Corinne Bell is a clinical psychologist and psychologist based in Myrtleford, Victoria. Her practice is at 164 Myrtle Street, Myrtleford VIC 3737. She works with people who want support with their mental health and everyday wellbeing, and she aims to keep things practical and grounded.
Corinne provides individual therapy sessions for adults, teens, and families, depending on what fits your situation. Sessions can be a good place to talk through stress, low mood, anxiety, relationship worries, or how life has been feeling lately. In many cases, people come in with problems that build up over time, and they need help to sort out what’s driving things and what might help them move forward.
She also offers couples counselling. This can be for communication struggles, feeling disconnected, conflict that keeps coming back, or trying to work out healthier ways to respond to each other. Couples therapy doesn’t have to be about “big” events either. Sometimes it’s about small patterns that are wearing everyone down.
For families, Corinne provides family therapy. Family life can be messy. When everyone is stressed, it can be hard to find calm routines and clear expectations. Family sessions focus on understanding what’s happening for each person, and then looking at ways to improve how the household functions day to day.
Corinne’s work also includes behavioural therapy and cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT). CBT is often used to help people notice how thoughts, feelings, and behaviours link together. Over time, that can make it easier to pick up on unhelpful thinking patterns and replace them with skills that actually work in real life, not just in theory.
Approaches are usually tailored to the person or the family. At times, that means setting small goals between sessions so progress feels steady and manageable. At other times, it’s about creating space to talk things through clearly, so you can get a better handle on what you want to change.
Because mental health is different for everyone, Corinne keeps the tone steady and supportive. The focus stays on what you need right now, and how therapy can help you cope better, feel more in control, and build healthier habits that last.