused Therapy (CFT) may assist individuals who struggle with mood disorders, anxiety, or feelings of shame and self-criticism, often stemming from early experiences of abuse or neglect. Through exercises like role-playing, visualization, meditation, and activities that promote gratitude for everyday life, CFT teaches clients about the mind-body connection and guides them in practicing awareness of their thoughts and bodily sensations. This helps clients cultivate self-compassion and compassion for others, which can help regulate their emotions and foster a sense of safety, self-acceptance, and comfort.

  • Culturally sensitive therapists provide therapy that is culturally sensitive. They understand that people from different backgrounds have different values, practices, and beliefs, and are sensitive to those differences when working with individuals and families in therapy.

  • Family Systems therapists view problems within the family as the result not of particular members' behaviors, but of the family's group dynamic. The family is seen as a complex system having its own language, roles, rules, beliefs, needs and patterns. The therapist helps each individual member understand how their childhood family operated, their role in that system, and how that experience has shaped their role in the current family. Therapists with the MFT credential are usually trained in Family Systems therapy.

  • Feminist therapy is an integrative approach to psychotherapy that focuses on gender and the particular challenges and stressors that women face as a result of bias, stereotyping, oppression, discrimination, and other factors that threaten their mental health. The therapeutic relationship, based on an authentic connection and equality between the therapist and the client, helps empower clients understand the social factors that contribute to their issues, discover and claim their unique identity, and build on personal strengths to better their own lives and that of others.

  • Multicultural awareness is an understanding and sensitivity of the values, experiences, and lifestyles of minority groups. Differences in race, culture, religion, gender, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, are all tackled by Multicultural counseling. In the counseling setting, the counselor recognizes that the client is different from the counselor and treats the client without forcing the client to be like him or her.

  • Person-centered therapy uses a non-authoritative approach that allows clients to take more of a lead in discussions so that, in the process, they will discover their own solutions. The therapist acts as a compassionate facilitator, listening without judgment and acknowledging the client's experience without moving the conversation in another direction. The therapist is there to encourage and support the client and to guide the therapeutic process without interrupting or interfering with the client's process of self-discovery.

  • Solution-focused therapy, sometimes called "brief therapy," focuses on what clients would like to achieve through therapy rather than on their troubles or mental health issues. The therapist will help the client envision a desirable future, and then map out the small and large changes necessary for the client to undergo to realize their vision. The therapist will seize on any successes the client experiences, to encourage them to build on their strengths rather than dwell on their problems or limitations.

  • Strength-based therapy is a type of positive psychotherapy and counseling that focuses more on your internal strengths and resourcefulness, and less on weaknesses, failures, and shortcomings. This focus sets up a positive mindset that helps you build on you best qualities, find your strengths, improve resilience and change worldview to one that is more positive. A positive attitude, in turn, can help your expectations of yourself and others become more reasonable.

  • Trauma focused cognitive behavioral therapy (TF-CBT) helps people who may be experiencing post-traumatic stress after a traumatic event to return to a healthy state.

Contact Jessie

(385)202-5440

email: jessie@ele-mentalhealing.com