Please reach us at info@theneurofeedbackclinic.ca if you cannot find an answer to your question.
Your care is in trusted hands. Our team includes:
Because our services are provided under regulated mental health professionals, your sessions may be eligible for insurance coverage or claimed as a medical expense.
Neurofeedback is highly effective for individuals with ADHD because it trains the brain to develop healthier, more regulated patterns of focus, attention, and impulse control.
People with ADHD often show imbalances in brainwave activity, particularly in areas related to attention, executive function, and self-regulation. These imbalances may lead to:
During neurofeedback sessions, the brain receives real-time feedback on its activity. When it shifts toward more balanced, focused patterns, it’s rewarded through visual or auditory cues—helping the brain “learn” what focused, calm, and alert states feel like.
Over time and with consistency, the brain begins to:
Many clients with ADHD—both children and adults—report better school or work performance, more restful sleep, and greater emotional control after consistent neurofeedback training.
Because neurofeedback addresses the root neurological patterns, the improvements tend to be lasting—even after sessions end.
PTSD doesn’t just live in your memories—it lives in your nervous system.
When someone experiences trauma, the brain can become stuck in survival mode. Even long after the event has passed, the nervous system may continue to respond as if danger is still present. This often shows up as:
Neurofeedback helps by gently retraining the brain to come out of survival mode and return to a regulated state.
Using real-time feedback from your brainwaves, neurofeedback teaches your brain what calm, grounded, and safe feels like—without needing to rehash traumatic memories.
As the brain practices these new patterns, the nervous system learns how to stay regulated even when faced with stress.
Over time, clients with PTSD often experience:
Because it works at the neurological level, neurofeedback helps heal the wiring, not just manage the symptoms.
Anxiety isn't just in your thoughts—it's in your brain and nervous system.
When you live with anxiety, your brain can get stuck in high-alert mode. Even when nothing is “wrong,” your system may respond as if danger is near—leading to racing thoughts, muscle tension, restlessness, difficulty sleeping, irritability, or panic.
Neurofeedback helps by training the brain to come out of that constant state of overactivation and return to calm.
Using real-time feedback, neurofeedback gently guides your brain to recognize and sustain more balanced patterns. When your brain shifts into a calmer state, it’s rewarded with audio or visual cues—helping it learn what regulation feels like.
Over time, clients with anxiety often experience:
Because neurofeedback works directly with your brain’s electrical patterns, it helps calm the root of anxiety, not just manage symptoms on the surface.
Depression isn’t just emotional—it’s neurological.
When someone experiences depression, certain areas of the brain may become underactive, while others stay stuck in patterns of negative thinking, low motivation, or emotional numbness. This imbalance can make it hard to focus, find joy, or even get out of bed.
Neurofeedback works by gently guiding the brain to regulate itself more effectively—helping it shift out of stuck, sluggish, or rigid states.
Using real-time brainwave feedback, your brain learns how to move into healthier, more flexible patterns. Over time, this training can improve mood, increase energy, and help restore clarity and motivation—without needing to “push through” or fake feeling better.
Clients with depression often report:
Because neurofeedback supports the biological and electrical side of mood regulation, it helps the brain rebuild pathways for wellness—naturally and gently.
Autism affects how the brain processes information, responds to sensory input, and connects emotionally and socially. While every individual with ASD is unique, many experience challenges with regulation—whether it’s emotional outbursts, sensory overwhelm, sleep issues, or difficulty with transitions and focus.
Neurofeedback helps by supporting the brain’s ability to self-regulate and process more efficiently.
By providing real-time feedback on brainwave activity, neurofeedback teaches the brain to shift into more balanced, organized patterns. Over time, this can lead to improvements in how a person feels, processes information, and responds to the world around them.
For individuals with ASD, neurofeedback may support:
Because it’s non-invasive, relaxing, and doesn’t require verbal processing, neurofeedback is especially well-suited for individuals who may struggle with traditional talk-based therapies.
It’s a gentle way to support neurological development and integration, helping the brain do what it was always meant to do—function with more ease, balance, and connection.
Sleep issues aren’t just frustrating—they’re often a sign that the brain is stuck in a pattern of overstimulation or dysregulation.
When the brain struggles to shift into restful states, it can lead to difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or waking up feeling unrested—no matter how many hours you spend in bed. This is common for those with high stress, anxiety, trauma, ADHD, or chronic health conditions.
Neurofeedback helps by training the brain to calm its activity and transition more easily into restful, restorative states.
By giving your brain real-time feedback on its activity, neurofeedback encourages it to move into balanced patterns that support sleep. Over time, your brain learns how to naturally quiet itself—without the need for medication or external aids.
Clients with sleep issues often experience:
Because it works at the root level—your brain’s electrical rhythms—neurofeedback helps rebuild your brain’s ability to rest, recover, and reset.
Chronic stress and burnout don’t just drain your energy—they rewire your brain to stay in survival mode. When stress becomes constant, your nervous system gets stuck in high-alert, making it hard to relax, focus, or feel present.
You may feel exhausted but unable to rest. Wired but foggy. Overwhelmed, irritable, or emotionally numb.
Neurofeedback helps by training your brain to shift out of stress mode and return to balance.
By monitoring your brainwaves in real time, neurofeedback teaches your brain how to calm itself, restore flexibility, and build resilience. As the brain learns to regulate, your body and mind begin to follow—naturally and without force.
Clients experiencing burnout often report:
Neurofeedback helps restore the brain’s natural rhythm—so you can move from surviving to thriving, with clarity and calm leading the way.
Learning and processing challenges aren't a matter of effort—they're often rooted in how the brain receives, organizes, and responds to information.
For individuals with learning difficulties or processing disorders (such as dyslexia, auditory processing issues, or working memory struggles), the brain can become overwhelmed or inefficient when trying to absorb and retain information. This can lead to frustration, low confidence, and difficulty keeping up in school or daily tasks.
Neurofeedback helps by teaching the brain to function in a more organized, focused, and efficient way.
By providing real-time feedback on brainwave activity, neurofeedback encourages the brain to shift into patterns that support attention, memory, and information processing. Over time, these new patterns become stronger and more automatic.
Clients with learning challenges often experience:
Because neurofeedback works at the neurological level, it supports lasting improvements—helping the brain work smarter, not harder.
When a child struggles with behavior, it’s often a sign that their brain is having trouble regulating emotions, impulses, or sensory input—not that they’re being “bad” or defiant.
Tantrums, aggression, emotional outbursts, refusal to listen, or difficulty sitting still can all stem from a nervous system that’s overwhelmed or stuck in survival mode.
Neurofeedback helps by teaching the brain to self-regulate more effectively, creating the internal balance a child needs to feel safe, calm, and in control.
During gentle, non-invasive sessions, your child’s brain receives real-time feedback on its activity. As the brain moves into more balanced patterns, it’s rewarded—helping it learn how to stay regulated, even in challenging moments.
Parents often notice:
By addressing the root of dysregulation—not just the symptoms—neurofeedback empowers children to build the tools they need to succeed socially, emotionally, and academically.
A traumatic brain injury (TBI) or concussion can disrupt the brain’s ability to communicate and function efficiently. Even long after the initial injury, individuals may struggle with memory issues, mental fog, mood swings, sleep disturbances, headaches, or difficulty concentrating.
That’s because the brain’s electrical patterns—and its ability to self-regulate—can be altered by injury.
Neurofeedback helps by providing the brain with real-time feedback on its activity, guiding it back into healthier, more stable patterns. This process supports the brain’s natural ability to rewire, repair, and restore function—a process known as neuroplasticity.
Clients recovering from TBI or concussion often experience:
Because neurofeedback works directly with brainwave activity, it helps restore balance at the neurological level—supporting long-term recovery, naturally and gently.
Obsessive-compulsive tendencies often involve repetitive thought loops, rituals, or behaviors that feel difficult—or impossible—to control. These patterns are usually driven by anxiety, fear, or a sense of internal urgency, even when the person knows the thoughts or actions don’t make logical sense.
At the neurological level, this is often linked to rigid or overactive brainwave patterns and a nervous system stuck in overdrive.
Neurofeedback helps by training the brain to become more flexible, calm, and regulated. Using real-time feedback, the brain learns to move away from obsessive loops and anxious overactivation into more balanced and stable patterns.
Over time, individuals with OCD tendencies often experience:
By working directly with the brain’s electrical activity, neurofeedback helps break the cycle from the inside out—gently guiding the brain toward peace, presence, and freedom.
Copyright © 2025 The Neurofeedback Clinic - All Rights Reserved.
Train Your Brain | Rewire Your Life
We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.