Holly Joy Cayia, LPC

Holly is a Licensed Professional Counselor, graduating from Walsh University with her master’s degree in clinical mental health counseling. She is supervised by Michael Pollak, PCC-S, LICDC. Holly has worked as a personal trainer and wellness coach to female clientele prior to completing her master’s degree, including working as a health and wellness coach at residential addiction treatment centers.

Holly’s areas of focus include dual-diagnosis, bipolar disorders, depression, anxiety, substance-use disorders, complex trauma, and post-traumatic stress disorder, including how stress manifests in the body and the benefits of movement, exercise, and nutrition. Holly’s therapeutic approach includes Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Dialectical Behavior Therapy, Motivational Interviewing, Mindfulness, and Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR).

Holly has decades of experience working with female clients in the areas of exercise, healthy relationships with food, and redefining one’s purpose in life as life roles change. Holly believes that we need to “feel to heal,” and she offers a safe space for this to happen. Her compassionate approach allows the client to explore and challenge maladaptive thoughts and behaviors.

Besides mental health, another of Holly’s passions is animal rescue. She co-founded an animal rescue and has fostered and rehabilitated hundreds of abused animals in her home over the years. She has a menagerie of animals, furred and feathered, and she understands the joy animals bring to one’s life.

Favorite Quote

“Our wounds are often the openings into the best and most beautiful part of us.” David Rich

Holly Joy Cayia, LPC

Contact

Position:
Licensed Professional Counselor

Address:
8224 Mentor Ave, Suite 208
Mentor Ohio 44060

Email:
hcayia@behavioralwellnessgroup.com

Phone:
440-392-2222 EXT 871

Fax:
440-565-2349

Articles

All or Nothing Thinking and Various Other Popular Cognitive Distortions

I was trying to think of a blog subject to write about this time for my blog. As I contemplated this, I noticed almost everyone in my Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) Intensive Outpatient Group (IOP) was talking about their struggle to be perfect, or how they feel like failures if things are not exactly as they think they should be. I was hearing phrases like: All or nothing thinking, often called black and white thinking, can go hand in hand…

Emotion Regulation Skills

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COVID update for the reopening of the office

The Behavioral Wellness Group will be returning to the physical office to begin seeing clients in person. This is for those clinicians and clients who prefer in-person sessions. A genuine thank you to all of you who tolerated our necessary move to virtual sessions during the pandemic. Below is a summary generally outlining what to expect upon our return. We will continue to see those who prefer to be seen virtually through our platform using Zoom. Of course, this is…

Self-Compassion: The Science of Kindness

As we say goodbye to 2020 and look ahead to 2021, we can all acknowledge it was a particularly trying year for our nation and the world. According to the American Psychological Association, the compounding stressors of 2020 yielded a national mental health crisis across generations. When situational and societal stressors build, we are left to try and find ways to manage. Some people may reach out to family, some may call upon friends, others may rely on mental health…

Bipolar Disorder (Supporting Your Loved Ones)

When your loved one is diagnosed with bipolar disorder, there may be a couple of questions that run through your mind. The first question, “What is Bipolar?” and the second question, “What is my role when things start to unravel?” Furthermore, for many people who have been diagnosed with this specific disorder, becoming fearful, confused, and having no concrete plan on how to manage the next episode can dominate one’s thoughts. These thoughts are not easily subsided as a result…

Teens, Entitlement and Instant Gratification

We live in a world where we want things done yesterday. Instant gratification. We have access to the internet via our phones. At any second we can catch up with the news, check our bank accounts, and send an email. We can purchase something and have it delivered within 2 days. We can check our children’s grades online at any time, book an appointment, do research instantly. A decade ago, this wasn’t the case. We used to have to go…