Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
CBT is based on the theory that unhelpful ways of thinking turn into unhelpful behaviors. By identifying those behaviors, you can implement coping skills that will improve your ability to handle difficult situations and develop confidence.
Emotion-Focused Therapy
EFT acknowledges that emotions are key to discovering your needs. By identifying, experiencing, and making sense of our emotions, we can also learn to manage them. When you can determine what your emotions tell you about yourself and your surroundings, you can adapt.
Dialectical Behavior Therapy
DBT is for those suffering from extreme emotions and includes group and individual therapy. It emphasizes mindfulness as a way to emotionally regulate; acknowledging emotions are temporary reduces their power. It also teaches how to sit with uncomfortable feelings and face them head-on.
Internal Family Systems Therapy
In IFS, the 'families' are really sub-personalities of your mind. They may be created by trauma, aim to suppress the trauma, or push us towards harmful coping mechanisms to distract us. These exist outside your core self. Identifying these all keeps us from acting on pure impulse, and instead you learn to coexist with it.