Heart and Mind Counseling – Helping You Find Calm, Clarity, and Balance
At Heart and Mind Counseling, we offer Mindfulness-Based Therapies (MBT) to help you reconnect with the present moment, ease stress, and strengthen your emotional resilience. Our licensed clinicians are trained in evidence-based mindfulness approaches, allowing you to notice thoughts, emotions, and sensations with compassion and curiosity—rather than judgment or avoidance.
We proudly serve clients online in 23 states: Alabama, Colorado, Delaware, District of Columbia, Georgia, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Illinois, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas, Vermont, and Wisconsin.
We also have offices in Michigan located in Birmingham, Clinton Township, and Mt. Clemens, and we provide telehealth services across all our licensed states.
What Is Mindfulness-Based Therapy?
Mindfulness-Based Therapy blends traditional psychotherapy with structured mindfulness training. You’ll learn practical tools to stay grounded in the “here and now,” helping you respond to life’s challenges rather than react on autopilot.
MBT integrates several well-researched methods:
- MBSR (Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction) – Developed by Jon Kabat-Zinn at UMass Medical Center to reduce stress and chronic pain.
- MBCT (Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy) – Combines mindfulness and CBT to prevent depressive relapse and manage anxiety.
- Mindfulness-informed DBT, ACT, and EMDR – Therapists at Heart and Mind Counseling often integrate mindfulness into other therapies to enhance outcomes.
How Mindfulness Helps
Decades of research show that mindfulness reduces stress, anxiety, depression, and chronic pain, while improving sleep, focus, and emotional regulation.
Common benefits include:
- Lower reactivity to stress and triggers
- Increased ability to stay calm during conflict
- Reduced anxiety and rumination
- Improved mood and sleep quality
- Enhanced concentration and productivity
- Greater self-compassion and resilience
- Better regulation of pain and physical tension
Mindfulness works by strengthening your brain’s capacity for attentional control, self-awareness, and emotional balance. MRI studies show it increases activation in areas responsible for focus, empathy, and emotion regulation.
What Happens in a Mindfulness Session
Your sessions are experiential and adapted to your needs. Common practices include:
- Body Scan: You’ll be guided to gently move awareness through your body, noticing areas of tension or comfort. This promotes relaxation and better awareness of stress patterns.
- Breathing Practices: Learning how to use the breath as a stabilizing anchor for calm.
- Grounding Skills: Focusing on your five senses to feel present and safe.
- Mindful Movement: Gentle yoga-inspired stretches to connect mind and body.
- RAIN Technique: Recognize, Allow, Investigate, and Nurture emotions with compassion.
- Urge Surfing: Observing impulses (such as worry, cravings, or anger) without acting on them.
Between sessions, your therapist may suggest short daily mindfulness practices or provide recordings to help reinforce new skills.
Mindfulness vs. Somatic Therapies — What’s the Difference?
Although both emphasize the present moment, they focus on different mechanisms of healing.
Mindfulness-Based Therapies (MBT)
- Focus on awareness and acceptance of inner experiences.
- Strengthen the ability to observe thoughts and emotions non-judgmentally.
- Best suited for anxiety, depression, chronic stress, and emotional reactivity.
Somatic Therapies
- Focus on body-based awareness, movement, and nervous system regulation.
- Aim to release stored tension, trauma responses, and physical manifestations of stress.
- Best suited for trauma, dissociation, and chronic physical symptoms.
Many clients benefit from integrating both approaches—starting with mindfulness for self-awareness, then progressing to somatic therapies for deeper nervous-system regulation.
👉 Learn more on our Somatic Therapies page.
Research and History
Mindfulness entered Western medicine in the 1970s through Dr. Jon Kabat-Zinn’s Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) program at the University of Massachusetts. Since then, over 4,000 peer-reviewed studies have confirmed its benefits.
Key findings:
- Depression and Anxiety: Reduces relapse and improves emotional regulation (Oxford MBCT trials).
- Chronic Pain: Decreases pain intensity and increases tolerance (JAMA, 2016).
- Stress Reduction: Lowers cortisol levels and improves immune function.
- Trauma and PTSD: Mindfulness helps ground the body and reduce flashback intensity when applied with trauma-informed care.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What issues can mindfulness help with?
A: Anxiety, depression, trauma recovery, chronic pain, grief, ADHD, and burnout are among the most common. It also helps improve relationships and overall wellbeing.
Q: What if I can’t quiet my mind?
A: That’s completely normal. The goal isn’t to stop thoughts—it’s to notice them and bring attention back with kindness.
Q: How soon will I feel results?
A: Most people notice subtle improvements within 2–4 weeks, with deeper changes emerging over several months of consistent practice.
Q: Is mindfulness safe for trauma survivors?
A: Yes, when guided by trauma-informed clinicians like ours. We pace exposure carefully and include grounding techniques to ensure safety.
Q: How long are sessions?
A: Sessions are typically 45–55 minutes and available via telehealth or at one of our Michigan offices.
Q: Do you take insurance?
A: Yes. We accept most major insurances including BCBS PPO, Aetna, United/Optum, Medicare, and others. We’ll help you verify your benefits.
Q: Is mindfulness therapy religious?
A: No. Our approach is secular, clinical, and fully adaptable to your personal beliefs.
Getting Started
Ready to slow down, breathe deeply, and live with more presence? Our compassionate clinicians can help you find balance through mindfulness-based therapy.
We have offices in:
Birmingham, Michigan
Clinton Township, Michigan
Mt. Clemens, Michigan
Telehealth Available in 23 States:
Alabama, Colorado, Delaware, District of Columbia, Georgia, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Illinois, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas, Vermont, and Wisconsin.
Call: (904) 896-4998
Website: www.heartandmindcounseling.com
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