Mindfulness Therapy

A Practice of Presence, Healing, and Liberation

Mindfulness therapy is more than learning to “be calm.” At Velvet & Vine, we see mindfulness as a practice of presence, belonging, and liberation. Many queer, trans, and neurodivergent people have been taught that our bodies, feelings, and needs are “too much” or “not enough.” Mindfulness therapy offers a way to return to ourselves without shame, to notice our inner world with compassion, and to live with greater steadiness in a chaotic, often hostile world.

Unlike quick-fix approaches that dismiss the depth of trauma or systemic oppression, mindfulness therapy honors your lived reality. It is not about detaching from pain but about cultivating awareness so that you can meet life with more choice, grounding, and self-respect.

What Is Mindfulness Therapy?

Mindfulness therapy is a therapeutic approach that integrates evidence-based mindfulness practices with talk therapy. Instead of trying to erase uncomfortable emotions, it teaches you to notice your thoughts, sensations, and feelings with gentleness and curiosity. This awareness interrupts cycles of shame, avoidance, and reactivity.

In sessions, we may explore breathwork, grounding exercises, guided meditations, or body scans. These tools are paired with compassionate dialogue to help you anchor into the present moment. Many studies—including those highlighted by APA and Harvard Health—show that mindfulness practices can reduce anxiety, improve mood regulation, and increase resilience.

A Queer Liberatory Approach to Mindfulness Therapy

Mainstream mindfulness is often stripped of its cultural roots and sold as productivity hacks or stress management tools. At Velvet & Vine, we resist that. Our mindfulness therapy is rooted in queer liberation, which means:

This liberatory lens ensures mindfulness therapy isn’t another way you’re told to “fix” yourself, but a way to resist shame and create more space for joy.

How Mindfulness Therapy Helps with Trauma

Trauma often teaches us to leave our bodies—to stay hyper-alert or disconnected as a way to survive. Mindfulness therapy offers gentle, trauma-informed pathways back to presence without forcing unsafe exposure.

For survivors of trauma, mindfulness therapy can:

At Velvet & Vine, we integrate mindfulness therapy with trauma-focused approaches like EMDR and Polyvagal-Informed Therapy. Together, these modalities create a foundation for safety and integration.

Mindfulness Therapy for Queer and Trans Communities

Queer and trans people carry unique burdens: microaggressions, family rejection, discrimination, and political violence. Mindfulness therapy supports us in holding these realities without collapsing into despair.

Sessions may include:

This approach echoes queer history: we have always found ways to create presence, joy, and resilience in the face of harm.

Mindfulness Therapy for Neurodivergent Clients

Mindfulness has often been taught in rigid or ableist ways that don’t work for neurodivergent minds. At Velvet & Vine, we adapt mindfulness therapy so it is accessible, flexible, and affirming for ADHD, autistic, and other neurodivergent experiences.

  • Shorter, sensory-friendly practices instead of long meditations.

  • Anchors like textured fabrics, weighted blankets, or fidgets.

  • Gentle support for emotional regulation without judgment.

  • Permission to move, stim, or adapt practices as needed.

This neurodivergent-affirming lens makes mindfulness therapy a tool for self-acceptance, not self-erasure.

For more supportive resources, we recommend the Autistic Self Advocacy Network

Evidence-Based Benefits of Mindfulness Therapy

Research consistently shows the benefits of mindfulness-based interventions:

When combined with a queer-affirming, trauma-informed framework, these benefits expand into areas of belonging, embodiment, and liberation.

What a Mindfulness Therapy Session Looks Like

Every session is adapted to your needs and comfort level. You may expect:

Some clients use mindfulness therapy as a main modality, while others integrate it with CBTDBT, or relational-cultural therapy.

Not at all. While a diagnosis may be required if you’re using insurance, you don’t need one to begin care with us.

We adapt practices so they are safe, slow, and supportive. You set the pace, and we honor your boundaries.

Yes, especially when combined with trauma-informed approaches like EMDR or somatic therapy. We use practices that avoid retraumatization.

We honor the roots of mindfulness while using evidence-based practices. We resist its commodification and respect its cultural lineages.

We strongly recommend weekly sessions, and we start therapy on a weekly basis. Moving forward, we’ll adjust frequency based on your needs, goals, and financial access.

Have Additional Questions?

Our Exceptional Services

Psychologists employ a variety of research methods, clinical techniques.

Ready to heal and grow?

Book your free, no‑obligation consultation with a queer‑affirming therapist today.