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Perfectionism therapists in Oakley, CA

We are proud to feature top rated Perfectionism therapists in Oakley. We encourage you to review each profile to find your best match.
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Nashville, Tennessee therapist: ScienceWorks Behavioral Healthcare, psychologist
Perfectionism

ScienceWorks Behavioral Healthcare

Psychologist, PhD, HSP, PSYPACT+California
We help clients address perfectionism and overcontrol, which often co-occur with anxiety, OCD, and ADHD. Treatment focuses on flexibility, self-compassion, and sustainable performance.  
20 Years Experience
Online in Oakley, CA (Online Only)
Lafayette, California therapist: Nes Pinar Psychotherapy, marriage and family therapist
Perfectionism

Nes Pinar Psychotherapy

Marriage and Family Therapist, LMFT
Many people don’t realize that perfectionism isn’t about doing things perfectly—it’s about feeling like anything less than what they had in their minds is unacceptable. This mindset often creates constant self‑criticism, pressure, and a sense that nothing is ever “good enough,” even when you’re working incredibly hard. I help clients notice these patterns with compassion and begin shifting toward a more grounded, accepting way of relating to themselves.  
15 Years Experience
In-Person Near Oakley, CA
Online in Oakley, CA
Oakland, California therapist: The Connection Clinic, marriage and family therapist
Perfectionism

The Connection Clinic

Marriage and Family Therapist
We assist individuals struggling with perfectionism by helping them cultivate self-compassion and realistic expectations. Our goal is to allow for healthier living and greater life satisfaction.  
9 Years Experience
Online in Oakley, CA (Online Only)
Los Angeles, California therapist: Mia Turner, therapist
Perfectionism

Mia Turner

Therapist, MA, RYT, ASDCS, LMFT, NPT-C, CMNCS, CMIP
Perfectionism is often less about striving for excellence and more about seeking safety, belonging, predictability, acceptance, or protection. It can develop in response to trauma, marginalization, giftedness, neurodivergence, family expectations, racism, ableism, cultural pressures, high-achievement environments, or experiences where mistakes felt costly and being "good enough" never quite felt good enough. What is often labeled as perfectionism may also reflect a nervous system that learned to stay vigilant, perform, overprepare, overachieve, self-monitor, mask, or anticipate problems in order to avoid criticism, rejection, disappointment, conflict, shame, or harm. For many people, perfectionism becomes intertwined with identity, self-worth, productivity, competence, and the belief that value must be earned rather than inherently possessed. It may show up as chronic self-criticism, difficulty resting, procrastination, overthinking, people-pleasing, hyper-independence, fear of failure, fear of success, difficulty making decisions, or feeling as though there is always more that should be done. This work explores the protective role perfectionism has played throughout your life while examining the ways it may be impacting relationships, wellbeing, creativity, joy, authenticity, and connection with yourself. Particular attention is given to the influence of family systems, culture, gender, neurodivergence, trauma, and the internalized narratives that shape how you relate to achievement, mistakes, success, failure, worthiness, and belonging. My approach is grounded in the belief that perfectionism is often an adaptive survival strategy rather than a personal flaw. Rather than attempting to simply eliminate perfectionistic tendencies, we become curious about what those parts are protecting, what they fear might happen if they loosened their grip, and what needs may exist beneath the pressure to perform. Using EMDR, somatic therapy, mindfulness, polyvagal-informed practices, parts work, neuropsychotherapy, expressive arts, attachment-focused approaches, and liberation-oriented healing, therapy supports developing a more compassionate relationship with the parts of yourself that learned to equate achievement with safety. Attention is also given to the ways perfectionism lives in the body and nervous system. This may include chronic tension, difficulty slowing down, overactivation, self-monitoring, exhaustion, difficulty experiencing satisfaction, or feeling unable to rest without guilt. Through greater awareness of sensation, emotion, nervous system states, and embodied experience, space is created for increased flexibility, self-trust, self-compassion, and choice. The goal is not to stop caring, striving, creating, achieving, or growing. It is to cultivate a relationship with yourself that is not dependent upon performance, productivity, approval, or getting everything right. Often, the work involves reclaiming authenticity, playfulness, creativity, rest, joy, pace, and the internal permission to be fully human rather than a constant self-improvement project.  
10 Years Experience
Online in Oakley, CA (Online Only)
Portland, Oregon therapist: Dr. Michael Marossy, psychologist
Perfectionism

Dr. Michael Marossy

Psychologist, Ph.D.
Perfectionism often involves far more than simply having high standards. Many individuals struggling with perfectionism experience chronic self-criticism, fear of failure, anxiety, procrastination, emotional burnout, shame, difficulty relaxing, or a persistent feeling that they are never “good enough” regardless of achievement or external success. I help clients better understand the emotional and relational roots of perfectionistic patterns while developing greater self-compassion, psychological flexibility, and a healthier relationship with achievement, performance, and self-worth. Therapy focuses on reducing rigid thinking and chronic pressure while helping clients build more balanced, meaningful, and emotionally sustainable ways of living.  
8 Years Experience
Online in Oakley, CA (Online Only)

Perfectionism therapists in Oakley, California Statistics

Perfectionism therapists in Oakley, California average 14 years of experience and charge around $203 per session. 100% offer online sessions. The top treatment approaches are Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) (82%), Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) (50%), and Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) (45%).

Average years in practice

14 Years Experience

Average cost per session

$203

Accept insurance

47%

Offer sliding scale

39%

Gender ID

69% Female
20% Male
7% Non-Binary
4% Gender Fluid

Session Type

50% In Person and Online
50% Online Only

Top Treatment Approaches

82% Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
50% Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)
45% Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)
45% Acceptance & Commitment Therapy (ACT)
42% Psychodynamic Therapy
42% Somatic Therapy
42% Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT)

Ages Served

97% Adult
76% Young Adult
63% Senior
47% Teen
18% Children

Client Focus

68% Women
58% LGBTQ+
39% Persons with Disabilities
39% Hispanic / Latino
39% Men