Psychotherapy Services for Adults & Adolescents

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SERVICES

QUESTIONS ABOUT THERAPY

QUESTIONS ABOUT THERAPISTS

COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS

SERVICES

WE PROVIDE INDIVIDUAL PSYCHOTHERAPY TO ADULTS AND ADOLESCENTS FOR:

•    Depression
•    Manic Depression (i.e., Bipolar disorder)
•    Anxiety
•    Anger & behavioral problems
•    Grief, Death & Dying
•    Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity (ADHD)
•    Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders (PTSD)
•    Coming Out— Sexuality, Sexual Identity and Sexual Orientation issues.
•    Substance dependence or abuse
•    Personality Disorders (e.g., Borderline, Narcissistic, etc.)
•   Narcissistic Fallout / AKA Narcissistic Victim Syndrome (i.e., Navigating the aftermath of an abusive relationship with an antisocial, narcissistic, borderline or histrionic personality disordered partner or parent.)

** Referrals to appropriate help and support services are gladly provided to the public free of charge. The referrals and resources by topic sections on this website may also help you to locate needed resources.

PROFESSIONAL GROWTH

  • Career questioning     

  • Work/Life Balance: Purpose, Values, Goals

  • Difficulties or Dissatisfaction with work or school

RELATIONSHIP DIFFICULTIES

  • Family of origin issues

  • Problems with current family functioning

  • Problems in romantic relationships

  • Struggling with a relationship break-up, separation, or divorce

  • Loneliness / Social skills building

  • Therapy is a process that helps you make changes in your life by helping you to pay careful attention to your thinking, feeling, daily habits, and ways of getting along with others. Most appointments are scheduled in advance, and a usual clinical appointment is 50 minutes in length. Some appointments can be pre-arranged for shorter or longer times.


  • "... the bottom line is that patients want to and need to be listened to. They want a therapist who can listen to them in depth. …. That is what psychoanalysis is. That is what we offer:

    We listen to people in depth, over an extended period of time and with great intensity. We listen to what they say and to what they don’t say; to what they say in words and to what they say through their bodies and enactments. And we listen to them by listening to ourselves, to our minds, our reveries, and our own bodily reactions. We listen to their life stories and to the story that they live with us in the room; their past, their present, and future. We listen to what they already know or can see about themselves, and we listen to what they can’t see in themselves. We listen to ourselves listening. Psychoanalysis is a depth psychology, which means that we listen in depth and teach our students to listen.

    Whatever managed care says, and whatever drugs are prescribed, and whatever the research findings, people still want to be listened to in depth and always will. That’s why there will always be patients who want and need an analytic approach and why there will always be therapists who need to learn it."

    Lewis Aron, Psychoanalytic Perspectives,
    interview by Jeremy Safran

    Learn more about psychoanalytic psychotherapy here.

  • In the long run, the goals of therapy are for you to develop more awareness of your feelings, make the most of your strengths and abilities, and to gain insight about yourself that can lead you to change behavior that is not working for you. At the same time, therapy may also be understood as ultimately striving to promote an immediate felt sense of radical self-acceptance.

  • Ultimately the responsibility for change rests with you. The therapist will not provide you with a psychological blueprint that will tell you who you are. The therapist’s role, rather, is to provide an environment and a relationship where such questions can be addressed. Similarly, therapists will not often give advice, but rather, help you to understand the conflicts within you that make it difficult for you to make your own decisions. In therapy try to be as honest as you can with yourself and your therapist, so that both of you can genuinely get to know you and your concerns. With your therapist’s help, you will work towards thinking differently about yourself and your relationship to the world, decide on a plan for growth and change, and then practice the new behaviors both in counseling and outside counseling. For those who find it difficult to decide what to talk about: as a rule of thumb, to the degree to which you find comfortable, you should strive to talk about whatever produces the most emotion.

  • On the one hand, therapy is an experience where you can expect to feel relieved that you are not alone with your problems. On the other hand, therapy does require work, so it does not always immediately provide a sense of relief. Sometimes you might even feel worse before you feel better. You may confront feelings, thoughts, memories or personal insights that are uncomfortable, sometimes even painful. And these experiences may result in you wanting to make changes in your beliefs, values, habits or behaviors that can be scary, and sometimes disruptive to the relationships you already have. 

    The process is not always easy, and no one can guarantee a specific outcome. Many people who do take these risks, however, find that therapy results in their gaining a better understanding of themselves and are able to implement positive change in their lives. How things go in therapy depends on you, whether you and the therapist are a good match for working together, and whether psychotherapy is the best way to help with your concerns.

  • As psychotherapists, we cannot prescribe medication. If at any point you or your therapist feel that medications might be helpful, we will recommend that you make an appointment for an evaluation with a psychiatrist (an M.D. who has completed a residency in psychiatry). On this website you can also access a list I've compiled of recommended psychiatrists. With your written permission, we can also discuss your case with the psychiatrist so that they may get a more complete picture of your concerns than might be possible for you to relay to the psychiatrist in the intake session. Your family physician can also prescribe medications, although this would not be their specialty.

    We do want to explain that although medication in most cases does not eliminate the root causes of one’s distress, it can sometimes play a very critical role as an adjunct to psychotherapy. In some situations medication can make one’s day-to-day suffering more manageable on a short-term basis so that the difficult work in therapy of analyzing and making changes in one’s life becomes more feasible. In other cases, a combination of medication and psychotherapy is the research-determined best-practice treatment for a given problem over a longer period of time. 

    We do want to reassure those people who are reluctant to take any kind of medication that we do not recommend medications to all of our clients, and that the final choice as to whether or not you will take medication is always yours.

  • Every client is different and comes to psychotherapy with a different set of goals and obstacles to those goals. The duration and frequency of therapy, therefore, varies from client to client. Deciding when therapy is complete is meant to be a mutual decision, and we will discuss how to know when therapy is nearing completion. Very broadly speaking, it can be helpful to consider psychotherapy as being either "short term" or “long term". For more information, please see below.

  • Short-term therapy is typically indicated for clients who desire support during a recent crisis or who are adjusting to a phase of life change (e.g., retiring, changing jobs, beginning a marriage or coping with a separation, etc). Clients with such time-bounded concerns may feel ready to discontinue therapy within six weeks to a few months. Short-term therapy may also be useful for clients who enter therapy with a specific goal in mind, such as addressing a specific phobia, controlling anxiety symptoms (e.g., panic attacks), or developing specific skills (e.g., parenting, social skills, etc). Again, such clients may find that they meet their goals relatively quickly and are ready to stop when they do. Others opt to continue therapy in pursuit of another goal. A good number of individuals remain in therapy as long as they are seeing ongoing progress as measured by feeling better, achieving goals, gaining insight into themselves, resolving issues, etc.

  • Long-term therapy tends to be less structured in approach than short-term therapy. Specific goals and behaviors may be addressed along the way, but the focus is on working-through more complex concerns such as a pervasive sense of emptiness in one's life, an enduring discontent with oneself, or a persistent frustration with one’s relationships with others. In long-term therapy a client often discovers a few signature themes with which they have struggled repeatedly in various guises throughout their life. In therapy the therapist and client work together to develop a recognition of these patterns, and to come to understand what internal conflicts and fears have often got in the way of breaking these habits. Together we create a safe environment within which one may then carefully dismantle the defenses one has developed to protect oneself from the challenges of changing. Over time, talking about these patterns in therapy slowly replaces the unconscious need to repeatedly act them out outside of therapy.

  • Change makes people anxious, even if the change will lead to a better life. That’s part of being human. We tend to repeat familiar behaviors in general, and familiar behaviors that cause discomfort are no different. It is difficult to avoid gravitating towards habits once they are ingrained. The process of interrupting the repetition of an old, self-defeating script, therefore, tends to be incremental.

    We ought to have some sympathy for ourselves, though, because these repeated behaviors, more than likely, were not always just "symptoms." When we were children, they probably worked--however imperfectly--to protect us against some real or perceived fears or threats. After all, if these behaviors had never worked at all, if there had never been any "pay-off" to them, then we would not have learned that it was helpful to keep returning to them. It would have been easy to cast them aside. We repeat them because we learned at an early age that they were helpful in some way. As adults, however, our challenges become more complicated, and we find that the "solutions" we found as children are no longer adequate. There is a saying in psychoanalytic circles that captures this thought: "What saves you as a child, kills you as an adult."

    Also, there is a wonderfully simple poem by Portia Nelson that illustrates some of the incremental stages one may go through in therapy as you work towards making positive changes in your life. It is called “Autobiography in Five Short Chapters."

  • Having negative feelings towards your therapist is actually expected to occur at some point during long-term therapy. If you do begin to feel this way toward your therapist, it is important that you openly discuss these feelings with the therapist so that they become “grist for the mill” as opposed to becoming a destructive force that you feel as though you need to grapple with on your own. It is part of the “job description” of being a therapist to help you to experience and to examine your feelings. As such, please understand that it is neither rude nor unfair for you to express these feelings in therapy.  

    There are, in fact, at least two reasons that clients should expect to have negative feelings towards their therapist at some point:

    ( 1 ) First, as was discussed above in "Why is change so hard?" all of us on some level desire the security of what we already know. In therapy, as clients get closer to implementing the changes they are seeking to make, this security is threatened. As a result, it is not uncommon for a dedicated client to go through a period when they find themselves feeling more confused or anxious than when they began. This sometimes comes in the form of feeling angry with, resentful toward, or distrustful of the therapist for being the catalyst for these threatening changes. 

    These moments can be challenging, but ironically, this period is oftentimes an encouraging sign. It often marks the point in therapy where a client has developed the courage to confront and grapple with the issues they have been systematically avoiding in their life up until that point.

    ( 2 ) Second, as children we internalize early, formative relationships and experiences such that they often profoundly affect the nature and expectations of future relationships. These old scripts can play out repeatedly in a client’s life without their understanding why—and they do so in therapy as well. Clients will sometimes experience the therapist as a “stand-in” for a critical relationship in a drama that needs to be worked through. 

    For example, an individual with a stern and disapproving father might interpret a therapist’s interest in hearing more about a story as evidence that they had failed to say enough, and was therefore a “bad client.” Similarly, a client with a mother who had shown little interest in them as a child, might interpret a therapist scheduling a week’s vacation as evidence that they were being dismissed as unimportant to the therapist. 

    In therapy—unlike in the repetitions in everyday life—clients have the opportunity to replay a manageable portion of these old scripts in a secure environment where they can be controlled and understood. In reconstructing these old narratives, the therapist can help the client to become more aware of the distortions in their thinking that allow a contemporary experience to look like an old one. And once the contemporary experience is no longer seen as something from their past, the client becomes free to respond to it in a new, less rigid way. 

    In other words, psychotherapy can help one to see the ways in which one may be confusing the present for the past. Through practice one may then learn to identify these mis-recognitions in the moment they are happening. Only then is it possible to react to the present with more freedom and flexibility than one has been able to in the past — when a long-established, predetermined script was the only available response.

  • In 1994 Consumer Reports surveyed nearly 3,000 individuals who had been in therapy during the previous 3 years. Over 90% reported significant long-term improvement. Moreover, those individuals who reported the most discomfort and upset at the beginning of treatment reported the most improvement from psychotherapy. This study found that therapy that lasted more than six months was significantly more effective than shorter-term therapies. Some have argued that this is the best meta-study ever conducted to answer the question of whether psychotherapy is efficacious. It should be highlighted that a 90% improvement rate across many different diagnoses is a better statistical outcome than most medical treatments, and no one asks, “do doctors cure illnesses?” 

    Statistics aside, well over one hundred years of experiential evidence has been gathered regarding the efficacy of psychotherapy. After all, deductive experimentation where variables are systematically controlled is not the only way to do science. Induction from observation of patterns in case studies is another. Countless therapists have documented case after case in which mental and emotional distresses were successfully overcome, stubborn clinical issues resolved and the general quality of life vastly improved. 

    That said, although the majority of therapy clients report significant benefits from treatment, therapy is not for everyone. In the spirit of scientific investigation, the only way to genuinely evaluate the effectiveness of therapy may simply be to keep an open mind, try a few sessions and see for yourself.

  • Clients who dedicate themselves to therapy oftentimes find that their old, destructive patterns of thinking, feeling and behaving will gradually have less power over their lives. This is not to say that one should expect to “rid oneself” of a grief, “recover” a loss, or totally eliminate any trace of the wounds from one's previous experience. Rather, one should expect that, just as when recovering from surgery, scars remain where the wounds had been, but the pain is diminished, and the scars do become less noticeable over time.

    Ultimately, therapy is successful to the extent that you experience these effects:

    Your responses to what is familiar become less rigid,
    Your vulnerabilities less threatening,
    Your struggles less isolating,
    Your challenges more tolerable,
    Your sense of belonging, of home, more secure,
    Your resiliency strengthened,
    Your insight more keen,
    Your sphere of influence expanded,
    Your imagination enlivened,
    Your options more varied,
    And your life more vital.

QUESTIONS ABOUT THERAPY

QUESTIONS ABOUT THERAPISTS

  • Yes. Licensed psychotherapists may be psychologists (LP), counselors (LPC/LPCC), clinical social workers (LICSW), or marriage and family therapists (LMFT). Psychoanalysts are specialists working under one of the above licenses. Some psychotherapists are psychiatrists (MD), psychiatric nurses (APRN/ARNP/CNP/PMHNP), or physician assistants (PA-C) and they are able to prescribe medications.

    If curious about these distinctions, more detailed information is included in this infographic.

  • Psychotherapy is such a vast field that I think it is oftentimes difficult to find good information about the basic meaning of the various terms related to it. Many people find themselves overwhelmed by the multitude of academic degrees, professional licenses and philosophical approaches associated with the practice of psychotherapy. But without an initial framework to address the topic, it can be challenging to determine what questions they may even want to ask. The following, then, is a very brief overview to help address that dilemma.

  • MD: Psychiatrists are medical doctors who have completed a residency in psychiatry, and therefore can prescribe medicine. They are usually seen in conjunction with a regular psychotherapist because most psychiatrists these days only offer 15-minute sessions for medication management, rather than 50-minute sessions of psychotherapy. (Psychiatric Nurses and Physician Assistants may also be certified to prescribe medicine.)

    PhD: A doctorate degree generally attained at public universities and which is oftentimes more oriented towards careers in research and academia than the PsyD.

    PsyD: A doctorate degree generally attained at private universities and which is more oriented towards practice than the PhD. The degree was developed in the late 1960s to address the need for practitioners. In the last few decades, the PsyD has become increasingly popular.

    MS, MA, MSW: Master degrees are earned in generally two to four years as opposed to the four to six years required for most doctorates. Masters degrees are oriented almost entirely towards the theory and practice of psychotherapy; there is less emphasis on research, statistics and data gathering; and there is less training in proprietary assessment testing instruments. 

  • Acceptance Commitment Therapy (ACT)
    Accelerated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy (AEDP)
    Adlerian
    Choice Theory / Reality Therapy
    Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT) 
    Dialectical-Behavioral Therapy (DBT)
    Existential Therapy
    Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)
    Family Systems Therapy
    Feminist Therapy
    Gestalt Therapy
    Humanist (Rogerian)
    Internal Family Systems (IFS)
    Jungian Analytical Psychology
    Narrative Therapy
    Psycho-Education
    Psychodynamic (Neo-Freudian) 
    Psychoanalytically-Oriented Psychotherapy (e.g., Classical, Ego-Psychology, Self-Psychology, Interpersonal, Object-Relations, Relational, Lacanian) 
    Psychoanalysis (Analyst certificate) 
    Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy (REBT)
    Somatic Experiencing
    Systems Theory

    Note About Specialities: It is important to understand that any psychotherapist can work within any of the theoretical models listed above or within any one of many dozens of other common approaches. There is no way to tell from an academic degree or professional license which modality a psychotherapist is likely to use. Most therapists graduate as “generalists” and begin to specialize through their selection of which post-graduate Continuing Education Workshops to attend. 

    Moreover, most therapists specialize in at least a couple of different modalities, and use whichever model they feel works best with the needs and temperament of each given client. The only way to know what kind of therapy a therapist offers is to ask. That said, there are some general trends (see below).

  • PSYCHOLOGISTS & COUNSELORS

    The difference is primarily historical. Psychology began as an offshoot of medicine, and was oriented towards the remedy of “abnormal psychology.” In contrast, counseling began as an offshoot of education, and evolved from studying what contributes to “healthy psychology.” The historical distinctions between psychology and counseling are collapsing in many training programs today. It is not uncommon now, in fact, to see programs in “Counseling Psychology.” 


    COUNSELORS

    Counselorsare often trained in Rogerian/Humanist therapy as their primary modality, which places an emphasis on human relationships, and to acquiring an awareness of one’s emotional and physical bearing.

    CLINICAL SOCIAL WORKERS

    Clinical social workersare oftentimes trained in “systems theory” which places an emphasis on how members of a group function together to impact the functionality of the whole. Power dynamics and cultural/environmental factors that impact mental health are carefully considered—which may include considerations of race, class, sex, gender, and sexual orientation.


    MARRIAGE & FAMILY THERAPISTS

    Marriage & family therapists specialize in family group work, but can see individuals. When seeing individuals they are likely to focus on family dynamics.


    PSYCHOANALYSTS

    Psychoanalysts are unique among psychotherapists in that the title itself signifies that they practice a specific modality: psychoanalysis. They are specialists who, after attaining one of the above academic degrees and licenses, undergo years of additional post-graduate training in psychoanalytic psychotherapy. The psychoanalytic approach is explicitly oriented towards “depth-work” achieved through long-term psychotherapy with multiple sessions per week. 

  • The good news is that in most cases a client does not need to understand the distinctions detailed above in “Are there different types of psychotherapists?” to pick a therapist that is right for them, or for their therapy to be successful. The most important criterion for a successful outcome in therapy, studies have shown, is the degree to which a client feels comfortable with their therapist. Part of this rapport is determined by whether a practitioner’s theoretical orientation and worldview is compatible with the client’s own outlook. However, clients do not necessarily need to articulate what this worldview is to be able to identify whether the therapist shares it. Rather, this knowledge usually comes from feeling as though they resonate with what is being said in the room. 

  • We would suggest that you ask around for referrals from people you trust. If you can't ask a friend for referrals, call various therapists and ask them who to talk to given your interests. The insurance company’s Providers List may list specialty areas (e.g., CBT, REBT, existential, feminist, etc.), and it's likely that the insurance agent is prohibited from providing recommendations beyond that.

    I'd also like to suggest that you consider meeting for one session with perhaps three different therapists before making a decision about who to stay with. I'm oftentimes surprised by the fact that many people spend more time shopping for a pair of shoes than for the therapist they are trusting to help them sort through some of their most painful or difficult life experiences. At first glance, it might feel like a "waste" to spend money on relationships you don't intend to continue. However, you will learn a lot about yourself and how you want to be helped from these initial meetings. You will also begin to get a feel for how different therapies emphasize different aspects of the human experience, and how different therapists approach their practice. If nothing else, it will make you feel more comfortable with the person you eventually do choose to work with. 

    Finally, trust your instincts. If something doesn't feel right, do not doubt yourself. It does not matter if you cannot articulate why you don't feel settled. While it is true that you may need to push yourself to share difficult content in therapy; you should not need to push yourself to feel comfortable in the therapeutic relationship itself.

    Please let me know if you have any other questions, or if we can be of any other help. We look forward to speaking with you.

COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS

  • The value of psychotherapy to people who are suffering from mental illnesses or who are experiencing acute distress cannot be overestimated. However, many individuals with non-clinical, fairly subtle issues (e.g., a vague sense that one's life is unfulfilling, or a feeling of dissatisfaction with one's work or personal relationships) also find that psychotherapy helps them to uncover and unravel persistent inner conflicts that have been limiting them in their lives. 

    In reality, there are few individuals who could not benefit from a better understanding of the intricate workings of their own mind and personality. Many people find that if they work hard in psychotherapy (Click here for more detailed information about the client's role in therapy), they are able to alter old scripts and habits, improve intimate relationships, gain more satisfaction from their work, enhance their quality of life, overcome personal limits, and identify and realize other personal goals. 

  • Therapy is, invariably, a lot of hard work—a process more akin to going to the gym than it is going to the spa. It takes courage to honestly examine oneself and one's life. Anyone who pursues psychotherapy with sincere commitment and a desire to change is likely to discover many unpleasant aspects of his or her personality along the way. Gradually acquiring the strength to directly confront precisely those aspects of ourselves that we have spent a lot of energy avoiding is one of the implicit goals of psychotherapy. The process is difficult, though rewarding. And while psychotherapists do provide support, empathy and understanding, no successful psychotherapy can be said to be "coddling"—as is a common misconception. 

  • Although it is true that psychotherapy sometimes encourages the client to explore early experiences, including formative experiences with one's parents, this process is often misrepresented. Therapy is not about "dredging up" memories from early childhood in order to self-righteously blame one's problems on the things that one's parents did or did not do. Ultimately, one does not move forward with one's life by "parent bashing," indulging in self-pity, and adopting the role of "the victim." 

    At the same time, early experiences do shape adult habits of thinking, feeling and behaving. As children we all learn what to expect from the world, what attitudes to adopt towards it, and what to do in order to feel safe in it. We learn basic strategies for meeting our needs and for soothing ourselves when these needs are not met. As adults we often habitually resort to these old coping strategies long after they are useful. In this sense, we are all "stuck in the past." 

    There is a saying in psychodynamic psychotherapy: "What saves us as children, wounds us in adulthood." Exploring the impact of early patterns in therapy can help us to alter the lingering, unhelpful habitual attitudes and responses that we adopted in childhood. A therapist helps the client recognize, validate and re-examine early feelings without getting lost in them. Therapy is about moving beyond past conflicts and wounds to take personal, adult responsibility for one’s own happiness and daily experience. 

    Ironically, then, whereas therapy’s reputation is that it may force you to engage in an endless rehashing of your childhood experiences, the explicit goal of therapy is just the opposite—to help you to become less subject to the influences of your past. Psychoanalyst Hans Loewald has suggested that psychotherapy can be understood as laying to rest the ghosts of the past so that we can be free to live in the present.

  • Working with a psychotherapist can be compared to working with a physical trainer. Although that trainer can provide an inspirational structure for change, helping the client to identify specific goals and assess bad habits, it is always up to the client to make use of the tools provided. (Click here for more detailed information about the client's role in therapy).

  • Sometimes people are reluctant to begin therapy for fear of losing their independence. The anxiety stems from the mistaken belief that the therapist will somehow take over for the client, making important life decisions for them, telling them how to feel, and so on. However, that is the role of a guru, not a therapist. A therapist does not, and cannot, interact with a client in this way. Once again, the role of the therapist is more that of an expert consultant than it is an authoritative official. 

    Of course, there are times when an individual may rely more heavily on their psychotherapist. It becomes an important function of therapy, sometimes, to examine the ways in which an individual may feel unnecessarily dependent on others, including the therapist. In that case, exploring issues around dependence is in the service of achieving the primary goal of therapy, which is to help the client to develop the courage to function more and more independently and confidently in all aspects of life.