Tara Bio Pic

Tara Graham, LCSW

(she/her)

I am a licensed clinical social worker with a passion for helping people find a sense of love and belonging within themselves and within their communities. I have several years of experience working with children, adolescents, and adults in both individual and group settings. I obtained a bachelor’s degree from Southern Utah University studying psychology and family services in which I built my foundation of knowledge about human development over the lifespan. I obtained my master’s degree in social work from the University of Utah in 2017, in which I began learning how to use clinical skills to pursue my passion for creating safety and healing within oneself and one’s “family” whether that is chosen, biological, or internal.  

Healing in therapy begins with a strong, trusting relationship. I use a person-centered approach to meet you or your child where you are, honoring your unique experiences and goals. We'll work collaboratively to create a safe space to explore your challenges and build the tools you need for growth and resilience with therapeutic modalities including EMDR, IFS, DBT, and play therapy. I do my best to engage in this delicate work while considering a variety of factors such as multicultural influences, neurodivergence, feminist culture, and more.

Outside of my work as a therapist, I enjoy spending time with my friends and family through meaningful conversations or playing out in nature. My nieces and nephews bring a lot of laughter into my life! I also find joy in traveling, reading, baking, watching Grey’s Anatomy, and doing artsy things.


Tara standing in a beautiful waterfall with her arms up expressing great joy
A couple poses for a selfie against a stunning sunset backdrop, overlooking layered red rock formations and distant mountains.
Tara and some friends standing in the beautiful canyonlands arms outstretched in happiness

Tara’s Specialties and Expertise

Top Specialties

  • Trauma and PTSD

  • Parenting

Expertise

  • ADHD

  • Anxiety

  • Coping Skills

  • Dissociative Disorders (DID)

  • Peer Relationships

  • Racial Identity

  • Self Esteem

  • Stress

Tara’s Treatment Approach

Types of Therapy

(descriptions from Psychology Today)

  • 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.

  • EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is an information processing therapy that helps clients cope with trauma, addictions, and phobias. During this treatment, the patient focuses on a specific thought, image, emotion, or sensation while simultaneously watching the therapist's finger or baton move in front of his or her eyes. The client is told to recognize what comes up for him/her when thinking of an image; then the client is told to let it go while doing bilateral stimulation. It's like being on a train; an emotion or a thought may come up and the client lets it pass as though they were looking out the window of the moving train.

  • Experiential therapy is a therapeutic technique that uses expressive tools and activities, such as role-playing or acting, props, arts and crafts, music, animal care, guided imagery, or various forms of recreation to re-enact and re-experience emotional situations from past and recent relationships. The client focuses on the activities and, through the experience, begins to identify emotions associated with success, disappointment, responsibility, and self-esteem. Under the guidance of a trained experiential therapist, the client can begin to release and explore negative feelings of anger, hurt, or shame as they relate to past experiences that may have been blocked or still linger.

  • The humanistic method takes a positive view of human nature and emphasizes the uniqueness of the individual. Therapists in this tradition, who are interested in exploring the nature of creativity, love, and self-actualization, help clients realize their potential through change and self-directed growth. Humanistic therapy is also an umbrella term for gestalt, client-centered therapy, and existential therapy.

  • Motivational Interviewing (MI) is a method of therapy that works to engage the motivation of clients to change their behavior. Clients are encouraged to explore and confront their ambivalence. Therapists attempt to influence their clients to consider making changes, rather than non-directively explore themselves. Motivational Interviewing is frequently used in cases of problem drinking or mild addictions.

  • 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.

  • Psychodynamic therapy, also known as insight-oriented therapy, evolved from Freudian psychoanalysis. Like adherents of psychoanalysis, psychodynamic therapists believe that bringing the unconscious into conscious awareness promotes insight and resolves conflict. But psychodynamic therapy is briefer and less intensive than psychoanalysis and also focuses on the relationship between the therapist and the client, as a way to learn about how the client relates to everyone in their life.

  • 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 Tara

(435) 979-1970

email: tara@ele-mentalhealing.com