Family therapy

Family struggles affect everyone. We help improve communication, resolve conflicts, and rebuild trust—so your home becomes a place where everyone feels heard and valued.

What types of family therapy are available?

There are many approaches to family psychotherapy, and the type of therapy your family receives is guided by your specific dynamics, history, and goals. Therapists often integrate multiple therapeutic approaches to help families improve communication, resolve conflicts, and create a more supportive home environment.

Some of the more common approaches in family psychotherapy include:

What is family therapy?

Understanding the therapy

Family therapy is a collaborative counseling experience designed to help family members explore, understand, and work through shared challenges and relational dynamics. It can be helpful for concerns such as:

Communication Breakdowns
Parent-Child Conflict
Behavioral Issues in Children or Teens
Major Life Transitions (Divorce, Blending Families)
Grief and Loss within the Family
Managing a Member’s Chronic Illness or Mental Health Condition
Impact of Substance Abuse on the Household
Intergenerational Trauma

Family therapy supports the growth of the entire household by fostering empathy, clarifying boundaries, and developing healthier ways to interact. Through guided dialogue and professional support, family members gain deeper insight into how their individual actions affect the collective unit. This process helps families overcome challenges together, building lasting skills that enhance harmony, stability, and the overall well-being of every person in the home.

Benefits of family therapy

Research shows that family therapy can lead to significant improvements in the overall household environment, including better communication, reduced conflict, and stronger emotional support. By addressing the family as a system, many members experience improved academic performance, reduced behavioral issues, and a greater sense of belonging and security at home.

Enhanced Communication

Family members learn how to express their needs and feelings without triggering defensiveness. This shift from “blaming” to “understanding” ensures that every voice in the home feels heard and valued.

Clearer Boundaries & Roles

Establish healthy boundaries that define the responsibilities of parents and children. This reduces power struggles and creates a more organized, predictable, and stable home life.

Stronger Conflict Resolution

Develop the tools to manage disagreements constructively. Families learn to de-escalate tension and solve problems together, preventing small arguments from turning into long-term resentment.

Emotional Resilience

By working through shared trauma or life transitions together, the family builds a “safety net” of mutual support. This helps individual members handle external stress, school, and work with greater confidence.

Some symptoms to watch out for

Early signs that shouldn’t be ignored

Hear from our clients

Stories of transformation

Frequently
Asked Questions

Questions we often asked

Family therapy can help any group of people who care about each other and call themselves a family. This includes biological families, blended families, foster families, or even adult siblings and their aging parents who are navigating new life stages.

Because family therapy is often goal-oriented and focused on specific patterns, it can sometimes be shorter than individual therapy. Many families see significant shifts within 8 to 20 sessions, though families dealing with deep-seated trauma or chronic issues may choose longer-term support.

The therapist facilitates a safe space where everyone has a “voice.” You will work on identifying the “rules” of your family (both spoken and unspoken) and practice new ways of interacting. The therapist may meet with the whole family together, or sometimes in smaller groups (like just the parents or just the children) to address specific dynamics.

Confidentiality in family therapy is slightly different. While the therapist protects the family’s privacy from the outside world, they often have a “no secrets” policy within the family unit to prevent “triangulation” and ensure that the therapy remains honest and effective for everyone involved.

Most families start with weekly sessions to establish a rhythm and begin implementing new communication tools. As the home environment stabilizes and conflict decreases, sessions may move to every other week or once a month.