Imagine yourself as a Blue Moon; rare, luminous and impossible to ignore. From this perspective, your boundaries sharpen, your choices clarify and your relationships reorganize around self-trust and inner authority. At Blue Moon Therapy, I support women to re-ignite their life force energy. Together, we consciously build your future self from the inside out through trauma-informed, neurodivergence-affirming care that restores nervous system capacity and transforms survival patterns into clarity and strength. 

For new clients only. 

For focused, short term support.

For ongoing relational work. 

For deeper processing and momentum.

Please note: Psychotherapy clients must reside in the province of Ontario.

About Me

Hello, I'm Tiffini!

I’m Tiffini Jacobs. I am a spiritual person who believes that we are deeply impacted by our relational health. I see healing not as something to achieve, but as something we live and practice over time.

I’m a parent to a neurodivergent teenage daughter, and she is one of my greatest teachers. This relationship has shown me how to slow down, listen more carefully, trust the body, and move in ways that honour nervous system capacity rather than urgency or perfection.

Early on I was identified as a gifted learner while also navigating challenges with organization, executive functioning and spatial processing. For many years, my way forward was adaptation. Eventually, my patterns of people pleasing and masking stopped working and I had to redefine success, worth and purpose. What I learned is that I was never broken. I was socially conditioned by systems that weren’t built to support my depth, breadth and intuition.

I’m deeply perceptive, emotionally attuned and sensitive to relational and environmental nuance. As a reflective framework, my work is informed by Human Design, alongside existentialism, somatics and nervous system approaches. Together, they support insight, embodied decision-making and a clearer relationship with self.

After 23 years as an elementary school teacher, I now work as a Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying), supporting women through periods of internal reorganization. These are times when old roles no longer fit, the body asks for something different and a new way of relating to life begins to emerge.

This work isn’t about fixing or learning how to cope better. It’s about learning how to live in rhythm with who you are becoming.

If this resonates, I’d be honoured to support you.

  • Psychotherapy addresses emotional, relational, and nervous system patterns, including trauma and mental health concerns and it is a regulated profession in the province of Ontario. Your identity is intersectional in nature and I am curious to know more about your belief systems, cultural heritage, family structure and spiritual belief systems. Confidentiality and informed consent are at the forefront of our work together.

  • The first session is a collaborative conversation. I promise not to interrogate you! We’ll talk about what’s brought you to therapy, whether you have experienced therapy before and what are your strengths. I will never ask you to outline your goals.

  • If you’re feeling stuck, overwhelmed, disconnected from yourself or others, or noticing patterns that keep repeating despite your best efforts, therapy can help. You don’t need to be in crisis to begin. I would suggest you book a free consultation and see how you can benefit from being in a therapeutic relationship with me. The state of your relational health is one of the most important factors to consider when leading a vibrant life.

  • I support adults navigating anxiety, depression, stress, burnout, trauma responses, identity shifts, relationship challenges, neurodivergence and life transitions. Therapy can also support nervous system regulation and deeper self-understanding.

  • I hold a Masters of Arts Degree in Counselling Psychology from Yorkville University. I also hold a Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy and a Bachelor of Education from York University. I hold specialist qualifications in Special Education.

  • Absolutely not. And on a side note, Canadian Psychotherapists are not in the business of diagnosing people either. If you have a formal diagnosis it is up to you if you want to disclose this information and provide me with the details.

  • This varies. Some clients come for short-term support around a specific issue, while others engage in longer-term work. We will regularly check in to ensure therapy continues to meet your needs.

  • This is highly dependent on a multitude of factors ie; comfort, need, budget, intentions….so many factors.

  • I’m glad you asked. It is an ethical responsibility for registered psychotherapists to have a self-care practice. I see my own therapist and seek out supervision and consultation with colleagues as needed. I read books, listen to podcasts, play baseball, journal, enjoy walking, spending time with family and networking with other entrepreneurs. If you are interviewing other psychotherapists to find a right fit, this is an excellent question to ask them. I encourage you to consult with multiple therapists before deciding to hire one.

Connect with me.