Dr. Jasmonae Joyriel
Clinical Psychologist, PsyD, LPI tackle the topics that most are too uncomfortable to discuss, and I believe you shouldn't have to MacGyver your way through life.
Online Therapy
Collaborative couple therapy is a therapeutic technique that helps couples understand how they communicate when struggling with an issue or argument. The focus of collaborative couple therapy is teaching partners how to turn those fights into intimate conversations, and in turn, strengthen the relationship. In collaborative couple therapy, the therapist will sit in between the couple and speak as if they were one of the partners talking to the other. If one of the partners is 'fighting' by using stinging words, the therapist will attempt to translate those comments into confiding thoughts. If a partner is ‘withdrawing,’ the therapist will guess at what the individual is feeling, and ask if the guesses are correct. A successful outcome of collaborative couple therapy is experiencing intimacy in times of struggle, rather than fighting or withdrawing. Think this approach might be right for you? Reach out to one of TherapyDen’s collaborative couple therapy experts today.
Take a quick survey to find therapists that match your needs.
With extensive training in anxiety, depression, life transitions, self-esteem, body image issues, grief, trauma, and more. We work with individuals, couples and children ages 10 and up. I am committed to fostering resilience, building coping skills, and promoting emotional health during key developmental years. In addition, we work with couples to strengthen communication, resolve conflicts, and enhance connection in their relationships.
If you’re ADHD, autistic, gifted, “twice exceptional,” or otherwise neurodivergent, you’ve got a specialized, high-performance brain. When you’re doing something you love, everything just works. It's the rest of life that's incredibly stressful. We experience higher rates of depression, anxiety, trauma, school refusal, substance abuse--you name it. But, it's not a deficit in you. It's minority stress. Let's work on changing your environment to fit your brain, not the other way around.
Take a quick survey to find therapists that match your needs.