Infidelity therapists in Commerce, Texas TX
Richard Scott, Ph.D.
Psychologist, Ph.D.
Infidelity can create depression, anxiety, and negatively impact mental health. Whether you have experienced the pain of learning about infidelity of your significant other or you are struggling with guilt, shame, and regret related to infidelity, it can be detrimental to your well-being. Therapy can be a great place to get help, support, and learn tools to recover. If I can help you, please don’t hesitate to reach out.
18 Years Experience
Dr. Mike Strand
Psychologist, PsyD
Infidelity shatters trust, leaving a trail of betrayal and hurt that challenges the very foundation of a relationship. The aftermath brings waves of confusion, anger, and grief, making it hard to see a way forward for both partners. My therapy for infidelity offers a space for healing, understanding, and rebuilding, providing the tools to navigate this difficult journey together, toward a future of renewed trust and connection.
16 Years Experience
Robert Good
Counselor/Therapist, M.A., Th.M., LPC-S, CART
Individual counseling is offered to individuals in helping them achieve control over actions through an understanding of how thoughts, feelings, and decisions produce actions. We provide a safe environment where one’s private pain can be shared in confidence with a trained therapist to grow in self-awareness and self-esteem while helping a person make decisions, solve problems, and overcome past and present abuses and pains. Sometimes when negative memories prohibit an individual from enjoying a satisfying life, issues in one’s family of origin can be explored to understand the past and seek to establish a new identity.
Feelings like fear, sorrow, anger, rejection, and loneliness can lessen as self-acceptance and coping skills are encouraged and strengthened.
23 Years Experience
Alan Brandis, Ph.D.
Psychologist, Ph.D., Licensed Psychologist
I have worked with many couples where this has been an issue. The first thing that must be handled, if the partner who was cheated on wants the relationship to continue, is to determine if there is real commitment on both sides, and if both are willing and able to have real, meaningful discussions about what was not working for each of them prior to the affair.
34 Years Experience
Dr. Brian Weir
Psychologist, PsyD
Often, couples find an affair to be the most devastating. They often feel that there is no way they can recover. In the case of various forms of infidelity, you would be surprised by what can be overcome and how learning from it can actually build a stronger and healthier relationship. Our work will be focused on healing, building back trust and bolstering the trust with a stronger connection and sense of deep caring for each other. This doesn't have to be the end. It can be the beginning of a better and stronger love.
21 Years Experience