Dr Nicholas Jenner is a counselling psychotherapist in private practice working with individuals and couples with a speciality in integrative psychology techniques. Dr Jenner runs a thriving online therapy business bringing help to those who find taking therapy online as convenient and tailored for their needs. He has been offering online therapy for over 10 years. During that time, he has built up a speciality in many areas of psychology (especially Codependency) and helped many clients move forward.
Contact him for a free consultation for online individual therapy or online group therapy.
He engages fully with his clients to ensure the best possible chance of recovery. He firmly believes that awareness is important but action is the decisive element of recovery. He accompanies his clients along that road not only by offering online individual and group sessions focusing on their issues but as a resource between sessions too.
His passion as a therapist is to help individuals and couples get their life back, freeing them of restraints of negative thinking, anxiety and depression. By using effective tailored therapeutic approaches, he puts clients back in charge of their own destiny. Working outside the box, he goes that extra mile to make sure clients have access to help between sessions, something that is greatly appreciated by clients.
Dr Jenner has experience of working with clients with severe depression, bipolar, personality disorders, anxiety, PTSD, eating disorders and other mental health issues.
For more information, go to:
- www.drnjenner.com
- www.freefromcodependency.com
- www.theonlinetherapist.blog
- Download The Online Therapist App
- or contact him by e-mail: therapy@drnjenner.com
This Post Has 51 Comments
Comments are closed.
Dr. Jenner,
I really enjoyed your page and the work on it.
Madeleine
Glad you liked it and thanks for the comment
Thanks for folllowing! I’ll admit, it makes me a tad bit nervous. 🙂 My guess is that the type of therapy I’m doing, Intensive short term dynamic phychotherapy is what interests you? I try to be very careful about what I post in terms of how the therapy works because I know it will come off sounding terrible if I’m the one explaining it. I went because I was told to go, knowing nothing about any type of therapy, thinking I was in it for just a few months due to a little depression. Almost a year later and I’m just getting started! 5 months was stolen by a psychiatrist who over medicated to the extreme. (I’m not sure she’s practicing after what she did to me) but now that I’m not so medicated I’ve been able to get more work done.
Feel free to ask any questions. I’m an open book. Hope I don’t bore you!
Mandi
Thanks for the comment….no need to be nervous and it wasn’t really your stories of therapy but more your writing style that attracted me. I like to read other blogs.Your story does prove though that medication only is not always the answer.
Thank you! That’s a huge compliment. That particular post was written mostly for me, probably the first. I don’t want to remember that session but I need to. I like reading other blogs too. I just started this a few months ago, hadn’t read a blog before then… much less thought of writing one myself!! 🙂
Mandi
The power of writing in therapy is well known. I often set my clients written tasks between sessions. It helps clarify, organise and focus on issues.
It’s interesting how you explained what inspired you to become a psychologist because experiences in my own life made me want to become one too. Although that dream remained unfulfilled till date since I became a lawyer, that unfulfilled dream led me to depression and which I eventually overcame.
I’m glad you liked my post and followed my blog, it gave me a chance to stop by your blog. I look forward to reading more. Keep up the good work! (:
Thanks for the comment. I had the urge to work in psychology quite early, studied and did work in it but I can only say I enjoyed it when my own issues were out of the way. That process made me stronger and gave me a strong insight into life and all its complexities which I hope goes someway to helping others.
Thank you for following my blog, Dr. Jenner. I am fortunate in having a loving, supportive husband as well as a therapist who talks with us both, and a psychiatrist who monitors my meds and mood. My husband and I have held hands through many of life’s challenges. We are married 43 years this spring.
That is great news…I am very happy for you.
Hi & many thanks for the follow on http://www.postsofhypnoticsuggestion.wordpress.com it’s much appreciated. This is a really interesting blog, so I now find myself following you back!
Wishing you all the best
Tony
Hi Tony…thanks for the nice comments and the follow 🙂
Thanks for the like and follow. I like what I have seen and I have a feeling that I’ve just skimmed across the top. I have suffered with major depressive disorder and complex PTSD. And anxietys of sorts, so I think this blog will be a nice card I can pull out of my back pocket when needed. Looking forward to visiting more. 😉
Thanks for dropping by. I liked your blog too and will be reading frequently.
Thank you for dropping by my blog, Dr. Jenner. I linked back to your page and started reading about CBT, and then recalled what I had just written and thought, well, fair enough. So, am I hopelessly incurable? Sigh. I’ll be mining your blog for stress management techniques, so thank you for that!
Why would you believe you are incurable?
Oh, it’s not that I’m incurable, it’s just a matter of choice – do I want to be functional, or do I want to ride out my mania/depression? Because each scenario comes with major drawbacks.
Yes, of course. Are you in therapy or have been?
yes, and I’ve been medicated, as well. I recognize my all or nothing statements, as I’m sure you do as well, but I don’t know how to make my personality other than what it is. I just keep setting myself up for disappointment. I try, only to fail, and then wonder why I bothered trying in the first place. Right now I am going through a period of self-pity where I want to find a place to use my skills and talents, only to feel like there must not be much skill or talent there at all if it is not given what I feel is due recognition (I’m a bit of a narcissist, you see)
Dr. Jenner, thank you for visiting my site and choosing to follow. In my opinion, CBT and DBT should be the only therapy models for bipolar disorder and borderline personality disorders. This is an important blog.
Thanks very much for choosing to comment…
Dr. Jenner, thanks for dropping by my tot lot and a much bigger thanks for choosing to follow – that gives me such a burst of encouragement. I’m thrilled by what I’ve found here on your blog. It’s exciting to know that someone is using all these online channels as tools in providing therapy. I’m a student of psychology myself – currently bagged my B.Sc- and yet that’s only one of the reasons i’m hooked.
Thanks for dropping by and commenting…
Thank you for following my blog. I have low vision so I bookmark blogs I’m interested in or I get an overwhelming inbox! Hopefully I can learn something here as my counselor is not helping me in coping with my chronic illness/disabilities!
Danke
Hello..sorry to hear that therapy is not going very well for you. Have you spoken with your therapist about your concerns? Maybe they could try a different approach.
Oh, I wish! I already told him that I really didn’t think we clicked personality-wise! I think my counselor likes his way or no way. He’s very into meditation, etc. and I like to talk things out, hence the problem! Private therapy is very expensive in the US, so I’m stuck at the low-cost clinic without other options. I think most therapists just don’t know what to do with the chronically ill (physical illness) over here. Sigh…
Dr. Jenner, thank you for joining http://thesundripshoney.com ‘s family of readers. I am looking forward to you adding your thoughts to our conversation. On my site I have a Friends page, where my readers leave info about themselves and their blogs. I hope you will do the same. I can’t believe I’m writing this, but if you want to see a lot of “abnormal” psychology, (i.e.38 years of depression,) please feel free to check out the archives. I was pretty messed up when I started this blog. Much better now. Welcome!!
Thank you..I will be sure to do that
Great!
Thank you for following my blog. I have to say CBT doesn’t work for me, it only makes things worse. What was life changing was somatic experiencing. I so wish that was offered where I reside now.
Sorry it didn’t work for you. I tend to use a mixed approach depending on the clients needs, using CBT as a basis.
Thank you. What kind of mixed approach? What therapy techniques are you trained in?
I’ve been through some OEI which is intense but does make a dent.
I’m considering EMDR..I don’t know if that would be too much for me.
It seems where we live the only three offered are OEI, EMDR, and CBT. I really wish Somatic was offered.
My initial training was in psychoanalysis but since then I have retrained in CBT and Internal family systems therapy. I tend to mix them as appropriate.
Oh okay. 🙂
Dr. Jenner,
Thanks so much for the blog follow. It has led me to your interesting and informative blog, which I am now following.
I look forward to reading more of your posts.
Nancy
Thank you Nancy. Pleased you enjoyed it !
I have nominated you for the Brave Heart Award. If you would like to accept it, please go to http://turkeyboneheaven.com/2014/03/22/brave-heart-award-announcement/ for details.
Stand Strong You Are Not Alone
I call you a survivor, because that is what you are. There are days when you don’t feel like a survivor and there are days when the memories trigger your past and it feels like you are loosing the fight – but you are not. Take the past and heal with it. You are strong. I want you to know that the abuse was not your fault. It does not matter what age it happened. You did not deserve it, you did not cause it, and you did not bring it on yourself. You own no shame, guilt, or remorse. In your life, you have faced many demons but look around you and you will see there is hope, and there is beauty. You are beautiful, You are loved, there is hope. You deserve to be loved and treated with respect. You deserve peace and joy in your life. Don’t settle for anything less than that. God has plans for you. Your future does not have to be dictated by your past.
Each step you take you are not alone.
Stand Strong.
The Redheaded Wonderblog
Thank you Alexis!
Thanks for the follow on “Live A Better Life.” I appreciate it. I look forward to reading your blog more.
Pingback: CardCastles Blogger Spotlight | CardCastlesInTheSky
Pingback: Planning 2015: A Beautiful Life | FemmeFuel
It is a pleasure to run across your site and meet you.
Nice to meet you too
I’m about 3 years late on this one, but I really enjoyed your posts :p also, it never fails to amaze me that you were one of the first followers I have on my mental health blog. It’s a little akin to feeling “star struck” when you find out that you have a psych following you xD
Thanks for taking the time to comment and it’s never too late !!
I’m intrigued to learn more about your therapeutic process. Seems you have read a bit of my story, so you know the depths of devastation I’ve been…yet the amazing wholeness and healing that is now my life. Sometimes I wonder how can it be…and I am grateful for people like you who help us when we are so hurt and desperate.
Hello thank you for your comment. I am happy that you found the work I do intriguing and you are in a good place.
Hello Dr Jenner
I literally come by you by chance, saw your blog and noticed you were a therapist, and then saw you were an online therapist.
I don’t know what to do. Or whether I should email or not. I don’t even know whether or not I need anymore therapy. But many have suggested to me that I probably do.
Therapy is scary for me and always has been.
Sorry if this is not the right place to put a message.
I just had to make the first step I guess.
Michelle
Hello Michelle….Thank you for reaching out…can you send me a mail at therapy@drnjenner.com?
I just want to thank you for your site and your blogs. They have been so wonderfully helpful. I’m not codependent but I was in love with a man who was. He spent 17 years in a relationship with a woman he told me could not live without him, going so far as to admit himself that it’s a codependent relationship and he garners some sort of hero feelings for doing everything for her. But he expressed unfulfillment and a long-held desire for me. He and I have a history that goes back to 1996 but he has always pushed me away because my unconditional love makes him uncomfortable. He broke up with his longtime girlfriend and we reconnected recently and I so thought he was ready. He even said he was, but almost as soon as we started our future together, it crashed and burned and he went right back to his ex. I’ve been dealing with a lot of depression and confusion, contemplating seeking therapy myself. I read a lot about codependency and see a lot of the traits in this man. I found your site, though, and it was the balm I needed to really put what I was dealing with into perspective. I really like that you give real credibility to codependency since a lot of doctors out there don’t think it’s a serious problem that needs professional help to overcome. Take it from someone who tried to have a relationship with someone with this mindset. It is no joke!! Your articles helped me see that this wasn’t my fault and what I experienced was pretty much to be expected. It still hurts but you’ve helped me understand him a bit more and that’s helped to lessen that pain. Thank you so much!!
Hello. Thank you so much for the comment. Codependency is a very complex issue and being in a relationship with someone who has these traits is equally complex as you have found. If you would like to talk this through via video, I would be more than happy to help.