Adina Mishor
Verified
Clinical Social Worker
350-500 NIS
Private Insurance
N/A
I'm a bilingual psychotherapist and clinical social worker with 20 years of experience working with teens, adults and parents.
I believe that therapy begins with a genuine human connection. Creating a safe, caring, and non judgemental space where people feel heard and understood. My approach is collaborative and integrative, and I draw on a range of therapeutic methods to meet each person's unique needs. Most modalities that I use are emotion, body or experience based such as AEDP and EMDR.
I've worked with many different populations including teens at risk, lone soldiers, young adults, yeshiva students, parents, women and men with a range of many different issues, such as anxiety, depression, addictions, trauma, and other mood dysregulation.
My role as a therapist is to undo aloneness. To help my client experience their emotions safely and empower them to achieve change as needed.
My practice is located in Efrat.
BSW
Hebrew University
2006
MSW
Hebrew University
2012
20
21188
Certified Psychotherapist - IDC - 2021
EMDR Level 1
EMDR Level2 - EMDER Israel - 2024
Online Therapy
Self-Esteem
Stress Management
Trauma / Post Traumatic Stress Disorder PTSD
Addictions
Alcohol Abuse
Anger Management
Anxiety / Panic
Depression
Drug Abuse
Grief
Infertility
Parenting Issues / Training
Postpartum Depression
Adolescents
Adults
Men
Women
Parents and diadic work
English
Hebrew
English
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is a type of psychotherapy that focuses on how one's thoughts, feelings and behaviors are connected and can be changed. It is based on the idea that how we think (cognition) and how we feel (emotion) can influence how we behave. CBT helps people identify and challenge distorted thinking and replace it with more balanced thinking, leading to improved mood and behavior. ‘Homework’, usually containing practical writing exercises, is often completed by the client between sessions to reinforce the therapy. Examples of tools that practitioners often use are journaling, challenging beliefs, and mindfulness.
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is a type of cognitive-behavioral therapy developed by Marsha Linehan to help people learn to better manage and cope with emotions and stress. It focuses on developing skills and strategies to help regulate emotions, improve relationships and communication, and reduce self-destructive behaviors. Through DBT, people learn to identify and modify unhealthy thoughts and behaviors, while also learning to accept and validate their own feelings. DBT teaches skills to help individuals become aware of and accept and regulate their emotions, tolerate distress, and improve interpersonal relationships.
Emotion-Focused TherapyEmotion-focused therapy (EFT) is a type of psychotherapy that is based on the idea that emotions play a key role in a person’s mental health. EFT focuses on helping people to identify, accept, and manage their emotions in a healthy and productive way. The goal of EFT is to help people identify and express their emotions, understand how those emotions impact their behavior, and learn how to manage their emotions in a way that is adaptive and healthy. EFT is a research-based approach to psychotherapy that has been found to be effective in helping people manage a variety of mental health conditions. It has been used successfully in the treatment of individuals, couples, and families, as well as with groups. EFT is particularly beneficial for people who struggle with emotional regulation, mood disorders, anxiety, trauma, and relationship issues.
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing Therapy (EMDR)Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is a psychotherapy treatment that was originally designed to alleviate the distress associated with traumatic memories. It uses a structured approach to address the past events that may be causing current distress, and uses bilateral stimulation, such as eye movements, to activate different neural networks in the brain in order to reduce symptoms of trauma. EMDR has been found to be effective for a wide range of mental health issues, including anxiety, depression, and PTSD.
Schema TherapySand tray therapy allows a person to construct their own microcosm using miniature toys and colored sand. The scene created acts as a reflection of the person’s own life and allows them the opportunity to resolve conflicts, remove obstacles, and gain acceptance of self. Schema therapy is based on the belief that early maladaptive schemas form when emotional needs such as affection, guidance, love, shelter, and safety, go unmet in childhood. These maladaptive schemas, which can be described as ways that individuals interpret life events, can later lead to them making unhealthy choices, forming toxic relationships, lacking healthy boundaries or social skills, engaging in destructive behavior patterns, having a poor sense of judgment, and experiencing feelings of worthlessness or self-doubt. Discovering the origins of one’s unmet emotional needs and learning to create nurturing relationships through schema therapy can help people begin to build feelings of trust, self-worth and adequacy.
AEDP Accelarated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy
Individual Therapy
Hadrachat Horim