Parenting Therapy
Parenting is one of the most rewarding and exhausting roles you’ll ever take on. These days, the pressure on parents can feel relentless—be involved at school, succeed at work, keep your relationship strong, raise well-adjusted kids, and somehow find time to rest. The truth is, no one can do it all perfectly. And you don’t have to. What matters is knowing where to focus, what to let go of, and how to feel proud of your parenting even when things aren’t flawless.
Why Therapy Can Help with Parenting
That’s where therapy can help. We don’t offer quick tips from a parenting book; we offer a space to really understand yourself as a parent. Much of this work begins with your own story—how your parents influenced you, the parts of their approach you want to build on, and the places you want to do things differently. From there, we’ll help you sort through the different “parts” of yourself—parent, partner, individual—so you can bring more balance into the role.
Addressing Real-Life Parenting Challenges
Parenting isn’t just about the past, we’ll also tackle the here-and-now: tantrums, sibling fights, teenagers pulling away, conflicts with your partner over parenting style, and the unique dynamics of step-parenting and blended families. These challenges can’t be solved with generic advice. They require evidence-based tools, relational insight, and guidance from someone who understands the lived reality of parenting. Our therapists bring not only professional expertise, but also the perspective of being parents, step-parents, and family members themselves—the kind of experience you can’t get from a book.
Our Approach to Parenting Therapy
What You’ll Get in Parenting Therapy
Relief from the pressure of “perfect parenting”
Support from therapists with real-life parenting experience
Space to understand your own upbringing and how it shapes you
A clear roadmap and plan for becoming the parent you want to be
Tools for navigating conflict between different parenting styles
Evidence-based strategies for child, teen, and blended family challenges