Codependency therapists in Homeland Park, South Carolina SC

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 therapist: Soul Journey Coaching & Wellness, counselor/therapist
Codependency

Soul Journey Coaching & Wellness

Counselor/Therapist, Board Certified Holistic Functional Medicine Psychoneuroimmunology Practitioner
Soul Journey Coaching works with Codependency from the perspective of creating within yourself the love, acceptance, belonging you inherently crave. Creating intrinsically self love,receptivity, listening, affection, trust and respect.  
24 Years Experience
Online in Homeland Park, South Carolina
Flagstaff, Arizona therapist: Psychotherapy.Com, psychologist
Codependency

Psychotherapy.Com

Psychologist, Ph.D.
Assistance with codependency issues.  
28 Years Experience
Online in Homeland Park, South Carolina
Charleston, South Carolina therapist: Ethredge Counseling Group of South Carolina, counselor/therapist
Codependency

Ethredge Counseling Group of South Carolina

Counselor/Therapist, LPC, CCTP
Originally coined to describe the relationship between alcoholics and their loved ones, we now have a broader understanding of this common (and destructive) relationship pattern. Understand the patters that effect your relatinoships, your behavioral patterns, and the way you view the world through your work with your therapist.  
5 Years Experience
Online in Homeland Park, South Carolina
Narberth, Pennsylvania therapist: Michelle Bloom, PsyD, psychologist
Codependency

Michelle Bloom, PsyD

Psychologist, PsyD, PsyPact
Setting healthy boundaries is something many of us did not effectively learn in childhood, even in the most well meaning and loving of families. We have, instead, learned to live life to serve others and to prioritize the needs of others, even when doing so harms ourselves. My approach is to help my clients create healthy boundaries, advocate for the self, learn to communicate our needs clearly and directly, and then learn to act upon the needs we have outlined to those we love so we can cultivate healthy and mutually effective relationships. Cutting the ties of codependency is central to this process: staying in one's own lane, letting others solve their own problems, offering compassion and help when asked, letting go of the rescue fantasy, living without an emotional hangover, and learning to accept that there is much we cannot control.  
27 Years Experience
Online in Homeland Park, South Carolina
Roswell, Georgia therapist: Alan Brandis, Ph.D., psychologist
Codependency

Alan Brandis, Ph.D.

Psychologist, Ph.D., Licensed Psychologist
The concept of Co-Dependency was developed as a way of explaining how family members of alcoholics, especially their spouses, became emotionally ill apparently as a result of living with an alcoholic for years. "Co" is a prefix that means "like" or "with" - the family member becomes sick like and with "the dependent" (the person dependent on a chemical). There are several common problems that often go along with life with an alcoholic or drug abuser, including their unpredictable moods, selfish and irresponsible behavior, angry outbursts which may include verbal or physical abuse, broken promises and commitments, embarrassing public behavior, financial irresponsibility, legal problems, and inability to return love or affection. However, most chemically dependent people have periods when they function well, and this generates the hope that they will stay well, quit or control their chemical use, and become responsible and loving for good.  
34 Years Experience
Online in Homeland Park, South Carolina