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Eating Disorders therapists in Beverly Cove, MA

We are proud to feature top rated Eating Disorders therapists in Beverly Cove, MA. We encourage you to review each profile to find your best match.
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Chicago, Illinois therapist: Resilient Mind Integrative Therapy, PLLC, psychologist
Eating Disorders

Resilient Mind Integrative Therapy, PLLC

Psychologist, Psy.D.
Our relationship with food and our bodies is deeply personal—and can often feel confusing, painful, or distressing. You may find that thoughts about eating, weight, or body image take up much of your energy, or that your sense of worth feels tied to how you eat or how you look. Patterns such as dieting, restricting, bingeing, purging, emotional eating, rigid food rules, or over-exercising can lead to feelings of shame, anxiety, and loss of control. It doesn’t have to stay this way. Recovery is possible. Therapy offers a safe, non-judgmental space to explore these struggles and your relationship with yourself. Because healing looks different for everyone, we’ll set goals that honor your individual needs and pace. Together, we’ll work to reduce shame, uncover the deeper roots of these patterns, build self-acceptance, and cultivate a more peaceful, confident, and balanced connection with both food and body.  
17 Years Experience
Beverly Cove, Massachusetts (Online Only)
Boston, Massachusetts therapist: Leslie Bowman, Holistic Psychotherapist, counselor/therapist
Eating Disorders

Leslie Bowman, Holistic Psychotherapist

Counselor/Therapist, MA, LPC, Over 19 years of successful experience
Eating disorders are very common and also debilitating. It controls and takes over your life. I have helped hundreds of clients with this issue and it starts with the root cause in understanding how and why this began in the first place. Reach out for a free consultation to learn more about how my Holistic Approach can help you.  
19 Years Experience
Near Beverly Cove, MA
Beverly Cove, Massachusetts
Boston, Massachusetts therapist: Evolve Psychotherapy, psychologist
Eating Disorders

Evolve Psychotherapy

Psychologist, PsyD
Eating disorders are complex, neurobiological conditions. Often times what leads to the development of an eating disorder is not what maintains it. The eating disorder becomes a coping mechanism that serves psychological functions. Treatment consists of understanding the function(s), identifying unmet needs, engaging in behavioral change, effectively managing emotions, and addressing unhelpful thoughts.  
18 Years Experience
Beverly Cove, Massachusetts (Online Only)
Belmont, Massachusetts therapist: Mosaic Behavioral Health, licensed clinical social worker
Eating Disorders

Mosaic Behavioral Health

Licensed Clinical Social Worker
Several of our therapists have expertise in the eating disorder realm. We also have an eating disorder group starting in November.  
13 Years Experience
Near Beverly Cove, MA
Beverly Cove, Massachusetts
Norfolk, Massachusetts therapist: Ellen S Leventhal, marriage and family therapist
Eating Disorders

Ellen S Leventhal

Marriage and Family Therapist, MEd, MA, LMFT
Eating disorders don’t discriminate; it doesn’t matter if you’re a girl or boy, young or old, black or white. Instead of hating our bodies we should learn to celebrate every body. Anorexia nervosa is characterized by weight loss, an intense fear of weight gain, food restriction, inappropriate eating habits, and obsessing over a thin figure. People suffering have the inability to see what their body truly looks like because they have a distorted body image. As the person becomes more emaciated, their image of themselves becomes more distorted. Bulimia nervosa is episodes of binging and purging. A person will binge by consuming a large amount of calories in a restricted period of time almost always carried out in secret. The person is also afraid of weight gain, so they undo the binge by purging. Most common is self-induced vomiting, meanwhile others are overdosing on laxatives and excessive exercise. Binge eating is an eating disorder in which a person consumes an abnormally large amount of food in a short period of time. During the binge, the person also feels a loss of control and is not able to stop eating. In this instance, they don’t undo the binge by purging. Afterwards, they typically feel disgusted, depressed, and guilty. Pica is persistently eating nonfood items, such as soap, cloth, talcum powder or dirt, over a period of at least a month. Eating these nonfood items can result in medical complications such as poisoning, intestinal problems or infections. Rumination disorder is repeatedly and persistently regurgitating food after eating, but it’s not due to a medical condition or another eating disorder such as anorexia, bulimia, or binge-eating disorder. Food is brought back up into the mouth without nausea or gagging. Sometimes regurgitated food is rechewed and reswallowed or spit out.  
39 Years Experience
Beverly Cove, Massachusetts