Caribbean Mental Health Consultants

Caribbean Mental Health Consultants Counselling Psychology is unique in its attention both to normal developmental issues and to problems associated with mental illnesses.

I am a Registered Psychologist with a PhD in Counselling Psychology from The University of British Columbia, a program jointly accredited by the American Psychological Association and the Canadian Psychological Association. With more than 10 years of clinical, research and teaching experience in mental health, I provide psychotherapeutic services for clients of diverse ages, cultures, ethnicities and levels of privilege. Some of the organisations with which I have worked in this capacity include California Polytechnic State University, the UBC/New Westminster Counselling Centre, Barbados Community College, Network Services Centre, and The Edna Nicholls Centre. Counselling Psychologists help people improve their well-being, alleviate distress and maladjustment, resolve crises, and increase their ability to live more highly functioning lives. They promote personal and interpersonal functioning across the life span with a focus on emotional, social, vocational, educational, health-related, developmental, and organizational concerns. I am available to work with individuals and couples on issues that include:
Academic & vocational/career
Addiction
Anger management
Family of origin
Grief & loss
Life transition
Marriage/relationship
Mood disorders: depression, anxiety/panic
Parenting
Stress

I hope that I can be a useful resource for you. Natalie Moore, PhD
Caribbean Mental Health Consultants
Barbados
246.250.9509

07/03/2026
07/03/2026

Mothers who didn't bond with their babies were called cold, broken, unnatural. Then a psychologist asked a different question: "What has this family lived through?" That question changed everything.
1970s. Ann Arbor, Michigan.
A young mother sat in Selma Fraiberg's office, holding her six-month-old baby at arm's length, tears streaming down her face.
"I don't feel anything," she whispered. "I feed him. I change him. I do everything right. But I don't feel... I don't feel what I'm supposed to feel."
She expected judgment. Expected to be told she was a bad mother. Expected confirmation of the terrible thing she already believed about herself.
Instead, Fraiberg asked quietly: "Tell me about your own mother."

Fraiberg, born in 1918 in Detroit to Eastern European Jewish immigrants, studied psychology and social work, focusing on child development. But her real education came from watching families in crisis. In the 50s and 60s, she made home visits to impoverished families, witnessing overwhelmed mothers and distressed infants, noticing bonds that hadn’t formed.

At the time, dominant theories blamed mothers for everything. Autism, schizophrenia, inconsolable babies—supposedly all signs of a defective mother. Fraiberg disagreed. Her observations showed these women weren’t cold—they were traumatized, haunted by their own childhoods of abuse, neglect, or loss.

The mother in her office had grown up with a violent, mentally ill mother. Needing comfort once meant danger. Now, holding her baby, those old patterns re-emerged. The baby's normal cries triggered her own defense mechanisms, and the bond faltered. Fraiberg told her gently: "You're not broken. You're responding to ghosts."

Those "ghosts in the nursery"—patterns from unresolved trauma—could haunt a parent-infant relationship. Fraiberg developed infant-parent psychotherapy, meeting families where they lived, observing interactions, and helping parents understand how their histories affected bonding.

Weeks later, the mother returned, holding her baby tenderly. The numbness had not vanished instantly, but understanding her trauma allowed genuine connection to form. Fraiberg documented case after case, showing struggling mothers could heal—and so could their babies.

In 1977, she founded the Child Development Project at the University of Michigan, training therapists and advocating for early intervention. She proved bonding is not instinctive; it is shaped by history, context, and mental health. Support, not blame, enables healing.

Selma Fraiberg died in 1981, but her legacy reshaped maternal care: infant mental health became a field, postpartum mood disorders were recognized, and therapists began asking, "What happened to you?" instead of, "What's wrong with you?"

Because sometimes the most healing thing is to stop demanding mothers be better—and start helping them be okay.

03/03/2026
28/02/2026
28/02/2026
25/02/2026
20/02/2026
14/02/2026

🧠 The greatest challenge in coping with a mood or anxiety disorder is finding the right treatment and support. We know how frustrating and confusing it can be.

As you seek help, keep these points in mind:
🔹 You have the right to receive quality care
🔹 You deserve the best care possible
🔹 Finding the right treatment is a trial and error process
🔹 Accessing services can be very challenging
🔹 Be prepared to do some research.

More info & resources: https://mdsc.ca/finding-help/

14/02/2026

Address

Warrens

Opening Hours

Tuesday 09:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 17:00
Thursday 09:00 - 17:00
Friday 09:00 - 17:00

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