Deirdre Owens
LCPC· Accepting clientsNevada · 5 yrs exp
Deirdre Owens is a Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor practising in Nevada, currently accepting new clients.
Stress, Anxiety · Family · Grief · Self esteem · +1 more
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Welcome to TherapistNetwork's Nevada directory for therapists trained in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). All listed clinicians are licensed and have ACT-specific training—explore profiles to find a therapist who fits your needs.
Nevada · 5 yrs exp
Deirdre Owens is a Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor practising in Nevada, currently accepting new clients.
Stress, Anxiety · Family · Grief · Self esteem · +1 more
Read profileNevada · 40 yrs exp
I know that it takes courage to take the first steps towards a change.
Addictions · Relationship · Intimacy-related issues · Self esteem · +1 more
Read profileNevada · 7 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, self esteem, depression, coping with life changes, and ADHD.
Stress, Anxiety · Self esteem · Depression · Coping with life changes · +8 more
Read profileNevada · 7 yrs exp
I work with clients on LGBT, trauma and abuse, grief, self esteem, and depression.
LGBT · Trauma and abuse · Grief · Self esteem · +1 more
Read profileNevada · 3 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, family conflicts, trauma and abuse, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Family · Trauma and abuse · +11 more
Read profileNevada · 11 yrs exp
I want to get to know you and I want you to feel heard and respected!
Parenting · Self esteem · Coping with life changes · Compassion fatigue · +13 more
Read profileNevada · 13 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, addictions, trauma and abuse, self esteem, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · Trauma and abuse · Self esteem · +10 more
Read profileNevada · 12 yrs exp
I believe in treating everyone with respect, sensitivity, and compassion.
Stress, Anxiety · Grief · Self esteem · Bipolar · +11 more
Read profileNevada · 8 yrs exp
I believe we all have the capacity to build a good life, even when we’re struggling.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · Relationship · Family · +15 more
Read profileNevada · 22 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, addictions, relationship issues, anger management, and self esteem.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · Relationship · Anger · +1 more
Read profileNevada · 4 yrs exp
I am here to support & empower you in that journey.
Relationship · Self esteem · Stress, Anxiety · Family · +6 more
Read profileNevada · 10 yrs exp
Together, we’ll explore tools and strategies that actually fit your life—not just textbook solutions.
Stress, Anxiety · LGBT · Relationship · Self esteem · +1 more
Read profileNevada · 16 yrs exp
I believe in treating everyone with respect, sensitivity, and compassion.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Trauma and abuse · Self esteem · +1 more
Read profileNevada · 5 yrs exp
I am here to support & empower you in that journey.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Grief · Parenting · +7 more
Read profileNevada · 3 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, trauma and abuse, bipolar disorder, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Trauma and abuse · Bipolar · +8 more
Read profileNevada · 30 yrs exp
I am here to support & empower you in that journey.
Stress, Anxiety · Family · Trauma and abuse · Anger · +1 more
Read profileIf you are searching for ACT-trained therapists in Nevada, you will find that acceptance and commitment therapy is offered by clinicians working across urban and rural areas and through online appointments. ACT is distinctive because it focuses on building psychological flexibility - the ability to notice thoughts and feelings without being ruled by them, clarify what matters to you, and take effective action aligned with your values. Therapists who specialize in ACT commonly integrate experiential exercises, mindfulness skills, and value-guided action planning to help you move through avoidance and unhelpful patterns.
In Nevada, many clinicians provide ACT via video sessions so you can access specialized care without needing to travel. Because ACT emphasizes present-moment awareness, willingness to have difficult internal experiences, and cognitive defusion - techniques that help you step back from literal belief in thoughts - the model adapts well to interactive online work. Whether you live in a city, a small town, or a more remote area of the state, you can seek a licensed ACT therapist who offers appointments at times that fit your schedule and supports the kinds of practical, skills-based work that ACT promotes.
People who choose ACT often want therapy that helps them stop struggling with unhelpful thoughts and feelings and begin living according to their values even when life is difficult. If you are tired of trying to eliminate unpleasant emotions or of being stuck in rumination and avoidance, ACT offers a framework that helps you build a different relationship to inner experience and take committed steps toward a meaningful life.
ACT is applied to a wide range of challenges, and in Nevada you will find therapists using it for anxiety, depression, chronic pain, obsessive-compulsive difficulty, trauma-related reactions, stress and burnout, and life transitions. The model is particularly helpful when the core issue involves getting stuck in rigid patterns - for example, persistent worry that keeps you from engaging with life, rumination that deepens low mood, avoidance of situations that matter to you, or fusion with self-critical thoughts that limit your choices.
When you work with an ACT therapist, the emphasis is not on labeling or simply reducing symptoms but on increasing your capacity to respond flexibly to thoughts and feelings so you can pursue what matters. For chronic pain, for instance, ACT can help you accept pain sensations while still identifying valued activities and taking steps to re-engage with life. For obsessive and compulsive patterns, ACT helps you notice urge-driven thoughts without acting on them, weakening their control. For burnout and stress, ACT supports you in clarifying values and choosing committed actions that restore balance. Across these concerns, the six core processes of ACT - acceptance, cognitive defusion, present-moment awareness, self-as-context, values, and committed action - work together to cultivate psychological flexibility, which is the central treatment goal.
You may wonder how experiential ACT work translates to video sessions. In practice, many exercises - such as cognitive defusion metaphors, guided mindfulness practices, values clarification exercises, and short behavioral experiments - adapt well to a virtual setting. A therapist can guide you through imaginal exercises, ask you to notice and describe internal sensations in the moment, and support you in planning small, concrete experiments to practice new responses between sessions. Screen-sharing can be used for worksheets, and many therapists provide audio recordings of mindfulness practices for you to use between appointments.
The collaborative nature of ACT means you will often do brief in-session practices and then take steps into your daily life. Your therapist will help you design values-based commitments that are practical and measurable, then troubleshoot obstacles with acceptance and willingness strategies when you encounter difficult thoughts or sensations. While online therapy provides convenience and access, it also requires clear communication about technology, session goals, and how you will practice between appointments. You should expect your therapist to talk with you about what to expect in online sessions, how to prepare for experiential exercises, and how to manage any interruptions so the work remains focused and productive.
Note that to provide telehealth services to people living in Nevada, clinicians must be licensed to practice in Nevada. This is a standard requirement across professional disciplines and is intended to ensure that your provider is recognized by state regulators to deliver mental health care to residents.
When you find an ACT therapist you might work with, it is wise to confirm their licensing status before beginning sessions. A straightforward first step is to ask the therapist for their full professional name and license number. With that information you can check the appropriate Nevada licensing board's online verification tool to confirm that the license is active and to review the listed license type. Pay attention to the credentials that match the kind of care you want - for example, licensed psychologist, licensed clinical social worker, licensed professional counselor, or licensed marriage and family therapist - and confirm that the license covers clinical work and telehealth services if you plan to meet online.
Beyond verifying that the license is active, you can look for any public disciplinary history or restrictions on practice that may appear in the board record. If the online verification tool is unclear, you may contact the licensing board directly by phone or email for assistance. Keep a record of the verification for your own files, and ask the therapist about their ACT-specific training, such as workshops, supervised ACT practice, or membership in relevant professional organizations that emphasize ACT training. A transparent clinician will typically welcome your questions and provide documentation or details about their training and ongoing professional development.
Choosing the right ACT therapist is both about credentials and fit. Look for clinicians who explicitly describe ACT in their professional profiles and who can explain how they use the model in therapy. Relevant indicators of ACT training may include formal workshops in ACT, supervised practice hours focused on ACT, participation in communities or organizations that support ACT practitioners, and publications or presentations on ACT topics. Membership in a professional community for contextual behavioral science is one sign that a clinician is engaged with ongoing ACT learning, though it is not the only indicator of expertise.
When you contact a therapist for an initial consultation, you can ask how they integrate the six core processes of ACT into sessions, what typical session structure looks like, how they support experiential exercises online, and how they measure progress. Inquire about session frequency, fees, insurance or third-party billing practices, and whether they offer sliding scale options if cost is a concern. If you value in-person work, ask whether the clinician also sees clients in a local office and whether they maintain availability for face-to-face appointments. Many people find that online sessions offer greater convenience and continuity, while others prefer meeting in person when possible; your comfort with the medium will influence the fit.
Finally, trust your experience during an initial session. A good ACT therapist will invite you to try small experiential practices, will be curious about your values and what matters to you, and will help you design manageable steps toward those values. If an approach feels overly didactic or misaligned with your goals, it is reasonable to explore other profiles until you find a clinician whose style and training match your preferences. Finding the right ACT therapist in Nevada can open a pathway to greater psychological flexibility and help you take meaningful action toward the life you want to lead.
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