Skip to content

Codependency therapists in Scarborough, ME

We are proud to feature top rated Codependency therapists in Scarborough, ME. We encourage you to review each profile to find your best match.
FILTER RESULTS
I need help with
Type of therapy
Gender
Demographic
Ages
Little Rock, Arkansas therapist: Erika Gray, psychologist
Codependency

Erika Gray

Psychologist, Psy.D
If you have trouble differentiating yourself from others, if your needs are way down on the list of priorities...maybe we should talk.  
13 Years Experience
Online in Scarborough, Maine (Online Only)
Manhattan, New York therapist: Dr. Walter J. Matweychuk, psychologist
Codependency

Dr. Walter J. Matweychuk

Psychologist, Ph.D.
My approach teaches you to depend on yourself and to be self-directed. You can learn to help yourself if you improve your discomfort tolerance for doing things for yourself, taking calculated risks, and accept yourself even when you fail.  
34 Years Experience
Online in Scarborough, Maine
Newport Beach, California therapist: Dr. Lyndsay Elliott, psychologist
Codependency

Dr. Lyndsay Elliott

Psychologist, PsyD.
Exploring issues that would have lead you to a co-dependent relationship. Boundary setting to break unhealthy patterns and more satisfying relationships.  
19 Years Experience
Online in Scarborough, Maine
Atlanta, Georgia therapist: Dr. Traci Williams, psychologist
Codependency

Dr. Traci Williams

Psychologist, PsyD, ABPP, CFT-I
In our work together, I help you explore the underlying causes of your codependency, develop healthier coping skills, boundaries, and communication strategies, so you can create more fulfilling relationships and lead a more balanced life.  
11 Years Experience
Online in Scarborough, Maine
Denver, Colorado therapist: Dr. Maria Canyon, psychologist
Codependency

Dr. Maria Canyon

Psychologist, PsyD, Licensed Clinical Psychologist
Patterns of codependency develop for complex reasons (e.g. personality traits, childhood environments) and require a thorough multimodal approach to treatment. Codependency develops as a unconscious and valid protective response to relational dynamics. Overtime you may have started to recognize the harmful effects this tendency, that likely protected you during childhood, is having on you and your current relationships. Together we can explore the unconscious patterning that has led to this and work to implement healthy boundaries and behaviors. While doing this, we will hold space for the inevitable emotions that arise when setting new patterns into place. Overtime, my hope is that you will be able to integrate your compassion for others into an empowered self, meeting your own needs as well as others.  
7 Years Experience
Online in Scarborough, Maine