Parenting therapists in Homewood, Alabama AL
Gayle MacBride
Psychologist, PhD, LP
Parenting - "All joy and no fun" is a quote I hear often and it resonates. It has been a great joy and the hardest job. It's hard to know if we are "doing it right" and "I don't want to screw up my kid" are the most common things my clients tell me. Let's talk about your parenting values and how this aligns with your parenting reality to learn some ways to increase your confidence.
18 Years Experience
Dr. Christina A Remek
Psychologist, Psy.D.
I can help to teach you the techniques that work to improve the relationship between you and your child so that you are both feeling happier and less stressed. Maybe you need the skills to be able to help your child better manage his/her own problems.
11 Years Experience
Michele Sitorus (Inner Peace Psychological Care)
Psychologist, Psy.D.
We will explore your parenting styles, beliefs, and goals in a supportive and nonjudgmental environment. Parents will learn to develop effective communication skills, set appropriate boundaries, and manage conflicts within the family. Additionally, therapy may focus on improving parent-child relationships, enhancing parenting self-efficacy, and addressing any underlying issues such as stress or trauma that may be impacting parenting behaviors.
5 Years Experience
Dr. Alex Littleton
Psychologist, Licensed Psychologist
For childhood/teen anxiety & OCD, we utilize SPACE (Supportive Parenting for Anxious Childhood Emotions). SPACE is a parent-facing approach for treating child anxiety, and has been demonstrated to be very effective for helping with many forms of child anxiety, including all forms of OCD, separation anxiety, social anxiety, sleep anxiety, school refusal, ARFID (picky eating), and Failure to Launch (dependent adult children).
8 Years Experience
Strides in Psychotherapy
Psychologist, PSY.D.
here are many different ways to be an effective and nurturing parent. People’s parenting styles may vary based on culture, race, religion, socioeconomic status, geographic location as well as due to both the parents’ and the children’s personalities. Some people tend to be more authoritarian, setting rules and expecting them to be followed because you are the parent. Other parents are more permissive, wanting their children to have their needs met and to feel heard and understood. Still others try to find some middle ground. They may switch positions depending on the specifics of the situation or they may negotiate a compromise. Sometimes one parenting style works really effectively with one child but not at all with another. Other times, a way of handling a situation may work fine for your child at one age but not at all once they get a bit older, so a shift in approach is needed. We all tend to use our own upbringing as a model for how we parent, or in some cases, for what we most want to avoid in raising our children. Often, this strategy works fine. When it does not, therapy can be a useful tool in offering you alternative strategies and techniques that might help.
23 Years Experience