Rued-Fraser Psychology Services

Rued-Fraser Psychology Services Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Rued-Fraser Psychology Services, Psychologist, Calgary, AB.

**Registered Psychologist | 10+ Years Experience | Childhood Trauma Specialist**
Helping you overcome life’s challenges and discover clarity, growth, and emotional freedom—your way.

05/26/2026

From the inside, narcissistic abuse often feels like confusion more than cruelty.

You apologize constantly, often without knowing what you did wrong.

You’ve stopped bringing things up because the conversation always ends with you being the problem.

You feel grateful when they’re kind and anxious when they’re not. You’ve started organizing your life around their mood without realizing you did it.

You work harder and harder to get back to the version of the relationship that existed at the beginning, without ever quite getting there.

You used to be more confident than this. You’re not sure when that changed.

If any of this sounds familiar, sit with these:

Have you ever felt lonelier inside a relationship than you did before it?

Have you ever worked harder to be loved than you ever thought you’d have to?

Have you ever felt responsible for someone else’s mood without ever agreeing to be?

Have you ever wondered what happened to the version of you that existed before this relationship?

You deserve a relationship that doesn’t cost you this much.

Gaslighting isn’t someone disagreeing with you. It isn’t conflict, a bad day, or a difference in perspective.Gaslighting...
05/21/2026

Gaslighting isn’t someone disagreeing with you. It isn’t conflict, a bad day, or a difference in perspective.

Gaslighting is a deliberate pattern of making you question your own perception of reality. Not once, but as a pattern. Not by accident, but with the intention of making you distrust yourself so you become easier to control.

Have you ever walked away from a conversation certain something was wrong, but unable to explain what?

Worry is the mind trying to solve its way to safety.It scans for a threat, works the problem, waits for the tension to r...
05/20/2026

Worry is the mind trying to solve its way to safety.

It scans for a threat, works the problem, waits for the tension to release. The worry often attaches to real things: finances, health, relationships. But when the underlying distress is something unsolvable, grief, loneliness, the fear of rejection, no amount of problem-solving closes the loop. So the mind finds another problem. And another. All-consuming, and ultimately beside the point.

What does your mind reach for when things feel out of control?

05/14/2026

Most people treat rest like something you earn.

Finish the list. Clear the inbox. Take care of everyone else. Then, if there's anything left, rest.

There's rarely anything left.

For a lot of people, staying busy is a nervous system strategy. If you grew up in an environment that wasn't quite safe, stillness may have been the most dangerous state of all. Movement, productivity, usefulness: these were ways of staying okay.

The body learned. And it's been running that program ever since.

So when people finally sit down, they don't feel peace. They feel anxiety. Guilt. The creeping sense that they're missing something, falling behind. Rest doesn't feel like rest. It feels like a threat.

Here's what I want to offer instead: rest is a skill. Not a reward, not a luxury, not something you get to once you've earned it: something that can be learned, practiced, and gotten better at. A well-trained body knows when to conserve energy. It's what a body that paid close attention learns to do.

If you've spent years in survival mode, learning to rest is real work. It makes sense that it's hard. And it makes sense that you'd need support to get there.

How do you give yourself permission to rest?

Not every difficult childhood has a villain.Some people grew up with a mother who was physically present, who kept the l...
05/07/2026

Not every difficult childhood has a villain.

Some people grew up with a mother who was physically present, who kept the lights on and food on the table, who by most external measures was there. And yet something essential was missing. Warmth that felt conditional. Emotional attunement that came and went. The sense that love had to be earned, and that the criteria kept shifting.

This is one of the hardest things to grieve, because it’s hard to name. There’s no clear event to point to. No obvious wound. Just a slow, quiet accumulation of moments where you needed something and it wasn’t there.

And often, a loyalty that makes it hard to even acknowledge the loss. Because she did her best. Because others had it worse. Because saying “I needed more than I got” feels like a betrayal.

It isn’t.

Grieving what a relationship didn’t give you isn’t an attack on the person. It’s an honest reckoning with your own experience. And it’s some of the most important work there is, because those early gaps have a way of shaping everything: how you ask for what you need, whether you believe you deserve it, how you love other people and let them love you.

If you find certain times of year quietly harder than they should be, and you’ve never quite been able to explain why, this might be part of it.

You don’t have to have a dramatic story to deserve support. You just have to be willing to look honestly at your own.

Book a free consult at
https://ruedfraser.janeapp.com/


— Annemarie Rued-Fraser, R.Psych
www.ruedfraser.ca

Registered Psychologist in Calgary specializing in complex trauma. Annemarie Rued-Fraser offers EMDR, DBT, IFS, and holistic therapy virtually across Alberta.

05/03/2026

Complex trauma doesn’t look like what most people expect.

There’s no single event. No clear before and after. Just a slow accumulation of experiences that taught you: the world isn’t quite safe, love is conditional, and the smartest thing you can do is stay vigilant.

So you did. You got very good at reading rooms. Anticipating needs. Keeping the peace. Making yourself acceptable.

And it worked — until it didn’t.

The signs tend to show up quietly. A critical inner voice you can’t seem to turn off. Relationships that feel safer when you stay small. A body that won’t fully settle, even when nothing is wrong. A persistent sense that you’re always one mistake away from losing something important.

This isn’t a character flaw. It’s a nervous system that learned exactly what it needed to learn to get you through.

But what helped you survive doesn’t always help you live.

If this sounds familiar, you don’t need a dramatic story to deserve support. You just have to be ready to put it down.

Book a free consult at https://ruedfraser.janeapp.com/


— Annemarie Rued-Fraser, R.Psych
www.ruedfraser.ca

What Nobody Tells You About Finding the Right TherapistMost advice about finding a therapist sounds like this: check the...
04/07/2026

What Nobody Tells You About Finding the Right Therapist

Most advice about finding a therapist sounds like this: check their credentials, make sure they specialise in what you’re dealing with, confirm they take your insurance. And yes, those things matter. But they’re also the easy part. They’re the things you can Google.

What’s harder to find — and what actually determines whether therapy works — is something quieter and more personal than any checklist. It’s fit.

I’ve been doing this long enough to know that the “right” therapist isn’t simply the most qualified one, or the one with the most five-star reviews. It’s the one who is right *for you*. And working that out takes a different kind of thinking.

Here are the questions I wish more people asked before they booked.

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Do you and your therapist see the world through the same lens?

Every therapist has a theory — a way of making sense of why people struggle and how they heal. Most clients never hear it explained plainly, but you feel it in how they listen, what they ask, what they seem to think matters.

Some therapists believe the most important thing is the past — that your patterns, your relationships, your nervous system all carry the fingerprints of what happened before. Others believe the most important thing is the present — how you’re thinking right now, and whether those thoughts are helping or hurting you. Others think it’s about the body, or about meaning, or about the stories you tell yourself about who you are.

None of these is wrong. But if your therapist is looking for patterns in your childhood and you feel certain the past is irrelevant — or if they keep asking how a belief makes you feel and you desperately want to understand *why* you have it — something is going to grind.

You don’t need to arrive knowing the theory. But it’s worth asking yourself: when something goes wrong in your life, what tends to feel most true? That it traces back to something old? That your thinking got distorted? That you lost your footing in your relationships? Your intuitive answer is a clue about whose map of the mind might feel like home.

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Do you actually vibe?

I know that sounds like an odd thing for a psychologist to say. But I’ll say it anyway, because the research backs it up: the quality of the relationship between therapist and client is one of the strongest predictors of whether therapy works. More than technique. More than modality. The relationship itself is doing a lot of the work.

What this means practically is that “good therapist” and “good therapist for you” are not the same thing.

The 15-minute consult call is imperfect. You might be nervous. They might be cautious. First calls are rarely the full picture. But there are still real signals worth paying attention to.

Did you feel heard — not just processed? Was there any moment where something genuine passed between you, or did it feel like a screening? Did they seem curious about *you*, or were they mostly gathering information? Did you feel like you could say something real, even briefly?

Sometimes you feel it right away — a kind of ease or recognition. That’s not nothing. And sometimes you don’t feel it, but nothing felt wrong either, and that’s fine too — sometimes it takes a session or two before the room comes alive.

What I’d pay more attention to: if you felt managed rather than met. If the warmth felt performed. If you sensed that your job was to fit into their process rather than the other way around.

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Do you want to be challenged — and can they do it well?

This is the question most people never think to ask, and the mismatch it creates causes a lot of quiet frustration.

Some people come to therapy wanting to be pushed. They want someone who will name the thing they can’t see, point out the pattern they keep repeating, sit with them in the uncomfortable truth rather than letting them off the hook. They don’t want a therapist who bites their tongue and reflects everything back — they want one with enough clinical confidence, and enough trust in the relationship, to actually say something.

Other people need something entirely different. They need a space where they are not at risk of being confronted before they’re ready. Where they can move at their own pace, build trust slowly, and feel safe enough to let their guard down — because without that safety, nothing opens.

Neither of these is more evolved or more healthy. They are different needs, and they require different things from a therapist.

The problem is that most people don’t know which camp they’re in until they’re in the wrong one. And there’s a third complication: being challenged well is genuinely hard. There’s a meaningful difference between a therapist who challenges you because they see you clearly and care enough to say the hard thing — and one who challenges you because it fits their model, or because they’re impatient, or because they confuse directness with insight. The first one moves you. The second one just stings.

So ask yourself honestly: when someone names a blind spot you didn’t know you had, what happens in you? Do you feel lit up? Do you shut down? Do you agree later, but in the moment it feels like an attack? Your answer tells you something important about what you need — and about what to look for.

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What has gotten in the way before?

If you’ve tried therapy before, something probably happened. Maybe it helped. Maybe it didn’t. Maybe it helped for a while and then stopped. Maybe one session, something was said that made you feel misunderstood, and you never went back.

Whatever that was, it’s worth naming — even just to yourself. Because the thing that derailed it last time is likely to come up again. Not because you’re doing something wrong, but because we all have characteristic ways of protecting ourselves, and those ways don’t disappear just because we’re in a therapeutic setting.

If you tend to intellectualise, a great therapist will notice and gently work with that rather than colluding with it. If you tend to perform wellness even when you’re struggling, you’ll want someone perceptive enough to see through the performance without shaming you for it. If you’ve had an experience where a therapist overstepped, or took someone else’s side, or made you feel like a case file rather than a person — that shapes what you need next.

Knowing your own patterns here isn’t a sign that therapy is going to be hard. It’s actually one of the most useful things you can walk in with.

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One last thing

A good therapist will welcome every question in this piece. They’ll have thought about these things too — about fit, about challenge, about what they can and can’t offer. Anyone who makes you feel like you’re being too particular, or asks too much, or should just trust the process — that is information.

You’re not interviewing a contractor. But you are choosing someone to be in the room with you for some of the most honest, difficult, necessary conversations of your life. It’s worth thinking about carefully.

And if the first person isn’t right, that’s not a failure. That’s just how it sometimes goes.

-Annemarie Rued-Fraser

Guiding You Into the Wilderness of the Mind

02/05/2026

Notes You Can Return To.

I encourage clients to read the notes I take during our sessions. These aren’t clinical files hidden away — they’re tools for your growth.
As soon as the session note has been added to your account you receive a notification so that you can review what we discovered together in session.
Reviewing them helps you stay engaged with the work, deepen your reflections between sessions, and track the shifts you’re making over time.
Many clients find that this makes therapy feel more grounded, collaborative, and meaningful.

All your questions answered, right here:
02/01/2026

All your questions answered, right here:

FAQ Do You Offer In‑Person or Virtual Sessions? I currently provide virtual therapy only. Sessions are held through a secure, encrypted video platform that meets all provincial privacy and confiden…

11/18/2025

I’m grateful to share that my practice is now an approved provider with the NIHB Program, allowing me to offer psychological services to eligible First Nations and Inuit clients.
It’s an honour to support healing, wellness, and culturally-safe care in our community.

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Calgary, AB

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