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Highly Sensitive Person therapists in Flowing Wells, AZ

We are proud to feature top rated Highly Sensitive Person therapists in Flowing Wells. We encourage you to review each profile to find your best match.
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Denver, Colorado therapist: Dr. Elizabeth Coldren, psychologist
Highly Sensitive Person

Dr. Elizabeth Coldren

Psychologist, PSYD, PSYPACT
I work with people who feel and notice a lot. You might be deeply affected by others’ moods, small changes in tone, or the energy of a room. Loud noises, bright lights, busy schedules, or conflict may feel more overwhelming to you than to those around you. Many highly sensitive people grow up feeling “too much” or “too sensitive.” As adults, this can look like needing more time to recover from social interactions or workdays; feeling easily overstimulated, wired, or shut down; taking on others’ feelings and struggling to find your own center; and being very conscientious, but also prone to burnout or self‑criticism. Highly sensitive children and teens are often described as intense, dramatic, shy, or “overreactive.” They may have big feelings, strong empathy, vivid inner worlds, or a very thoughtful, observant way of moving through life. In environments that do not understand them, they can become anxious, withdrawn, perfectionistic, or reactive. In our work together, we explore how your sensitivity shows up in your nervous system, relationships, and daily life. We look at what overwhelms you and what nourishes you so that sensitivity can become less of a constant struggle and more of a source of information, depth, and connection. When I work with children and teens, I also support parents in understanding their child’s sensitivity and responding in ways that feel more workable for everyone. Working with highly sensitive people is central to my practice, and I understand how much strength it takes to move through the world this way.  
26 Years Experience
Online in Flowing Wells, AZ
Gallatin, Tennessee therapist: Jason Holland, psychologist
Highly Sensitive Person

Jason Holland

Psychologist, Ph.D.
If you are highly sensitive, you may feel things deeply and get overwhelmed more easily by conflict, noise, or constant demands. We can treat sensitivity as a temperament, not a flaw, and work on practical ways to manage overstimulation. This often includes boundaries, nervous system regulation, and improving how you navigate relationships and stress so you can feel steadier without having to shut down who you are.  
25 Years Experience
Online in Flowing Wells, AZ
Gilbert, Arizona therapist: Restored Counseling & Wellness Center, PLLC, marriage and family therapist
Highly Sensitive Person

Restored Counseling & Wellness Center, PLLC

Marriage and Family Therapist, LMFT, LPC, NMD
Being a highly sensitive person is a genuine neurological trait — and one that comes with profound gifts alongside real challenges. At Restored, we deeply value the sensitivity our clients bring into the room and offer therapy that honors the depth at which HSPs process emotion, relationship, and the world around them. Our work helps highly sensitive individuals build resilience, establish healthy boundaries, and embrace who they are without apology.  
14 Years Experience
Online in Flowing Wells, AZ
Santa Clara, California therapist: Suzanna Freerksen, psychiatrist
Highly Sensitive Person

Suzanna Freerksen

Psychiatrist, MD
I know the struggle for HSP. A significant portion of the folks I currently work with identify as HSP or have sensory sensitivity issues. I try to make my office as welcoming and comfortable for HSPs (no strong smells or fluorescent lights, for example), and am open to making accommodations if necessary in our work. I also use the Job Accommodation Network to assist in any accommodations needed for school, university, or work.  
12 Years Experience
Online in Flowing Wells, AZ
Chandler, Arizona therapist: Jocelyn Jarman, counselor/therapist
Highly Sensitive Person

Jocelyn Jarman

Counselor/Therapist, LMSW
If you've spent your life being told you're too sensitive, too emotional, too intense, or that you just need to toughen up — this is a space where that story gets rewritten. Being a Highly Sensitive Person (HSP) is not a weakness, a disorder, or something to be managed away. It is a genuine neurological trait, present in roughly 15 to 20 percent of the population, that means your nervous system processes the world more deeply than most — taking in more, feeling more, and noticing details that others simply walk past. That depth is also the source of some of your greatest gifts: your empathy, your creativity, your conscientiousness, your ability to connect. But without the right support and understanding, sensitivity can also leave you chronically overwhelmed, emotionally exhausted, prone to anxiety, and quietly convinced that something is fundamentally wrong with you. At Deserts Bloom Therapy, working with highly sensitive individuals is something Jocelyn approaches with both professional knowledge and genuine appreciation for the HSP experience. Together, the work focuses on helping you understand your nervous system, establish boundaries that actually protect your energy, process the emotional backlog that sensitivity can accumulate over a lifetime, and most importantly — learn to see your sensitivity not as a burden to manage, but as a profound and beautiful part of who you are. You were never too much. You were simply in the wrong spaces. This one was made for you.  
1 Years Experience
Online in Flowing Wells, AZ

Highly Sensitive Person therapists in Flowing Wells, Arizona Statistics

Highly Sensitive Person therapists in Flowing Wells, Arizona average 19 years of experience and charge around $208 per session. 100% offer online sessions. The top treatment approaches are Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) (61%), Somatic Therapy (45%), and Existential / Humanistic Therapy (42%).

Average years in practice

19 Years Experience

Average cost per session

$208

Accept insurance

42%

Offer sliding scale

39%

Gender ID

64% Female
29% Male
5% Non-Binary
2% Gender Fluid

Session Type

55% In Person and Online
45% Online Only

Top Treatment Approaches

61% Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
45% Somatic Therapy
42% Existential / Humanistic Therapy
39% Acceptance & Commitment Therapy (ACT)
39% Person-Centered Therapy (Rogerian)
39% Psychodynamic Therapy
33% Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT)

Ages Served

100% Adult
70% Young Adult
58% Senior
52% Teen
24% Children

Client Focus

55% Women
45% LGBTQ+
30% Persons with Disabilities
27% Men
24% Buddhist