Yanina Lambert
LMFT· Accepting clientsCalifornia · 20 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, trauma and abuse, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Trauma and abuse · Depression · +12 more
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This directory page features therapists trained in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) who focus on life purpose and values-driven living. Browse the listings below to compare clinicians, read profiles, and connect with ACT practitioners who can help you clarify what matters and take meaningful steps forward.
California · 20 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, trauma and abuse, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Trauma and abuse · Depression · +12 more
Read profileLouisiana · 15 yrs exp
My goal is to walk alongside you as you develop resilience, insight, and hope.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Family · Trauma and abuse · +12 more
Read profileSouth Carolina · 20 yrs exp
Together, we will discuss a treatment plan and use it to guide you on your journey.
Stress, Anxiety · LGBT · Relationship · Trauma and abuse · +14 more
Read profileMassachusetts · 17 yrs exp
I am currently on a journey of discovering and experiencing healing dances, such as Biodanza.
Stress, Anxiety · Family · Trauma and abuse · Self esteem · +12 more
Read profileFlorida · 20 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, addictions, relationship issues, self esteem, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · Relationship · Self esteem · +16 more
Read profileWashington · 19 yrs exp
I also believe each one of us has an inner wisdom to tap into.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Grief · Anger · +9 more
Read profileOregon · 26 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, trauma and abuse, grief, depression, and coping with life changes.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Grief · Depression · +10 more
Read profileCalifornia · 7 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, addictions, trauma and abuse, grief, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · Trauma and abuse · Grief · +8 more
Read profileMontana · 14 yrs exp
Together we will focus on your natural strengths and interests to help you to cope and feel better.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Grief · Self esteem · +8 more
Read profileNew York · 9 yrs exp
I work with clients on addictions, LGBT, intimacy-related issues, and depression.
Addictions · LGBT · Intimacy-related issues · Depression · +9 more
Read profileCalifornia · 25 yrs exp
I love to listen deeply and to offer questions for self-exploration, also.
Stress, Anxiety · Self esteem · Career · Coping with life changes · +10 more
Read profileMissouri · 36 yrs exp
My therapeutic approach is rooted in understanding each individual's unique journey.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Trauma and abuse · Intimacy-related issues · +15 more
Read profileNew York · 5 yrs exp
Each person's individual experiences are essential to the therapy journey.
Stress, Anxiety · LGBT · Trauma and abuse · Bipolar · +12 more
Read profileMissouri · 35 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, trauma and abuse, parenting issues, self esteem, and coping with life changes.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Parenting · Self esteem · +13 more
Read profileFlorida · 19 yrs exp
I look forward to walking this journey alongside of you!
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Self esteem · Depression · +14 more
Read profileFlorida · 9 yrs exp
Dr. Melissa Echevarria Baez is a FL Psychologist PY9980 practising in Florida, with 9 years of experience, currently accepting new clients.
Stress, Anxiety · Grief · Self esteem · Career · +3 more
Read profileColorado · 27 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, trauma and abuse, grief, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Trauma and abuse · Grief · +16 more
Read profileKentucky · 10 yrs exp
I believe therapy is most helpful when it combines introspection and self-discovery with planning and action.
Stress, Anxiety · Family · Self esteem · Depression · +12 more
Read profileTexas · 10 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, relationship issues, family conflicts, depression, and coping with life changes.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Family · Depression · +14 more
Read profileOhio · 18 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, trauma and abuse, grief, anger management, and self esteem.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Grief · Anger · +11 more
Read profileArizona · 20 yrs exp
If you choose to work with me, I believe you will find meaning and help in the experience.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · Grief · Self esteem · +14 more
Read profileKentucky · 20 yrs exp
I work with clients on stress and anxiety, addictions, relationship issues, grief, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Addictions · Relationship · Grief · +10 more
Read profileColorado · 11 yrs exp
My therapeutic practice is deeply committed to understanding each individual's journey.
Stress, Anxiety · LGBT · Trauma and abuse · Anger · +15 more
Read profileMichigan · 21 yrs exp
I believe in treating everyone with respect, sensitivity, and compassion.
Stress, Anxiety · Relationship · Family · Bipolar · +14 more
Read profileIf you are seeking greater life purpose, you may feel a sense of drifting, chronic dissatisfaction, or a nagging question about whether your daily choices align with what matters most to you. People often respond to these feelings by overplanning, chasing externally defined achievements, avoiding uncertainty, or ruminating about whether their life has meaning. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy offers a distinct approach that does not primarily try to change the content of those thoughts - such as convincing you that a thought about lack of meaning is false. Instead, ACT focuses on changing your relationship to thoughts and feelings so you can act in line with your values despite doubt, fear, or confusion.
ACT is built around six core processes that together cultivate psychological flexibility, the ability to contact the present moment and pursue a chosen life even when difficult inner experiences arise. When you apply ACT to life purpose work, the emphasis is on clarifying what you care about, learning to allow uncomfortable feelings, stepping back from self-critical or limiting stories, and taking committed actions that move you toward a meaningful pattern of living. This orientation can be especially helpful when life purpose feels elusive because it shifts the task from solving a puzzle about meaning to practicing a life guided by values and willingness.
In ACT, psychological flexibility is the central outcome that supports a purpose-driven life. For the task of discovering or strengthening life purpose, each ACT process plays a concrete role. Acceptance helps you make room for uncertainty, grief, or shame that often accompanies deep questions about purpose, rather than engaging in avoidance that narrows your options. Cognitive defusion gives you tools to step back from limiting thoughts such as I am a failure or It is too late to find purpose, so those thoughts have less power to dictate your choices.
Present-moment awareness grounds you in experiences and relationships that reveal meaningful patterns, rather than getting lost in abstract evaluations. Self-as-context helps you notice that you are more than a narrative of past decisions or perceived shortcomings, creating distance between your sense of self and passing thoughts. Values clarification is particularly central to life purpose work - ACT therapists guide you in identifying core values across domains such as relationships, creativity, contribution, and learning. Committed action then translates clarified values into ongoing behavioral commitments that instantiate purpose in daily life. Together these processes interrupt common unhelpful patterns like rumination, avoidance, and pursuit of hollow goals, and replace them with repeated, values-guided experiments that build momentum toward a life you want to live.
When you begin ACT therapy focused on life purpose, early sessions often center on building an understanding of your present difficulties and introducing experiential learning. Your therapist will typically explore what matters to you, how you currently respond to difficult thoughts and feelings, and the ways that avoidance or overcontrol may be limiting your options. You can expect a mix of conversation and experiential exercises from the start - mindfulness practices, brief metaphors to illustrate ACT concepts, and simple experiments to test new responses in real life.
Mid-phase therapy tends to deepen values clarification and expand willingness to experience emotions that have been keeping you stuck. Common exercises include values sorting or guided imagery that helps you imagine a meaningful future, cognitive defusion practices that transform your relationship to unhelpful thoughts, and willingness practices that support approaching discomfort. Later sessions focus more on committed action - setting specific, achievable steps aligned with your values, tracking progress, and building resilience for setbacks. The number of sessions varies with goals and complexity; some people find clear shifts in a few months, while others work over a longer period to solidify patterns and navigate life transitions.
ACT tends to benefit people who want to live in alignment with their values but find themselves blocked by self-doubt, perfectionism, fear of failure, or emotional avoidance. If you have been trying to reason or debate your way into a sense of purpose and feel stuck, ACT’s experiential, values-focused methods may provide a practical pathway forward. ACT shares lineage with cognitive behavioral approaches but differs by emphasizing acceptance and mindfulness rather than attempting to change thought content. This makes ACT particularly suitable when meaning questions are intertwined with strong emotions or persistent self-judgments that are resistant to challenge-based techniques.
There are situations where therapists integrate ACT with other approaches to meet individual needs. For example, therapists may incorporate behavioral activation strategies to jumpstart action, or brief skills from cognitive therapies when problem-solving around concrete obstacles is needed. Mindfulness-based therapies and existential approaches also overlap conceptually with ACT’s focus on meaning and presence, and an experienced ACT clinician will tailor interventions to your goals while keeping psychological flexibility as the guiding aim. If you prefer a hands-on, practice-oriented approach that balances inward work with outward action, ACT may be a good fit for your pursuit of life purpose.
When selecting an ACT therapist, look for clinicians who have specific training or supervised experience in ACT and who can explain how the six processes are applied to life purpose work. Credentials such as licensure in a clinical discipline and additional ACT-focused training or membership in organizations that support ACT practice can indicate focused expertise. During an initial consultation call, ask how the therapist conceptualizes life purpose work within an ACT framework, what kinds of experiential exercises they commonly use, and how they measure progress. A good match often depends on the therapist’s ability to combine empathy with practical, exercise-based guidance that you can apply between sessions.
It is reasonable to ask about logistics as well - session frequency, typical duration for values-based goals, and whether the therapist offers in-person or video sessions. ACT translates well to video because many of its practices are experiential and can be guided effectively through telehealth. You may want to inquire how homework or between-session practice is supported, since consistent practice is often what turns insights into lasting behavior change. Pay attention to whether the therapist invites collaboration and tailors exercises to your life context; when you feel heard and see exercises that connect to your priorities, you are more likely to engage in committed action that builds purpose over time.
As you work with an ACT therapist, you will likely develop a set of practical habits that support purpose beyond therapy. Small, consistent actions tied to values - such as setting aside time for creative work, initiating conversations that matter, or volunteering in ways that resonate - create experiential evidence that your life is moving in a chosen direction. Mindfulness practices can help you notice opportunities for values-aligned choices as they arise, and defusion skills reduce the sway of self-critical thoughts that might otherwise derail action. Over time, these daily practices add up and make purpose less an abstract ideal and more a lived pattern.
Choosing ACT for life purpose is not about erasing uncertainty or achieving a fixed destination. It is about cultivating the flexibility to engage with what truly matters while navigating the inevitable ups and downs of life. If you are ready to explore values, practice new responses to difficult inner experiences, and take concrete steps toward a more meaningful life, an ACT therapist listed below can help you begin that work.
Alabama
53 therapists
Alaska
5 therapists
Arizona
49 therapists
Arkansas
15 therapists
California
249 therapists
Colorado
72 therapists
Connecticut
17 therapists
Delaware
12 therapists
Florida
319 therapists
Georgia
120 therapists
Hawaii
10 therapists
Idaho
30 therapists
Illinois
122 therapists
Indiana
51 therapists
Iowa
14 therapists
Kansas
32 therapists
Kentucky
27 therapists
Louisiana
58 therapists
Maine
16 therapists
Maryland
28 therapists
Massachusetts
26 therapists
Michigan
120 therapists
Minnesota
42 therapists
Mississippi
25 therapists
Missouri
95 therapists
Montana
18 therapists
Nebraska
16 therapists
Nevada
16 therapists
New Hampshire
9 therapists
New Jersey
54 therapists
New Mexico
15 therapists
New York
117 therapists
North Carolina
135 therapists
North Dakota
7 therapists
Ohio
62 therapists
Oklahoma
52 therapists
Oregon
38 therapists
Pennsylvania
95 therapists
Rhode Island
9 therapists
South Carolina
79 therapists
South Dakota
3 therapists
Tennessee
42 therapists
Texas
275 therapists
Utah
37 therapists
Vermont
4 therapists
Virginia
41 therapists
Washington
51 therapists
West Virginia
11 therapists
Wisconsin
51 therapists
Wyoming
12 therapists