At Energetics Institute, Richard and Helena Boyd offer family counselling services from their Inglewood practice for Perth families who want more than generic advice. Their work draws from counselling, psychotherapy, body psychotherapy, systems thinking, and cognitive behavioural therapy. That means sessions do not stay at the level of “talk more” or “listen better.” They focus on what is actually happening in the family system, how conflict builds, what each person is carrying, and what needs to change for home to feel steadier again.
Family Life Often Gets Stuck In Patterns
When families arrive, they are often describing one visible issue. A child who will not go to school. Brothers who fight constantly. A co-parenting arrangement that keeps sliding into conflict. A household where everyone is tense by dinner.
But in practice, there is usually a pattern underneath.
For example, one Perth family came in saying their main concern was a teenage son who had become oppositional and rude. Once we slowed the process down, the real structure became clearer. Mum was carrying most of the weekday load and moving quickly into correction. Dad, working long hours and often arriving home late, was trying to restore calm by smoothing things over. The teenager had worked out that conflict between the parents was easier to trigger than direct consequences. The visible issue was “defiance,” but the deeper issue was a family pattern built around exhaustion, inconsistency, and rising resentment. Once that was clear, the work stopped circling and started moving.
That is what family counselling can do. It helps family members see the structure they are living inside, not just the latest argument.
Emotional Health Shapes Family Dynamics
A family system often changes long before anyone names the problem. A child may start acting louder because tension is already in the air. A parent may become sharper and less patient because they are carrying too much stress. One of the quieter people in the family may disappear emotionally, not because they do not care, but because that is how they cope.
This is why family therapy looks at family dynamics, not only individual behaviour. If one part of the system is strained, the whole family feels it.
Family counselling can help when:
- parents and children are trapped in repetitive arguments
- sibling rivalry has turned into constant hostility
- a young person’s mental health is affecting the whole home
- separated parents cannot discuss practical issues without reopening old conflict
- blended families are struggling with fairness, belonging, and boundaries
- one family member’s stress is setting the emotional climate for everyone else
Family Counselling That Is Specific, Not Generic
A lot of websites say they help families “improve communication” or “reduce conflict.” Those outcomes matter, but they are too broad on their own. Families need to know what actually happens in the room.
At Energetics Institute, sessions are structured around the real pattern in your household. That may include:
- identifying the sequence of what happens before conflict escalates
- mapping who pursues, who withdraws, who mediates, and who absorbs
- helping parents recognise when a limit has turned into a power struggle
- helping children and teenagers express feelings without only using behaviour
- teaching adults how to slow a conversation before it turns into correction, blame, or shutdown
- building routines that reduce strain at predictable pressure points such as school mornings, handovers, bedtime, screens, homework, or shared care changeovers
That is what makes the work practical. It is not only about insight. It is about helping families develop usable skills, better communication, and more effective strategies for daily life.
How Richard And Helena Boyd Work With Families
Richard and Helena Boyd are not presented here as generalist “relationship and mindset specialists.” Their approach is informed by psychotherapy and body psychotherapy, which gives them a different lens on family stress.
This matters because family conflict is not only verbal. It is also physiological. In the room, you can often see the family pattern before anyone explains it. One person braces. Another interrupts fast. Another goes still and silent. A parent’s breathing lifts as soon as a teenager speaks. A child watches the adults instead of answering the question. These are not small details. They tell you how the system organises itself under pressure.
Richard and Helena work with those moments directly. Their body-inclusive approach helps people notice the physical side of conflict, not only the words. That can be especially helpful when a family says, “We know what the problem is, but the same thing keeps happening anyway.”
What Family Counselling Looks Like Here
Most family counselling sessions run for 50 to 60 minutes. Some involve the whole family. Some work better with parents first. Some include shorter parts with children or teenagers, depending on age, readiness, and the goals of the work.
A first session usually focuses on:
- the family’s main concerns
- who is affected most directly
- what has already been tried
- what tends to happen before conflict builds
- the specific needs of parents, children, and carers
- one or two realistic goals for the next stage of the process
A lot of families are relieved by how concrete this feels. Instead of revisiting the same argument in circles, the session starts giving shape to the process.
For example, another family came in because two siblings were “always fighting.” What emerged was more specific. The older child felt constantly intruded on. The younger one kept pushing for contact in clumsy ways. Mum was intervening too late, then too forcefully. Dad was trying to solve it with fairness rules that neither child experienced as fair. The work was not simply “get along better.” It was helping each family member understand what was happening, building clearer routines, and changing how parents stepped in before the conflict hit full intensity.
Support For Perth Families Living With Real Pressure
Local context matters. Family counselling Perth should sound like it understands Perth family life.
Some families here are living around FIFO and long roster absences. The issue is not only time apart. It is the abrupt shift from remote site life back into family life, often with very little adjustment space. Some are dealing with long metro commutes that leave everyone depleted before the evening has even started. Some are co-parenting across suburbs, schools, and work schedules. Some are carrying the financial strain that sits beneath many family arguments but is rarely named directly.
Those pressures do not excuse harmful behaviour, but they do shape the emotional conditions people are living in. Good counselling has to understand that.
Relationship And Family Counselling Services
Our counselling services support:
- parenting strain
- sibling conflict
- separation and co-parenting pressure
- blended families
- parent-teen conflict
- family stress linked to grief, anxiety, burnout, or a young person’s mental health
- adults and individuals dealing with family strain that is spilling into work, sleep, and wellbeing
Between sessions, families are often given one or two focused practices to try at home. These are not busywork. They are chosen because they fit the actual pattern.
That may include:
- changing how a difficult conversation is opened
- using a clearer turn-taking structure
- trialling a new after-school routine
- helping one family member express needs earlier instead of holding everything in
- setting a repair step after arguments so the family can move on without pretending nothing happened
Couples And Partners
When tension between adults is shaping the whole household, we may include partner work within the wider family process. This is especially important when couple conflict is affecting the children, parental alignment, or the emotional tone of the home.
This part of the work can help couples:
- improve communication
- discuss parenting decisions more clearly
- reduce escalation and defensiveness
- strengthen connection
- build stronger working alliances during difficult times
Often, when the adult relationship becomes steadier, the whole family system becomes easier to regulate.
Workplace Offerings
Family stress does not stay at home. It can spill into work performance, concentration, and emotional capacity. Work stress also comes back into the home. Where appropriate, we offer workshop-style support focused on communication, conflict, boundaries, and emotional regulation.
These sessions are designed to provide practical knowledge, useful tools, and workable strategies that people can apply in both family and work settings.
Our Team Of Experienced Therapists
You will work with experienced therapists and practitioners who understand how family systems behave under stress. The work is grounded, structured, and tailored to the family’s specific needs.
We aim to create a non judgmental space where each person can speak honestly enough to be understood, while still keeping the session focused and constructive. The point is not to create more emotional chaos. It is to help the family build something more stable, more connected, and more workable.
What Our Clients Say
Family members and parents describe calmer evenings and fewer arguments. Teens say they feel safer to discuss feelings. Families value clear steps, practical tools and a caring, support focused approach.
Frequently Asked Questions
Latest Family Counselling Articles
Read our latest articles on parenting stress, communication, co-parenting, family conflict, and wellbeing.
What Is True Friendship?
In a world where social networks thrive and digital conversations [...]
Your Guide to Personalised Family Therapy
Facing family issues and looking for a tailored solution? This [...]
The Power of Family Bonds
Family bonds extend beyond shared genetics or living under the [...]





