Loss or Grief therapists in Cortez, Colorado CO
Richard Scott, Ph.D.
Psychologist, Ph.D.
Losing someone you love and care about can impact every facet of your life. Grief and loss can sometimes be complex and confusing. One day you may feel good and the next day you may be unable to manage your emotions. Every person experiences grief differently based on their lived experiences and a number of factors. If you're struggling with a loss, therapy can be a very helpful place to talk about your emotions and find ways to cope effectively with complicated emotions. Please give therapy a chance to help you recover from a loss and heal in a way that will be best for your mental health and well-being.
18 Years Experience
Kelli Tahaney
Psychologist, Licensed Clinical Psychologist, Ph.D.
Grief and loss is a universal human experience, one that often plays a role in depression, anxiety, and complex trauma reactions. I help clients process loss and learn to understand grief and loss as emotions that are natural, at times overwhelming, and often as a sign that we experienced love and meaning.
3 Years Experience
Dr. Dina H. Harth
Psychologist, Ph.D.
I help individuals and couples with any forms of loss, including: deaths of loved ones, relationship losses, infertility or pregnancy loss, life events & transitions, medical diagnoses or terminal illness, job loss or changes, etc. Whether it is sudden or anticipated, recent or ones that occurred years ago, we can work together to help you cope with, and grieve such significant losses.
29 Years Experience
Dr. Brian M. Berman
Psychologist, Psy.D.
I specialize in helping clients work through unprocessed grief and loss by utilizing compassion-based treatments and emotion focused therapy (EFT).
20 Years Experience
Philip Cooke
Psychologist, PhD
The death of a loved one is hardly ever simple - it stirs strong, complicated, and upsetting feelings within us. This is particularly true when we lose someone close to us - a partner, parent, child - or someone with whom we had a complicated relationship. I believe the key to successful grieving is allowing ourselves to feel, identify, and make sense of all our feelings around the loss, especially feelings we’re reluctant to accept.
Having worked previously as a palliative care psychologist within a hospital setting, I have accompanied many families and caregivers before, during, and after their loved one’s death. I am familiar with helping others navigate the often uncomfortable psychic terrain of grief. I work well with those looking to explore their grief and find relief through expressing their feelings and making meaning of their loved one’s death.
10 Years Experience