Loss or Grief therapists in Highland, Utah UT
Compassionate Counseling
Counselor/Therapist
Grief is directly associated with loss. Not surprisingly, the more attached you were to the something or someone you've lost, the greater the feelings of loss you will experience. Whether your grief is due to the loss of someone you loved or it's due to some intangible loss - it's a loss. Learning to adapt in loss and change is difficult and necessary. Especially since we will all, inevitably encounter loss and grief as we move through live. We can support you as you move with grief and into your new "normal".
4 Years Experience
Jackie Ma
Psychologist, Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology
I have worked with individuals with serious and life-limiting illnesses who may be experiencing anticipatory grief in the context of their prognosis. Also, through working with older adults, I frequently support them in coping with grief that is a result of loss of loved ones and/or changes to their health and functioning. My goal is to support you through the grief process and to learn helpful coping strategies for grief.
1 Years Experience
Dr. Kimberly E. Johnson
Psychologist, PsyD, HSPP, APIT
Unfortunately, we live in an age of excess uncertainty due to violence, natural disaster, disease, war and various health issues. Loss of loved ones or others close to us can lead to uncomplicated or complicated grief. I help clients accept and process the emotions and life changes caused by unexpected or anticipated loss.
18 Years Experience
Sarita R. Schapiro, Ph.D., P.A.
Psychologist, Florida Licensed Psychologist PY4914, APIT Certified
Supportive counseling to process grief and loss.
42 Years Experience
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