About Us
At Fields of Hope Counselling, we believe in the power of restoration, resilience, and hope. Whether you're navigating life transitions, wrestling with anxiety or depression, or seeking greater clarity in your relationships or identity, you are welcome here. This is a space where your story matters, and healing is possible.
Fields of Hope Counselling is a fully online practice — intentionally designed this way. By working via Zoom, I'm able to support clients and supervisees across Australia, removing the barrier of geography and offering the flexibility of sessions from the comfort of your own space. All you need is a quiet room and a stable internet connection.
Meet Delaney
Founder, Clinical Counsellor and Supervisor
You don’t have to have it all figured out to reach out.
Some people come to counselling carrying years of unspoken pain. Others arrive at a crossroads, unsure of what comes next. Wherever you are — that’s exactly where we start.
I’m Delaney, a Registered Counsellor (ACA Level 4 & PACFA Clinical) and ACA-Accredited Supervisor with eight years of experience across private practice, EAP and national mental health services. I work with individuals and couples navigating trauma, anxiety, depression, relational challenges, and life transitions — and I believe that healing rarely looks the same twice.
My approach is integrative and tailored to you. Drawing on Person-Centred Therapy, CBT, ACT, Narrative, and Solution-Focused approaches — and shaped by a deep appreciation for Family Systems theory and Attachment theory— I work alongside you at your pace, not mine. You are the expert on your own life. My role is to help you access what you already carry within you.
I have a particular heart for those from Asian backgrounds, and for those navigating the space where faith and mental health intersect. As a committed Christian, I’m able to thoughtfully integrate faith for clients who welcome it — while fully honouring the beliefs, values, and autonomy of every person I work with, regardless of background.
For fellow counsellors: Supervision with me is built on the same foundations — safety, curiosity, and collaboration. I use the RISE UP model to guide our work together, creating a space where you can reflect openly, strengthen your practice, and be genuinely supported in the work you do.
You are welcome here — exactly as you are.
Who I work with
I work with people who are carrying more than they let on - those who have learnt to hold it together on the outside while quietly struggling within. If any of the following resonate with you, you’re in the right place.
-
You may not label it as trauma. But something happened — or kept happening — and it changed how you move through the world. We work at your pace, gently and without pressure, to make sense of what you’ve been carrying and to find a way forward that feels safe.
-
The overthinking, the what-ifs, the constant sense of dread that something is about to go wrong. Anxiety can be exhausting — and isolating. Together we explore what’s underneath it and build practical tools to help you feel more grounded.
-
When everything feels heavy and nothing feels like enough — getting through the day can take enormous effort. You don’t have to explain why you feel this way. We start where you are.
-
Whether it’s conflict, disconnection, communication breakdowns, or the weight of family dynamics you didn’t choose — relational pain runs deep. I offer a safe space to untangle it, with or without your partner present.
-
Starting over. Losing a role that defined you. Navigating a new country, a new season, or a version of yourself you don’t yet recognise. Transitions can destabilise even the strongest people — and they deserve proper support.
-
For those whose faith is central to who they are, it belongs in the counselling room too. I offer a space where spirituality is welcomed, not set aside — and where questions of faith, doubt, and meaning can be explored with care and without judgement.
-
Growing up between cultures - navigating family expectations, intergenerational dynamics, the pressure to succeed and the complexity of belonging - is its own kind of journey. I have a particular for those from Asian backgrounds and understand that these experiences are often invisible in mainstream mental health spaces.
-
Loss takes on many forms - a person, a relationship, a version of your life you thought you’d have. Grief doesn’t follow a timeline and it doesn’t always makes sense. It simply needs space.