EMDR; Couples Counseling; Family Therapy Therapists in Oregon
1,671 providers found
Find Oregon therapists who practice EMDR; Couples Counseling; Family Therapy.
Khatya Albano
LMFT, SEP · Portland, OR
Feeling stuck, overwhelmed, or caught in exhausting patterns? You try your best, yet emotions like anxiety, panic, and self-doubt keep hijacking you, leaving you drained and…
Angela Caiazza
MS, LMFT · Clackamas, OR
The majority of her work tends to utilize the Gottman method, Emotionally Focused Therapy, Cognitive Behavioral interventions, and Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing ( …
Alissa Dayton
MS, LMFT · Portland, OR
Alissa is influenced by attachment theory, systems theory, and trauma research. She strongly believes that clients are the experts on their own lives and approaches therapy…
Paula Fitzgerald
MA, LMFT · Portland, OR
Renee Fitzpatrick
LMHC, LPC, CST · Portland, OR
Hannah Fleckenstein
MA, LPC · Tigard, OR
Evan Giudice
LMFT, CADCIII · Bend, OR
Ashley Garcia
MA, LMFT, CCTS-I · Sherwood, OR
Resources & Guides
Articles and guides from the Oregon Providers team.
When Talk Therapy and Medication Aren’t Quite Enough: Another Way to Support Your Mental Health
If you’ve tried talk therapy, medication—or both—and still feel like something isn’t quite clicking, you’re not alone. Many people reach a point where they understand their patterns, have tools to cope, and are doing “all the right things”… yet still feel stuck. Maybe your mind knows what to do, but your body doesn’t seem to follow. O
Where Neurofeedback Fits in Mental Health Care: A Complement, Not a Replacement
Mental health care is evolving. Today, more providers are recognizing that lasting change often requires supporting not just thoughts and behaviors—but the underlying patterns of the nervous system itself. This is where neurofeedback can play a valuable role. What Is Neurofeedback? Neurofeedback is a non-invasive form of brain training that helps the brain become more flexible, regulated,
Left on Read by Therapy: Coping With the Silence
Maybe you've had it happen before. You spend what feels like forever debating whether it's time to reach out for help. Then the day comes where you're finally feeling ready so you look around, you find a few people, you draft the email (and edit it a thousand times because you're worried it doesn't sound right), you send it, then…. Nothing. Radio silence. You spent all that time working up