Prakash is a Clinical Counsellor registered with PACFA who supports individuals, couples, and families experiencing relationship challenges, family conflict, separation, trauma, and life transitions. He works with clients facing a wide range of concerns including emotional distress, relationship difficulties, mental health challenges, and the impact of life stressors.
Prakash brings experience from both community services and private practice. Through this work he has supported people experiencing disability, trauma, mental health concerns, and complex family or relationship difficulties. These experiences have shaped his understanding of how early life experiences, trauma, and family dynamics can influence emotional wellbeing and relationships later in life.
His therapeutic approach is attachment-informed, trauma-aware, and evidence-based, drawing from a range of modalities including Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), attachment-based therapy, psychodynamic therapy, polyvagal-informed practice, humanistic and client-centred approaches, and transpersonal psychotherapy. Prakash works collaboratively with clients to help them better understand relationship patterns, regulate emotions, and build healthier and more secure connections.
Prakash believes therapy should be a safe, compassionate, and non-judgmental space where clients can explore their experiences at their own pace. His goal is to support people in healing unresolved emotional wounds, improving communication, strengthening relationships, and breaking patterns that may repeat across generations.
He works with clients experiencing:
- Relationship conflict and communication difficulties
- Emotional disconnection, trust issues, or infidelity
- Family and parent–child relationship challenges
- Trauma, stress, anxiety, and emotional wellbeing concerns
- Cultural or generational relationship tensions
Prakash offers in-person counselling in Belconnen, Canberra, as well as secure online sessions across Australia. He is deeply committed to ethical, culturally responsive, and client-centred practice, and believes that when people heal and strengthen their relationships, it creates positive change not only for individuals but also for families and communities.
Prakash is fluent in English, Nepali, and Hindi.