
Positive Psychology
Positive Psychology
Positive psychology focuses on nurturing your strengths, fostering resilience, and building a life filled with meaning and joy. Through this approach, we help you shift toward greater well-being, enhancing your relationships, and discovering your fullest potential. Positive psychology is empowering you to create lasting, positive change in your life.


Transpersonal and spiritual treatments that help you understand how to manifest a better future while using all your energy to bring about positive change
Positive psychology invites you to embrace your natural strengths and uncover deeper joy. It’s about gently guiding you toward resilience, meaningful connections, and a richer, more fulfilling life. Together, we’ll help you move toward greater well-being and lasting change, with warmth and support every step of the way.
conception, pregnancy, the immediate period after giving birth (the postnatal period) and the year that follows the birth of a child (the perinatal period). These events can bring on stressors never previously experienced or exacerbate mental health conditions already in existence.
The same is true for non birthing partners.
We are here to help improve your sense of emotional well-being and your experience of pregnancy and early motherhood. And we’re also qualified to deal with any other, more specific metal health related conditions facing you in relation to your perinatal health.


You might be experiencing low levels of ongoing depression and anxiety, centred around the challenges of falling pregnant.
You might be dealing with the situation of an un-planned pregnancy. You may be experiencing a tough or demanding pregnancy, for many different reasons +including worry about financial stress. You might be experiencing birth trauma after a difficult birthing process. You might find that after giving birth, the conflicting thoughts you are experiencing regarding your new status as a mother and your newborn child do not go away.

Remember, we are here to help
If you are interested in scheduling an appointment, would like to discuss your goals for therapy, or simply want to learn more about whether therapy will be helpful for you,.
Let our team help you build a family
Our professionals include experts who provide psychological assessment, diagnosis and treatment for a range of mental health conditions related to pregnancy. Choose from specialists who focus in all aspects of perinatal mental health. With decades of experience and constantly expanding services in the field of clinical psychology we can introduce you to doctors and practitioners who have worked in private practices, hospitals, aged care facilities, and event palliative care while doing all they can to improve community mental health.
We believe that perinatal care should extend to up to two years after the birth of a child, and is often referred by treating obstetricians and gynecologist for therapy.

Dr Claudine Martijn
Clinical Psychologist

Karen Posener
Counsellor, Psychotherapist, Relationship Therapist, Development Coach

Anne Reilly
Buddhist Psychotherapist, Relationship Counsellor

Danielle Lass
MCAP, Counsellor & Psychotherapist

The Months of Pregnancy
It is likely that you will experience many emotional highs and lows during your months of pregnancy. Feeling a degree of anxiety or depression is also common. You may find that both immediate and extended family place stresses on your pregnancy experience that you have not had to deal with in other situations. And you will also find yourself interacting with an extended range of people including health professionals such as midwives, GPs, obstetricians, neonatologists, paediatricians, paediatric and neonatal nurses, allied health professionals, carers and community family workers.
External factors that might impact on your pregnancy experience and your interaction with others may include cultural dynamics, financial stress, work-place related issues, or gender and sexuality-related factors experienced within the LGBTQI+ community.
Your emotional well-being during your pregnancy is of paramount importance. Whether you need an occasional mental health check, support for integrating healthy behaviours into your daily life, or clinical assistance relating to more specific issues you are experiencing, we want to make sure that you have a parent-centred, positive experience throughout your pregnancy.
Pregnancy And My Partner’s Wellbeing
It’s now understood that perinatal mental health among fathers and other non-birthing partners, including step-parents, co-mothers and non-binary partners, is an important part of increasing a sense of overall wellness during pregnancy. While you as the birth mother might have access to a range of health professionals and their allies, your significant other(s) may not come into contact with the health system, and its inherent checks-and-balances, as often as you.
If you feel that your significant other(s) or co-parent might benefit from a wellness check or other prenatal mental health services, we are here to support you.

I’m A Mother – Why Am I Feeling This Way?
Now that you are a parent you may be experiencing thoughts and feeling you weren’t necessarily expecting. And these thoughts may not be going away on their own.
They may centre around traumatic memories of the birth process (including PTSD), even when the birth itself might be considered obstetrically straightforward. They may focus on your child. They may relate to the way you are processing your new status as a parent, or the way you perceive yourself and the way that others, including partners and family members, now perceive and interact with you.
Up until now, you may have felt that these are issues you can deal with on your own. Or that your partner offers enough support. Perhaps you are unsure of what you should be feeling, even what might be considered normal. You are not alone in feeling this way. There are a number of different techniques that can be used to help you, from simply listening and offering guidance and support in a non-judgemental environment, to the application of structured cognitive therapies and even group-based support sessions. Medication, for example in the form of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may also be appropriate, which can be assessed on a personal level after taking into account your own circumstances and preferences.
Prenatal Grief And Loss
Not all pregnancies and births go the way you want them to.
The pain associated with the death of a child, whether born or unborn, cannot easily be described. The natural order of life is overturned. The sense of loss is catastrophic.
Grief affects the brain and body in many different ways. Changes in memory, awareness, behaviour, sleep patterns and body functions are normal, as the brain tries to cope with the unthinkable. The immune system as well as the heart are affected in exactly the same way as when a person is coping with extreme and traumatic stress.
If there can be said to be any good news in this situation, it is that the brain will, with time, heal. There are many guided techniques that can assist this process. Mindfulness, meditation, counselling and cognitive behaviour therapy can all contribute to healing and, when ready, moving forward.
