If you’re struggling with binge eating, late night eating, or feeling out of control with eating, you are not alone — and you are not broken.
Many clients at Healing Stones Therapy come to us saying:
These experiences are not failures of willpower. They are often the result of diet culture, restriction, and a dysregulated nervous system.
As a specialized provider of eating disorder therapy in Wyoming, we help individuals move from shame and control toward stability, body neutrality, and healing.
Body neutrality removes moral judgment from your body.
Instead of:
“I feel fat.”
“I need to shrink.”
“My body is wrong.”
Body neutrality says:
“My body is a body.”
“My body deserves care.”
“I don’t have to love it to respect it.”
For individuals experiencing binge eating disorder, chronic overeating, or feeling out of control with food, body neutrality reduces shame — which is one of the biggest triggers for late night eating and binge cycles.
Diet culture teaches:
But biologically, food is food. When we restrict certain foods, the brain increases urgency around them. That urgency can lead to:
Research shows that chronic dieting is one of the strongest predictors of binge eating.
At Healing Stones Therapy, we use evidence-based approaches including CBT-E (Enhanced Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) to stabilize eating patterns and reduce binge eating episodes within a structured 20–40 session framework.
When someone says, “I can’t stop eating,” we look deeper:
Many individuals struggling with binge eating in Wyoming have never had access to specialized outpatient eating disorder care. Without support, late night eating can become the only time the body feels safe. That’s why we integrate trauma-informed therapy and EMDR to address the root causes of eating behaviors — not just the symptoms. Healing isn’t about more control. It’s about nervous system safety.
The Impact of Diet Culture in Rural Wyoming
In rural communities across Wyoming, access to specialized eating disorder treatment has historically been limited. Many individuals are told to:
These approaches often increase binge eating and feelings of being out of control with food.
As a specialized provider of binge eating therapy in Wyoming, Healing Stones Therapy offers structured, evidence-based outpatient treatment so individuals do not need to travel out of state for care.
You may benefit from specialized eating disorder treatment if you:
You do not need to wait until behaviors become severe to seek support.
Healing Stones Therapy provides:
Our approach focuses on:
You deserve support that goes beyond dieting advice.
Binge eating is often caused by a combination of chronic dieting, restriction, emotional stress, trauma, and nervous system dysregulation.
Late night eating often occurs when the body has been underfed, emotionally overwhelmed, or suppressing needs throughout the day.
“Feeling fat” is usually a placeholder for emotions such as shame, anxiety, sadness, or lack of control.
Yes. EMDR can help process underlying trauma that contributes to out of control eating behaviors.
For many collegiate and professional athletes in Utah and Wyoming, the transition out of sport can feel just as demanding as the sport itself. When structured training, competition schedules, and performance goals suddenly end, athletes are often left navigating identity shifts, body image struggles, food guilt, and uncertainty about the future.
At Healing Stones Therapy, we specialize in helping current and former athletes across Utah and Wyoming move through this transition with compassion, clarity, and support—so life after sport can still feel meaningful, grounded, and fulfilling.
In states like Utah and Wyoming—where athletics, outdoor performance, discipline, and grit are highly valued—many athletes grow up deeply identified with being “the strong one,” “the disciplined one,” or “the high performer.”
When sport ends due to graduation, injury, burnout, or life changes, athletes may experience:
This identity shift is real—and it deserves care. Healing does not mean losing your athletic self; it means expanding who you are beyond performance.
As athletes transition into a more sustainable pace of physical activity, it’s common to experience body image distress—especially in environments where physical strength and endurance are praised.
Common struggles include:
At Healing Stones Therapy, we help clients in Utah and Wyoming rebuild trust with their bodies—shifting movement from obligation or punishment into something that supports long-term health and quality of life.
Athletes are often taught to eat for performance. When sport ends, those rules can turn into guilt, fear, or control struggles around food.
Many former athletes report:
Through a compassionate, trauma-informed approach, we help clients develop a healthier relationship with food—one rooted in nourishment, flexibility, and self-respect rather than performance metrics.
ACT helps athletes:
IFS supports clients in:
CBT helps address:
All interventions are provided through a compassionate, athlete-informed lens, honoring discipline while supporting sustainable mental health.
Life after athletics in Utah and Wyoming can still include strength, movement, and meaning—just in a way that supports your long-term goals, relationships, and wellbeing.
You are not failing because your body or life has changed. You are adapting.
At Healing Stones Therapy, we help athletes redefine success, reconnect with their bodies, and build a future that feels aligned—not forced.
If you are a former collegiate or professional athlete in Utah or Wyoming struggling with identity loss, body image concerns, food guilt, or difficulty adjusting to life after sport, support is available.
You don’t have to navigate this transition alone; reach out for support today.
Negative thoughts, self-doubt, anxiety spirals, and inner criticism are part of the human experience—but many people feel overwhelmed by them, as if every thought demands attention or action. At Healing Stones Therapy, serving Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, and Oklahoma, we help clients step off the mental rollercoaster through Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), an evidence-based treatment that teaches us how to accept our internal experiences while living a life rooted in personal values.
Whether you are navigating sports anxiety, sports performance challenges, eating disorders or disordered eating, or generalized anxiety, ACT offers a powerful, compassionate approach to living with greater freedom and intention.
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy is a mindfulness-based behavioral therapy that focuses on:
Instead of trying to eliminate unpleasant thoughts or feelings (which often causes more suffering), ACT teaches people how to change their relationship to these experiences.
You learn to say, “This thought is here—but I don’t have to follow it.”
One of the central teachings of ACT is this:
Human brains create thousands of thoughts every day—many of which are negative, repetitive, unrealistic, or rooted in old learning. Trying to control or eliminate thoughts actually increases their intensity.
ACT helps clients understand that:
This shift—called cognitive defusion—is one of the most liberating parts of ACT.
Athletes often struggle with:
Traditional approaches try to “fix” or suppress anxiety, but ACT helps athletes:
ACT helps athletes stay psychologically flexible—allowing them to perform with clarity, presence, and confidence.
Eating disorders often involve:
ACT offers a non-judgmental approach that helps clients:
Paired with somatic awareness and trauma-informed care, ACT is a powerful tool for shifting long-standing patterns.
Anxiety often comes from trying to control the uncontrollable—thoughts, sensations, outcomes, or other people’s perceptions.
ACT helps clients:
When clients stop battling anxiety and instead work with their internal experience, anxiety loses its power.
At the heart of ACT is the idea of living by values, not by fear or self-judgment.
Values are not goals—they are ongoing directions.
Examples include:
When you clarify your values, you gain:
Values help clients move toward the life they want, even when difficult thoughts or emotions show up.
ACT teaches that suffering is not a personal flaw—it is a shared human experience. Psychological flexibility means:
This flexibility becomes a pathway to freedom, authenticity, and emotional resilience.
Healing Stones Therapy supports clients across Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, and Oklahoma with:
Our therapists don’t strive for perfection—we strive for presence, compassion, and connection. ACT helps us walk alongside you as you build a life that reflects who you truly want to be.
If you’re seeking support with anxiety, performance issues, trauma, or eating-related concerns, ACT offers a grounded, evidence-based path toward clarity and freedom. Give us a call and get started today!
Trauma and anxiety can quietly take over daily life—making it hard to feel grounded, confident, or connected. Whether trauma came from a single event or years of stress, the nervous system learns to stay on high alert, and the body often holds the story long after the mind tries to forget it.
At Healing Stones Therapy, serving Wyoming and Colorado, we help adolescents through older adults reconnect with safety, regulation, and meaning using EMDR therapy, somatic approaches, and a deeply personable, collaborative style. Our goal is simple: improve your overall quality of life, not just reduce symptoms.
This guide explains how EMDR works, what the research shows, why somatic therapy strengthens healing, and how both can transform anxiety and trauma symptoms.
EMDR—Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing—is a specialized, evidence-based therapy designed to help the brain reprocess unhealed memories that contribute to anxiety, intrusive thoughts, emotional reactivity, and avoidance.
Developed by Dr. Francine Shapiro, EMDR uses bilateral stimulation (eye movements, tapping, or tones) while you recall traumatic or distressing experiences in a safe, structured way. This process allows the brain to “unstick” traumatic memory networks and process them in a healthier, more adaptive way.
EMDR is one of the most researched trauma treatments in the world:
Trauma is not only a psychological experience—it is a physiological one. When something overwhelming or frightening happens, the nervous system may become stuck in:
These states can persist long after the event, showing up as:
This is why trauma-informed therapy must address both the mind and the body.
At Healing Stones Therapy, our approach is informed by somatic psychology—the understanding that healing happens through regulation of the nervous system, not just insight.
Somatic therapy techniques may include:
These methods support EMDR by helping clients stay regulated, connected, and safe throughout the process.
Many clients seek EMDR for:
EMDR works by identifying the root causes of anxiety—early experiences, accumulated stress, body-based memories, or past moments of overwhelm—and helping the brain reprocess them so they no longer trigger an anxious response.
You don’t need a single “big trauma” to benefit. EMDR is extremely effective for small, repeated stressful experiences that shaped your self-beliefs or nervous system.
Our therapists take a warm, engaged, and individualized approach. We work with:
Healing Stones Therapy offers:
You don’t have to carry the weight of anxiety or trauma alone. There are effective, evidence-supported methods that help your brain and body return to balance.
If you're in Wyoming or Colorado and looking for EMDR, somatic therapy, or trauma-focused care from truly engaged therapists, we’re here to help. Contact us today!
Healing Stones Therapy
Supporting your healing, your story, and your quality of life—one step at a time.
Trauma doesn't pause at county lines or stop at state borders. It follows you across life transitions, into new jobs, through parenting challenges, and into the quiet moments when no one else is watching. If you're carrying unresolved trauma in your day-to-day life, you're not alone—and you don’t have to manage it by yourself.
Whether you're based in Jackson Hole, live in the heart of St. George, or work long shifts in Reno or Las Vegas, your story matters. You deserve care that fits your needs, your schedule, and your pace. Healing Stones Therapy, LLC offers counseling options built to meet you right where you are—so you can begin the healing process with care that’s accessible and responsive to your needs.
Trauma isn’t one-size-fits-all. It may come from a single event, like a car accident or loss. Or, it might result from years of high-pressure work, emotional neglect, or unresolved childhood pain. You might be navigating grief, burnout, or PTSD. And even if your experiences feel invisible to others, they are very real.
Counseling that acknowledges your story, your context, and your pace can make all the difference. Through our counseling sessions, you can expect personalized care that honors your experiences—whether you're managing anxiety from career stress, overcoming emotional wounds from past abuse, or trying to rebuild after a relationship breakdown.
Licensed therapists work with you to understand your emotional, mental, and physical responses to trauma. By focusing on your individual needs, you receive a care plan that respects who you are and where you've been—no matter which state you call home.

Finding support shouldn’t require driving hours from your home or waiting weeks for an in-person appointment. That’s where virtual counseling comes in. Whether you’re in a rural Wyoming town, commuting through Nevada, or living in Utah’s Wasatch Front, online therapy creates a direct path to consistent care.
You don’t need to leave work early or rearrange your entire day. Online counseling can happen from your home, your car during a lunch break, or anywhere you feel safe and grounded. These sessions offer flexibility without sacrificing quality. For many people, being in a familiar space makes it easier to open up and start processing pain.
This accessibility removes a major barrier to healing. It also allows continuity when life moves fast. If you relocate for work or travel between states, your therapeutic relationship doesn’t have to stop. You keep that connection and continue building resilience.
Working through trauma takes time, and talk therapy is only one part of the process. A well-rounded approach includes attention to both body and mind. That’s why many clients benefit from an integrated model—one that includes collaboration between counseling, primary care providers, and nutrition support.
Counseling can help you identify emotional triggers and coping mechanisms. Medical support ensures your physical symptoms—like sleep disturbances, chronic fatigue, or tension—are not ignored. And nutritional guidance can help rebalance your energy and support overall wellness.
This kind of care respects the full picture of your health. When you begin working with professionals who communicate and collaborate across disciplines, you get support that aligns with all the ways trauma shows up in your life. Whether in Wyoming, Utah, or Nevada, that integrated healing is available to you.
Trauma impacts people of all ages. If you're a teen dealing with bullying or social pressure, a college athlete trying to balance performance and expectations, or an adult navigating relationship pain or PTSD—your healing deserves attention.
Therapy creates a private, non-judgmental space to process, reflect, and grow. Sessions are designed to meet you where you are, emotionally and developmentally. There’s no “right” age to start therapy. What's important is recognizing when something no longer feels manageable and choosing to reach out for support.
Clients in counseling programs, for example, often share how validating it feels to talk with someone who simply listens—without rushing or trying to fix. This kind of environment helps you feel safe, respected, and in control of your own healing journey.
You might feel unsure about what to say or how to begin. That’s okay. Every client starts somewhere, and your willingness to explore healing already shows strength.
Take a moment to consider where you are right now and what you might need. Maybe it’s clarity. Maybe it’s peace. Maybe it’s someone who will walk beside you without judgment. Whatever it is, therapy can help.
You can schedule a free consultation to ask questions and see if the support feels right for you. No pressure—just a space to explore what’s next. Whether you're seeking Wyoming counseling for trauma recovery or looking for emotional clarity in Nevada or Utah, support is available.
Start small. Show up. Healing is possible.
