About Naomi

I didn't get here by accident. I got here because the system wasn't working.

I'm Naomi Barnes — a Registered Psychotherapist based in Newmarket, Ontario. I work at the intersection of trauma, the nervous system, and the body. What brought me here isn't just professional training. It's a lot of lived experience, some hard years, and an unwillingness to settle for "nothing is wrong with you" as a final answer.

MA, RP CRPO #004481 Advanced PRT Certified Advanced DBT Trained Somatic Trauma-Informed Neurodiversity Affirming LGBTQ+ Affirming
Naomi Barnes, MA, RP — Ontario Therapy
Where it started

I know what it's like to have a nervous system that learned to read everyone in a room before deciding if it was safe — scanning, adapting, bracing. I also know what it's like to search for approaches that actually work for brains that were built to survive first and rest never.

I have lived experience with chronic pain and injury, and with the particular exhaustion that comes from navigating a medical system that keeps running tests and sending you home with nothing. I also know what it feels like to watch someone you love be in pain and feel completely helpless — sitting beside them, unable to fix it, and having to learn that being present is sometimes the only thing that actually helps.

And I know the invisible load. The mental load of illness — yours and other people's. The load of motherhood. The particular weight that gets distributed unevenly and quietly — the anticipating, the managing, the holding-it-together while also being the one who tracks everyone else's falling apart. The labour that doesn't appear on any record but never actually stops. That load has a nervous system cost. It accumulates. And it often gets mistaken for anxiety, or depression, or simply being too sensitive — when really it's a body that has been doing too much, for too long, with too little acknowledgement that any of it was even happening.

"It's not 'what's wrong with me.' It's 'what's wrong for me — what's happening in my environment that I'm reacting to.'"

I spent a long time learning every skill, reading every book, chasing every fix. Some of it helped, and I carry those tools forward. But I also got tired. Tired of the constant drive toward self-improvement, toward being better, toward fixing something that — it turned out — wasn't actually broken. The system was the problem. Not me.

That realization changed how I work. It's in the room with me every session.

Where things shifted

Before building Ontario Therapy, I spent years working in MVA rehabilitation before moving into WSIB and LTD work at Altum Health through UHN — one of Canada's leading hospital-based rehabilitation programs. I worked alongside physicians, physiotherapists, and occupational therapists with some of the most complex presentations in Ontario: chronic pain, mTBI, movement disorders including CRPS and FND.

What I kept seeing was this: people who had learned, often for very good reasons, to ignore their own needs. Sometimes for survival — to keep working, to keep showing up, to keep others safe. A body pushed past its limits by a world that rewards productivity and punishes stopping. At some point, the alarm bells start going off. Pain. Fatigue. Panic. Anxiety. And when those go ignored long enough, they find other ways to be heard.

The medical system I worked inside was built to treat the symptom — the physical presentation — without much room for what was driving it. I watched clients manage their pain without ever addressing what the pain was actually about. And I became fascinated by that gap: between what the body was expressing and what the treatment was targeting.

That's where pain science came in. Then Pain Reprocessing Therapy. Then the research on how the nervous system encodes, perpetuates, and — crucially — can update these patterns. The pain, the fatigue, the physical symptoms were real. And they were also changeable. Not by pushing harder, but by understanding what the brain had learned and offering it something different.

The through-line

I am neurodivergent. And what I've learned — in clinical work, in my own life, and in a men's health talk I gave that apparently made some people cry in a good way — is that most people who seem stuck aren't unwilling. They're under-equipped.

They genuinely want to get better. They want to connect with their partners. They want to feel like themselves again. Their inability to do so isn't a character flaw. It's not laziness or resistance. It's that nobody ever taught them the right skills. Their wires got crossed somewhere — through trauma, through neurodivergence, through a lifetime of adapting to environments that weren't built for them — and they've been doing the best they can with what they have.

"You are doing your best. AND there are more effective ways forward. Both of those things are true at the same time — and holding both of them is where the work begins."

Most therapeutic modalities were developed for neurotypical populations without complex trauma histories — and many have never been evaluated for how they land on brains that work differently. If CBT didn't work for you, that's not a failure of effort. It's a mismatch of method. The approaches I use are evidence-based, trauma-informed, and neurodivergency-affirming — adapted for nervous systems that have been working overtime, not just minds that need better coping strategies.

Ontario Therapy exists to be the practice I kept looking for and couldn't find. Intuitive, effective, and genuinely affirming. A place where you don't have to explain yourself before we can begin, and where the goal isn't symptom management — it's actually getting to feel like yourself.

The work isn't about
becoming someone different.

It's about finally reading the signal your body has been sending — and knowing what to do with it. You came by this honestly. The responses that now feel like problems were once solutions. We're not here to judge the survival strategies. We're here to update them.

This practice is built around one premise: healing happens in relationship — to yourself, to the people you love, and to a therapist who isn't going to make you prove you deserve to be here first.

How I work

What you can expect

Not a set of rules. More like a way of being in the room — or on the screen.

01

You don't need to arrive organized

No diagnosis required. No articulate summary of your trauma required. If you know something needs to change, that's enough to start.

02

Your body is part of the conversation

We work somatically — which means the body doesn't wait outside while the mind talks. The physical symptoms are data, not inconvenience.

03

You won't be handed a worksheet and sent home

Skills matter. But skills without understanding are just more things to fail at. And if worksheets aren't how your brain works — you can say no. We find what actually fits you and build from there.

04

Neurodivergence is not a problem to manage

ADHD, autism, sensory processing differences — these are variations, not deficits. The work here is affirming, not corrective.

05

Slow is sometimes faster

Nervous systems don't respond to being pushed. We move at the pace that creates safety — which is also the pace that creates lasting change.

06

If I'm not the right fit, I'll say so

Not every therapist is right for every person. If we're not a match, I'll tell you — and I'll help you find who is.

Credentials & Training

Background

MA, Registered Psychotherapist (RP)

CRPO #004481 · Member, OAMHP

Advanced Certified, Pain Reprocessing Therapy

One of a small number of Advanced PRT practitioners in Ontario

Advanced DBT Training

Dialectical Behaviour Therapy — the dialectic as the foundation of the work

Somatic, Polyvagal & Trauma-Informed Practice

Body-based approaches including polyvagal theory, nervous system regulation, trauma-informed mindfulness, and somatic completion

Additional Modalities

Psychodynamic therapy, relational therapy, CBT and others — drawn on selectively. Trained in many; uses what actually works for you.

Hospital Rehabilitation (Altum Health / UHN)

MVA, WSIB, and LTD with complex chronic pain, mTBI, CRPS, and FND presentations

Top 40 Under 40

Central York Region Chamber of Commerce

LGBTQ+ Affirming Practice

Inclusive and affirming across gender identity, sexual orientation, and relationship structure

Ready when you are.

A free 20-minute conversation — no pressure, no commitment. Just a chance to see if this feels like the right fit.

Book a free consultation