Individuals
often enter therapy to gain better insight into their own behaviors and responses to circumstances that occur in their lives.
Couples
often enter therapy in order to gain the clarity, skills, and confidence necessary to negotiate, on an ongoing basis, the many different points of contention unique to their relationship.
Couples
often enter therapy when issues have gone unaddressed for a long time and are then bubbling up.
Treatment Philosophy: One
often enters therapy to relieve emotional suffering that has existed for several years and had painful impact upon one's life.
Not exact matches
I
often tell people «it takes a strong person to
enter therapy.»
When children
enter attachment disorder
therapy, they are
often introduced to an environment where they first and foremost feel safe and cared about.
As a therapist, I recognize that the decision to
enter therapy is
often not an easy choice.
Couples
entering IFIO
therapy often hold the two goals of feeling safe within their relationship and reestablishing intimacy.
Because the person who
enters the
therapy room
often isn't the person
therapy will reveal her to be.
Often, when only one person
enters therapy, the relationship changes for the better and happiness increases for the couple.
When couples
enter therapy,
often both partners will say that they feel stuck or misunderstood.
Before I became a therapist, I read that the best
therapy often takes place when one or both partners have said «I'm Done», prior to
entering the
therapy room.
The decision to
enter into
therapy often takes a lot of time and thought before taking that chance.