Master the Maze | Rates

Invest in Your Family’s Wellbeing

You’ll never regret taking a step towards your family’s health and happiness.

Rates (no GST)

  • $120 per hour (reduced rates for longer sessions)

-My sessions are 50 minutes to allow time for scheduling, notes, and an optional 10-minute telephone check-in between sessions.

-I have a discounted rate for families without extended health insurance coverage.


Choose what works for you – Skype, or telephone

I offer Skype (or other online platforms) or telephone appointments. Skype or telephone are convenient and effective methods for busy parents.

Convenient payment methods

Payment can be made by

  • Online bank transfer
  • Credit card (on Square)
  • Credit card through Paypal

NOTE: You don’t need a Paypal account to pay using your credit card through Paypal. I will send an invoice by email a few days before your scheduled appointment, and you can pay as a guest using your credit card on Paypal.


Extended health insurance coverage

Some extended health insurance providers offer coverage for Registered Clinical Counsellors. Contact your extended health insurance provider or your human resources department at work to see if your plan covers counselling by a Registered Clinical Counsellor.

If your plan covers counselling by a Registered Clinical Counsellor, you would pay me directly and I would issue you a receipt to submit to your insurance company for reimbursement.

Ready to grow into Conscious Parenting?

If you are ready to take the first step, call me at 604 700 9715 to schedule your free, 20-minute Skype or telephone consultation, or to book an appointment.

“Lucinda gently and skillfully helped me trace the origin of a recurring and distressing pattern back to my childhood. I came away from the session (via Skype, no less) with renewed understanding and tenderness toward the child of my past.”  Jeanne M., Hawaii

 

Therapy is an investment that keeps on paying dividends

“People who receive psychotherapy keep their therapeutic gains and appear to even continue to improve. When researchers measured mental health many years after therapy has ended, they found that that people’s improvements had continued to increase over time.”

 Jonathan Shedler, “The Efficacy of Psychodynamic Psychotherapy” (2010)