Online counselling across the UK

One-to-one therapy sessions via Zoom with qualified therapist Jen Morrison, wherever you happen to be.

There’s a particular kind of ease to working together online. You don’t have to leave the house, arrange parking, or spend the energy it takes to step into an unfamiliar building. You put the kettle on, close the door behind you, and we begin.

A lot of my online clients tell me that being in a space that already belongs to them makes it easier to settle in and say the harder things a little sooner. Others tell me honestly that they wouldn’t have started therapy at all if they’d had to travel to it every week. What happens in our 50 minutes is the same as what would happen sitting across from me in Amersham.

A few reasons people choose online

It fits around your life

Sessions slot into a lunch break, the quiet hour after the kids are in bed, or the gap between meetings. You don’t have to take time off work or rearrange childcare to be there.

You’re not limited to therapists in your postcode

Finding someone you click with is the hardest part of starting therapy. Online means you can choose the right person, wherever they happen to be.

There’s more privacy to it

You don’t have to sit in a waiting room, bump into anyone you know, or explain where you’ve been for the last hour.

It travels with you

You can keep the same therapist whether you’re at home, away for work, or living abroad. The thread of what we’re working on doesn’t have to break every time life changes.

Who I work with online

My online clients span the UK and sometimes further afield. Some live locally in Buckinghamshire and choose Zoom because the flexibility fits their week better. Others are based in London, Manchester, Edinburgh or somewhere rural enough that finding a therapist locally is harder than it should be.

Plenty are working parents fitting sessions in while the baby naps or between school runs. A few are British expats living abroad, working with me from wherever life has taken them.

Whatever brings people to online therapy, the thing they have in common is wanting to feel heard by someone paying close attention. That’s the bit I care about getting right. I’m a BACP-registered counsellor and qualified therapist, and if online therapy feels like it could work for you, I’d love to hear from you.

What online sessions are like

You’ll open Zoom, I’ll ask how you’re doing, and we’ll go from there. Some sessions feel like a slow, careful unpicking of something that’s been knotted for years. Others go somewhere you weren’t expecting and land somewhere that turns out to be exactly where you needed to get to.

I listen to what you’re saying and to what you’re not quite saying yet, and I’ll reflect things back when it might help you see them differently.

Research into online therapy is consistent on this. What matters most is the relationship between the two people in the conversation, and that forms just as well through a screen as it does in a room.

Want to know more about my approach?

What you need to get started

Not much.

  • A private space where you can sit undisturbed for 50 minutes (a bedroom, study or parked car all work fine)
  • A reliable internet connection
  • A device with a camera (laptop is easiest, but a tablet or phone is fine
  • Headphones if you share the house

We’ll use the same secure Zoom link each session.

A note on privacy

Working online doesn’t change how confidentiality works. I’m in a private room where I can’t be overheard, sessions aren’t recorded, and each one uses a secure, encrypted Zoom link. You can read the full confidentiality notes on the How I work page.

The details

  • Session length: 50 minutes
  • Fee: £65 per session
  • Availability: Daytime and evening appointments available

Your first conversation with me is always free

Book a free 15-minute consultation via Zoom, ask me anything you want, and get a real feel for how I work before you decide anything at all.

Or send me a message first if you prefer.