Rebecca Quigley
Certified Clinical Yoga Therapist
MS, C-IAYT, 500-RYT, E200-RYT
Rebecca Quigley, MS, C-IAYT
Certified Clinical Yoga Therapist
Exciting News!
Every Day Is Yoga Therapy (Rebecca) is excited to be accepting NEW clients virtual who are looking for an additional layer of care, or a different approach to managing trauma, ADHD, Anxiety, and/or major life transitions.
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Curious about yoga therapy or Rebecca? Keep scrolling!
Ask questions, get info or SCHEDULE with Rebecca...Click below!
About
Rebecca
Rebecca is currently a yoga therapist at the nation's largest non-profit psychiatric hospital. She works with adolescents & adults experiencing mood, and/or behavioral disorders, and those with recent or past trauma histories. She also works with adults with PTSD, C-PTSD, DID, and other complex trauma disorders. When used in conjunction with medical treatments, yoga therapy can help to "connect the dots," helping you find space--and feel better.
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Rebecca works with those who are beginners, those beginning again, and seasoned yogis alike. She translates the traditional aspects of yoga into tangible, clinical practices for each person she works with, making yoga and it's healing potential widely accessible.
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In Rebecca's private practice she also works with those who experience the effects of trauma, ADHD, OCD, autism, and extreme fear conditions.
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Rebecca has a master's degree (MS) in yoga therapy, is a certified yoga therapist (C-IAYT), and an experienced registered yoga teacher (E-RYT). She holds training in trauma-informed yoga, and several specific therapeutic styles of yoga. She has close to 1800 hours of highly specialized training and thousands of hours face-to-face experience with yoga students and yoga therapy clients, alike.
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Rebecca is currently accepting new virtual clients.
Yoga Therapy
Yoga therapy is an evidence-based therapeutic practice that has been shown effective in reducing anxiety and depression, strengthening the mind-body connection, increasing focus and executive function, reducing stress and chronic pain, and a whole host of other benefits (Stephens, 2017). Yoga therapy addresses such a wide range of issues and disorders because the practice allows the client to address their mental, emotional, and stress issues through their work with the body, breath, meditation, and philosophical inquiry.
Yoga therapy sees and honors all of you while you work toward greater comfort.
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Yoga therapy is different from yoga is a few key ways:
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1. Assessment to determine what practices are appropriate and the most beneficial to you. This may change from session to session, yoga therapy allows for you to be you and still work toward your goals.
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2. Practices are tailored to you and your specific needs and wishes.
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3. There is a collaboration between you and your yoga therapist- this collaborative conversation may include the rest of your conventional treatment team as well (with your consent, of course).
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Stephens I. (2017). Medical Yoga Therapy. Children (Basel, Switzerland), 4(2), 12. https://doi.org/10.3390/children4020012
L.M. (Adolescent Patient)
“This [working with Rebecca] is the first real help I've gotten with the issue I came here with.”
H.H. (Adult Patient)
“The breath exercises you [Rebecca] gave me have really helped me to manage overwhelming emotions. They are part of a regular practice for me now.”
S.F. (Adult Client)
“Can you come here every day? I haven't felt this calm in years.”
C.D. (Adolescent Client)
“Ms. Rebecca's yoga is different, you just feel better.”
J.S. (RN working with adolescents patients)
“I keep hearing the kids say that they actually like yoga now. They say it's a new coping tool that they want to keep doing after discharge”