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Patricia “Paddy” Doherty, LPC, NCC, CHAIS, AATC

Professional Memberships
  • American Counseling Association
  • Association for Creative Counseling
  • Therapy Animal Coalition
  • American Horticultural Therapy Association
  • Blue Water Therapy Dog Association

Population

  • Adults
  • Young adults
  • Elders
  • Veterans
  • Special Needs

Modalities

  • Individual
  • In-Person
  • Outdoors
  • Online
  • Group

Common Issues Treated

  • PTSC
  • Veteran-Related Issues
  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Career Counseling
  • Life Coaching
  • Video Game Addictions
  • Life Transitions
  • Trauma
  • Self-Esteem
  • Grief and Loss
  • Pet Loss
  • School Related Issues
  • Stress
  • Coping Skills
  • Peer Relationships
  • Special Needs Issues
  • Behavior Issues
Types of Therapy
  • Forest Therapy
  • Animal Assisted Therapy
  • Horticulture Therapy
  • Adlerian Therapy
  • Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy
  • Choice Therapy
  • Person Centered Therapy
  • Existentialism
  • Gestalt Therapy
  • Solution Focused Brief Therapy
  • Mindfulness Based Therapy
  • Humanistic Therapy
  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
  • Trauma Focused Therapy
  • Play Therapy
  • Dialectical Behavioral Therapy
  • Positive Psychology
  • Cognitive Processing Therapy
  • Grief Therapy
Education & Certifications
  • Master of Arts in Counseling, Oakland University, 2019 

  • CHAIS and AAT Certification, Oakland University, 2019

  • Master of Science in Outdoor Education, Field Biology, and Forest Work, University of Akron

  • Master of Arts in Special Education, Oakland University

  • Bowling Green State University, Cognitive Ethology, Field Biology, Mammalogy, Secondary Education

  • Certified First Aid and CPR American Red Cross

Life is like being on a trail, and finding on the trail that there are difficult spots and easy spots.. It is up to you to determine how far you walk during the day, and where to camp for the night.

However, with strange trails and no maps, a guide is needed to help you find your way. This is the role of the counselor, and this is what I do. Together, we can find the right path for life’s challenges, and achieve goals that promote growth and overall wellness, along with finding your true self.

I have unique and alternative qualifications with therapy and counseling. My approach to therapy is integrating many different theories concerning depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress, grief and loss, geriatric, life transitions, life coaching, career counseling, and many other issues. My focus is with Adults who need guidance through the path of life, Veterans. Elders, and Special Needs Population.

Clover is Grace Counseling’s Therapy Dog, and is my co-therapist. He is an Australian Shepherd who can help guide you through life’s trailblocks with his empathic and sassy attitude. When we are not at Grace, we are either in our garden, hiking the trails, or on our ministry work. Clover and I have been called to ministry work where we share our love to assisted living facilities. In the future, with additional credentials, we are being called to assist in hospice work and end of life facilities.

I am very passionate about alternative forms of therapy that allows the whole of a person to experience Nature, who is a tremendous healer. Horticultural therapy is a connection to nature by facilitating the sensory experience through the power of the garden. Forest therapy is absorbing and grounding with the animals and trees while exploring our purpose in life. Both horticultural therapy and forest therapy teaches mindfulness and helps minimize trauma by connecting with the natural healing of plants with the healing process of therapy work. Animal therapy is a hands-on approach where clients are given the space to project and analyze their situations, make connections, and find their solutions that are personally experienced in conjunction with intellectual understanding with animals.

I am also very passionate about Career Counseling. Career Counseling develops individuals for an understanding of the world of work in order to make career, educational, and life decisions at any stage of life.  

I believe that everyone strives to become successful and to grow. I believe that changing negative thoughts to more appropriate feelings help increase the quality of life and the ability to make choices that result in healthy, positive lives. I believe that people are self-determining and have control over their behavior and choices. I believe that all people have goodness and, given the right environment, strive towards self-actualization. I believe that all people have the will and the ability to change their lives and actions by finding meaning and value.

I have experience in Outdoor Education with a Field Biology and Forest Work emphasis, and hold a Master’s Degree in Outdoor Education. I also hold a Special Education Master’s degree specializing in Learning Disability focusing on the biological factors of the Special Needs population along with trauma and crisis work of special needs students. This experience extends to the psychological needs of the military, both in the transition to civilian life and active duty.

Clover holds his AKC STAR Puppy and his AKC Canine Good Citizen certification.

Inspiration

Nature Points to God’s Love

All nature conceals its great secrets and cannot reveal its hidden wisdom and profound beauty if we do not listen carefully and patiently. John Henry Newman sees nature as a veil through which an invisible world is intimated. He writes: “The visible world is . . . the veil of the world invisible . . . so that all that exists or happens visibly, conceals and yet suggests, and above all subserves, a system of persons, facts, and events beyond itself.”

How differently we would live if we were constantly aware of this veil and sensed in our whole being how nature is ever ready for us to hear and see the great story of the Creator’s love, to which it points. The plants and animals with whom we live teach us about birth, growth, maturation, and death, about the need for gentle care, and especially about the importance of patience and hope.

It is sad that in our days we are less connected with nature and we no longer allow nature to minister to us. We so easily limit ministry to work for people by people. But we could do an immense service to our world if we would let nature heal, counsel, and teach again. I often wonder if the sheer artificiality and ugliness with which many people are surrounded are not as bad as or worse than their interpersonal problems.

-Henri J. M. Nouwen