FILTER RESULTS
I need help with
Type of therapy
Gender
Demographic
Ages
Memphis, Tennessee therapist: Khelsea Walker, licensed professional counselor
Loss or Grief

Khelsea Walker

Licensed Professional Counselor, LPC
This approach to grief counseling focuses on helping the client identify negative thought patterns and replace them with more positive thoughts. Some negative thought patterns can make it difficult for a person to process their grief. They may also prevent a client from realizing how those negative thoughts affect their behavior. CBT techniques include reframing and restructuring, targeting behaviors, and developing a new narrative about the loss.  
7 Years Experience
Online in Springfield, Tennessee
Nashville, Tennessee therapist: PSYCHe, PLLC, psychologist
Loss or Grief

PSYCHe, PLLC

Psychologist, PhD, LPC, PsyD, MSW, Marriage and Family Counselor, LCSW
We have extensive experience helping clients process grief, loss and other trauma.  
10 Years Experience
In-Person Near Springfield, TN
Online in Springfield, Tennessee
Brentwood, Tennessee therapist: LAH Therapy Services, marriage and family therapist
Loss or Grief

LAH Therapy Services

Marriage and Family Therapist, Ph.D., LMFT, CAS, EMDR-2
Loss and Grief affects everyone at some time and I have worked with many issues that loss and grief present to many people over many ages. It is imperative to meet the client where they are and help them heal from their losses and grieve at their own pace.  
35 Years Experience
In-Person Near Springfield, TN
Online in Springfield, Tennessee
Boise, Idaho therapist: Lauren Chavis, psychologist
Loss or Grief

Lauren Chavis

Psychologist, PsyD
Bereavement can be a difficult time and I focus on acknowledging grief and focusing on positive memories of the loved one who has passed.  
11 Years Experience
Online in Springfield, Tennessee
Narberth, Pennsylvania therapist: Michelle Bloom, PsyD, psychologist
Loss or Grief

Michelle Bloom, PsyD

Psychologist, PsyD, PsyPact
Loss is inevitable. We all die and we all lose people, relationships, and states of being that we once loved. If we open ourselves to live an authentic, honest, interdependent life, we are sure to experience loss and grief. Many of us fear it so much that we develop a multitude of ways to avoid it, strike a connection balance that we believe will help us protect ourselves later (yet that often robs our joy in the meantime), and use substances or other numbing techniques to help us avoid the complicated process of grief. I believe we can all benefit from learning to appreciate that loss is inevitable, and to learn to grieve in a way that enables us to move forward with compassion and fulfillment.  
27 Years Experience
Online in Springfield, Tennessee