Parenting therapists in Taber, Alberta AB, Canada CA
Renee Lyon
Therapist, MACP, RSW, CEH
Most of my 30 year career has involved working with parents on parenting and discipline strategies. Now I incorporate more spiritual concepts in my work with parents. I'm also the parent of two grown children.
30 Years Experience
Aaron Chin
Licensed Mental Health Counsellor, MA, RCC
When working with parenting, I like to start with some mindfulness around the issue to gain a deeper understanding of the experience, from here there are many options, and I rely of the client's wisdom to guide me.
2 Years Experience
Mark Giesbrecht, MA, CCC, RCC - Psychotherapist
Counsellor/Therapist, MA, CT, CCC, RCC
Parenting is one of the most difficult tasks we humans encounter in our lives. If you love and care for your children it is exhausting on a daily basis. But their are ways to develop better relationship boundaries with your children that will still allow you to have a loving and caring relationship with them. Sometimes you just need the right kind of support.
29 Years Experience
Melanie Wuytenburg
Licensed Clinical Social Worker, MSW, RSW
Parenting is a deeply personal journey that acknowledges the challenges and triggers that come with the profound responsibility of raising children. I understand firsthand how difficult parenting can be, and I approach counselling with empathy, warmth, and understanding. My goal is to create a safe and supportive space where parents can explore their struggles and triumphs without judgment. In parent counselling sessions, the focus is on supporting individuals in navigating the complexities of parenthood, understanding the triggered responses, developing effective parenting strategies to fostering repair and growth within their relationships with their children.
16 Years Experience
Suzan Erritzoe, Being One Counselling & Coaching
Counsellor/Therapist, Transpersonal Counsellor DK
Parenting brings up everything unintegrated, un-dealt with in our selves will easily bring up a lot from our own childhood, and to be in the vulnerability of that, at the same time as caring for a child, depending on us, calls for gentleness and the release of the need to perform according to outer ideals and ideas. As parents, we more than anywhere else, need to okay with being imperfect, and to learn how to see, and meet with another being intimately in the midst of that.
Children read us all the time, and if what we say don't match how we "walk the talk" they get confused - more than being and doing the right thing, our children need us to be authentic and honest, so they can know us and see us. To be a role model, doesn't mean to do the right thing all the time, but to not use power where we feel lack, and instead allow them to see your humanness
24 Years Experience