Women's Issues therapists in Clinton, North Carolina NC
Vanessa Roddenberry
Psychologist, Ph.D.
Women are amazing creatures, but we often are asked to hold so much that we struggle with balance and holding space for our own needs. Whether you're struggling with negative self-image and beliefs, fears related to phases of life and transitions, or burnout. I would love to join you in designing your best life. It's possible to thrive in the face of adversity and come out stronger than ever. I specialize in helping women connect with their strengths, build resiliency, overcome difficult adjustments, and make meaningful life changes.
12 Years Experience
Emma Huber, Apricity Bay Therapy
Licensed Clinical Social Worker, LCSW, EMDR
It can be hard being a woman. Whether biologically, identifying as a woman, or presenting as a woman, there are unique and difficult issues that come along. As someone who was socialized as a woman and identifies as one, I understand the social, familial, and internal pressures and stress that can come up. I will work with you to help reduce these stressors and help you heal from any trauma being a woman has directly or indirectly caused.
4 Years Experience
Dr. Desiree S. Howell
Psychologist, Ph.D.
Empowering women, especially highly-sensitive and late-diagnosed neurodivergent women, is my greatest passion. People-pleasing, perfectionism, martyrdom, abuse, neglect, self-doubt, sexual oppression, and discrimination are all too common for most women in our society. It's my honor to help you remember your worth, shed the unhelpful messages/demands from society, and listen to your inner wisdom with trust, confidence, and self-compassion.
15 Years Experience
Therapy Solutions, LLC
Psychologist
All of our therapists work with women facing particular issues regarding their health, mental health, culture, and history as it relates to women's issues.
22 Years Experience
Joy Rabon
Marriage and Family Therapist, MA, LMFT, CCTP, CIMHP
Guilt, shame, work/life imbalance, power-imbalances in relationships/career; fear of the unknown; decision-making anxiety; difficulty trusting own perceptions/reality; being victimized, victim-blamed and slut-shamed; spiritual trauma and purity culture; trust/doubts/jealousy; insecurity; codependency; self-image/concept/body image; mental and physical exhaustion; chronic illnesses often with no discernible diagnosis or successful treatment: sleep disorders, migraines, chronic pain, chronic fatigue, autoimmune, complicated grief, feeling the weight of the world; being an empath/highly sensitive person; are just but a few of the issues that are prevalent among women in therapy today. Sadly, childhood and societal programming; adverse childhood experiences and trauma; modern-day pressure and expectations, and feeling stuck in cycles of toxic relational interactions and patterns, lead to a sense of loneliness, hopelessness, and despair among 21st-century women.
24 Years Experience