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Online Codependency therapists in Damascus, OR

We are proud to feature top rated online Codependency therapists in Damascus. We encourage you to review each profile to find your best match.
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San Ramon, California therapist: Ever After Individual and Family Therapy, marriage and family therapist
Codependency

Ever After Individual and Family Therapy

Marriage and Family Therapist, MS, LMFT
When relationships become imbalanced, codependency can lead to emotional exhaustion and loss of self-identity. We help clients set healthy boundaries, build self-worth, and develop relationships based on mutual respect and independence.  
17 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR (Online Only)
Encinitas, California therapist: Hannah Nyznyk Christian, marriage and family therapist
Codependency

Hannah Nyznyk Christian

Marriage and Family Therapist, LMFT #133278
We help clients recognize patterns of over-giving, people-pleasing, and blurred boundaries. Therapy focuses on developing healthy relationships rooted in self-worth and balance.  
7 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR
Lake Oswego, Oregon therapist: Dr. Michael Marossy, psychologist
Codependency

Dr. Michael Marossy

Psychologist, Ph.D.
Codependency often develops when a person becomes overly focused on the emotional needs, approval, behaviors, or wellbeing of others while losing connection with their own needs, identity, and emotional boundaries. Many individuals struggling with codependent patterns experience chronic guilt, people-pleasing, fear of rejection, difficulty setting boundaries, emotional exhaustion, or repeated involvement in unhealthy or one-sided relationships. I help clients better understand the relational and emotional patterns underlying codependency while developing greater self-awareness, emotional autonomy, assertiveness, and healthier interpersonal boundaries. Therapy focuses on helping clients build more balanced and authentic relationships without losing their sense of self in the process.  
8 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR
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Las Cruces, New Mexico therapist: Angelica Amaya, licensed clinical social worker
Codependency

Angelica Amaya

Licensed Clinical Social Worker, LCSW,LICSW
I specialize in helping clients understand and heal patterns of codependency that can keep them feeling stuck, anxious, or disconnected from their authentic selves. Together, we work to build healthier boundaries, strengthen self-worth, and create more balanced, fulfilling relationships. My approach is compassionate, trauma-informed, and focused on helping you develop the confidence to meet your own needs without guilt or fear.  
21 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR (Online Only)
Queens, New York therapist: Julien Moe, hypnotherapist
Codependency

Julien Moe

Hypnotherapist, Diploma in Clinical and Applied Hypnosis, Diploma in Life Coaching
Patients with this disorder are getting resilient in no time. I get their habit disorder treated by my Dicit hyptherapy and clinical hypnosis. How Hypnotherapy Treats Codependency: Hypnotherapy works to change underlying, often subconscious, beliefs such as "I am only valuable if I am helping others" or "I must fix my partner's problems".Setting Boundaries: It helps individuals establish healthy emotional boundaries and gain the confidence to say "no" without guilt. Addressing Root Causes: By relaxing the mind, therapists can access memories or traumas that triggered the codependent behavior to foster emotional healing. Building Self-Esteem: Hypnotherapy helps individuals reconnect with their own needs, interests, and identity outside of the relationship.  
10 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR
Salem, Oregon therapist: Kaijah Bjorklund, counselor/therapist
Codependency

Kaijah Bjorklund

Counselor/Therapist, LPC, LMHC
Codependency often develops as a brilliant survival strategy — if you focus on everyone else's needs, you stay safe, loved, or needed. But over time it can leave you feeling invisible, resentful, and unsure who you even are outside of taking care of others. In our work together, we use IFS to gently explore the parts of you that learned to over-give, and we begin rebuilding your relationship with your own needs, voice, and sense of self — so you can love others without losing yourself in the process.  
12 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR (Online Only)
Portland, Oregon therapist: Meghan Hanes, licensed clinical social worker
Codependency

Meghan Hanes

Licensed Clinical Social Worker, LCSW
Codependency often develops when we learn to prioritize the needs, emotions, or expectations of others above our own. You may find yourself struggling with boundaries, feeling responsible for other people's happiness, or losing sight of your own needs and identity. Therapy can help you develop healthier relationships, stronger boundaries, and a deeper connection with yourself.  
9 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR (Online Only)
San Francisco, California therapist: San Francisco Counseling Collective, licensed professional counselor
Codependency

San Francisco Counseling Collective

Licensed Professional Counselor, LPCC, LMFT, LCSW
At San Francisco Counseling Collective ("SFCC"), when working with codependency issues, we help clients identify relational patterns rooted in overresponsibility, difficulty with boundaries, and self-sacrifice. Together we strengthen self-awareness, autonomy, and relational balance.  
9 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR
Tigard, Oregon therapist: Sonya M Jones, licensed mental health counselor
Codependency

Sonya M Jones

Licensed Mental Health Counselor, Licensed Professional Counselor, LPC
Loving someone who has an active or prior dependency, obsession, or addiction can be physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually exhausting! With Codependency comes anxiety, stress, and often depression. Your expectations are often broken which can effect your self worth and peace of mind. We will work on your identified goals for our time together. This may include identifying thinking patterns and behaviors and how to reshape things in a positive way. Learning Self-compassion and tools and skills to address the anxiety and other emotions and thoughts that accompany codependency will be a part of our work. You might benefit from processing the root concerns, triggers and any trauma that may be informing your codependency.  
19 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR
Los Angeles, California therapist: Forest Williams, life coach
Codependency

Forest Williams

Life Coach, ICF
Take the charge out of giving and receiving boundaries. What if boundaries weren't barriers, but bridges for connection?  
7 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR (Online Only)
Milwaukie, Oregon therapist: Tycee Belcastro, marriage and family therapist
Codependency

Tycee Belcastro

Marriage and Family Therapist, M.A., LMFT, CSTIP
Codependency can feel like a tangled mess where you’re not sure who’s responsible for what in your relationships—or even in your own life. It’s that blurry line where you might take on too much, lose sight of your own needs, or struggle to know where you end and someone else begins. That’s why working on codependency is a big part of my relationship therapy. I’ll help you sort out what’s truly yours to carry, set clear boundaries, and figure out what and who you are truly responsible for. This isn’t just about making relationships work—it’s about feeling solid in who you are. In our sessions, we’ll untangle this together in a warm, safe and educational space so you can build stronger connections and a stronger sense of self.  
21 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR
West Linn, Oregon therapist: Rose Snyder, EdM, PsyD, LLC, psychologist
Codependency

Rose Snyder, EdM, PsyD, LLC

Psychologist, PsyD
Many of my clients find themselves in codependent relationships as a result of their lifelong attachment styles. Together we will look at these patterns and I will support you in gently shifting these patterns away from codependence towards effective interdependence. It is not about learning to be totally self-reliant either—it is more about having a secure attachment within yourself as a primary source of stability, and then reaching out for connection with others from a whole/healthy place. We are social creatures and we need one another, but we feel better when we can relate with others from a place of sturdiness as much as possible too. From that place, we can ask for our needs to be met and connection to be fulfilled, knowing deeply that we have the right to ask and deserve to be attuned to and met by those closest to us. And we can also learn to self-soothe in the moments that that is not available or possible with our loved ones.  
23 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR
Vancouver, British Columbia therapist: Candace Plattor, drug and alcohol counselor
Codependency

Candace Plattor

Drug and Alcohol Counselor, M.A. in Counselling Psychology from Adler University
When we keep trying to put other people's needs ahead of our own, we lose ourselves in terms of our self-care and our self-respect. Often families do this with the addicts they love - and it creates a lose-lose situation for everyone concerned,  
35 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR (Online Only)
Valley Village, California therapist: Layla Ashley Psychotherapy, marriage and family therapist
Codependency

Layla Ashley Psychotherapy

Marriage and Family Therapist, LMFT
Codependent patterns often develop from learning to prioritize others’ needs while losing connection with your own. Therapy can help you reclaim healthy boundaries, self-trust, and more balanced relationships.  
23 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR
Portland, Oregon therapist: Lesley Lacny, licensed professional counselor
Codependency

Lesley Lacny

Licensed Professional Counselor, M.A, Psych.R, C.Psych, LPC
Codependency can show up as over-focusing on others’ needs, difficulty setting boundaries, people-pleasing, or feeling responsible for other people’s emotions and choices. It often leads to exhaustion, resentment, and a loss of connection to your own needs and identity. I offer therapy for codependency to help you understand the deeper emotional patterns that keep you stuck in these dynamics. Together, we’ll explore how these patterns developed, how they show up in your relationships, and what’s happening beneath the urge to over-give or over-function. The work focuses on building healthier boundaries, strengthening self-trust, and developing a more balanced and grounded sense of self in relationships.  
20 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR (Online Only)
Manhattan, New York therapist: Salvadore Coaching LLC, life coach
Codependency

Salvadore Coaching LLC

Life Coach, Holistic Life Coach, Certified Breathwork Instructor, Certified Hypnotist
Codependency often begins as care, loyalty, or sensitivity—but over time it can become self-abandonment. And when you abandon yourself, you don’t actually protect the relationship—you weaken it. Oftentimes, many people find themselves over-functioning, people-pleasing, managing another’s emotions, or staying in relationships that require them to shrink their needs in order to keep connection. The result is often a combination of anxiety, resentment, exhaustion, and a loss of clarity about what they actually want. In our work together, we aim to de-escalate these patterns and explore what they’ve been protecting: perhaps a fear of conflict, abandonment, guilt, or the belief that love must be earned through sacrifice. We build practical skills for boundaries, self-trust, and direct communication, so you can stay connected without losing yourself. The goal is not to become “less caring,” but to create relationships that include you—relationships where care and reciprocity can coexist.  
14 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR
New York City, New York therapist: Dr. Stéphanie Gamache, PhD, hypnotherapist
Codependency

Dr. Stéphanie Gamache, PhD

Hypnotherapist, PhD
Codependency often reflects early relational patterns in which emotional needs, boundaries, and self-worth became entangled with the needs of others. My work integrates psychoanalytic exploration and somatic awareness to understand how these patterns continue to shape adult relationships. Together, we work toward greater emotional autonomy, clarity, and the capacity to remain connected to oneself while being close to others.  
7 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR (Online Only)
Wilmington, North Carolina therapist: Kelli Hall, licensed clinical social worker
Codependency

Kelli Hall

Licensed Clinical Social Worker, LCSW
I work with individuals who find themselves over-functioning or over-accommodating in relationships. This often includes difficulty saying no, feeling responsible for others, or prioritizing others’ needs over your own. Together, we focus on developing boundaries, clarifying needs, and building more balanced, authentic relationships.  
13 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR (Online Only)
Draper, Utah therapist: Sandy Shores Counseling, marriage and family therapist
Codependency

Sandy Shores Counseling

Marriage and Family Therapist, LMFT, ACMHC, CSW, LCSW
We help individuals experiencing codependent patterns develop healthier boundaries, self-trust, and emotional independence. Therapy focuses on increasing self-awareness, strengthening identity, and creating more balanced relationships.  
14 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR
Walnut Creek, California therapist: Victoria Miller, licensed clinical social worker
Codependency

Victoria Miller

Licensed Clinical Social Worker, LCSW
You're trying to make a loved one's life better but nothing seems to change. You're trying to have lasting friendships and relationships but things always seem off balance and a struggle. Without healthy boundaries eventually these relationships can go off the rails leaving you devastated and wondering "what did I do wrong?" I will help you understand how codependent patterns develop and how these patterns have transferred to other relationships. I will help you explore what it means to have healthy boundaries and help your relationships grow stronger, be more balanced, eventually helping you to feel less anxiety and stress.  
20 Years Experience
Online in Damascus, OR

Codependency therapists in Damascus, Oregon Statistics

Codependency therapists in Damascus, Oregon average 16 years of experience and charge around $193 per session. 100% offer online sessions. The most commonly treated issues are Codependency (100%), Anxiety or Fears (87%), and Depression (79%).

Average years in practice

16 Years Experience

Average cost per session

$193

Gender ID

62% Female
27% Male
9% Gender Fluid
2% Non-Binary

Session Type

54% Online Only
46% In Person and Online

Top Specialties

100% Codependency
87% Anxiety or Fears
79% Depression
74% Self Esteem
69% Stress
69% Trauma and PTSD
64% Loss or Grief

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