Relationship and Marriage Counseling therapists in Carneys Point, New Jersey NJ
We are proud to feature top rated Relationship and Marriage Counseling therapists in Carneys Point, NJ. We encourage you to review each profile to find your best match.
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Dr. David Leibovitz
Psychologist, Psy.D.
Relationships are like any living organism. They need to be fed to stay healthy and alive. Often times we unknowingly put our intimate relationship lower on our priorities list than things such as kids, work, and more. Let’s rediscover together the love and passion you and your partner once had. We also focus on letting go of toxic resentment from old things of the past, as well as the development of new healthy communication skills.
23 Years Experience
In-Person Near Carneys Point, NJ
Online in Carneys Point, New Jersey
Patricia Anna Martucci
Marriage and Family Therapist, LMFT
I work with new couples, long term relationships, LGBTQIA coupes, as well as infidelity, divorce in relationships. The work includes looking at communication patterns and changing ineffective patterns to support connection and growth, discovering how our family of origins blueprints impact current relationships and shifting that imprint to one that works for the couple today. I also do pre-marital counseling, and provide tools of communication and connection.
14 Years Experience
Online in Carneys Point, New Jersey
Linda Robinson
Therapist, LSW
Relationship and marriage counseling can be a transformative experience for couples seeking to improve their relationship, enhance their communication, and build a stronger foundation for long-term happiness and fulfillment. Together, you and your partner will learn how to establish goals, rebuild trust and intimacy, and address your individual needs to create a deeper connection and mutual understanding.
20 Years Experience
Online in Carneys Point, New Jersey (Online Only)
Stephanie Marks
Hypnotherapist, MA
Do you feel frustrated and stuck in patterns of relating with your partner and want to find greater satisfaction in your significant relationships? The quality of our relationships occupy a central importance in our lives and deeply affect our states of being and how we experience ourselves in the world. From the moment we are conceived we share life with another and from there on all our subsequent relationships are shaped by these early relating experiences. Examining and delving deeply into our patterns of relating can free us from the familiar constraints of who we identity as being in the context of others and our relationship to ourselves. All of our relationships stimulate many feelings and often old hurts and patterns of relating to others that can often be difficult to navigate. I feel confident that I can help you to find a life that is filled with greater satisfaction, emotional stability and improved relationships. In our work together, we will examine patterns of relating that have become outdated and no longer serve the same function as they used to and aim towards finding new ways of being and relating to bring about more harmony in your life and relationships. I offer therapy to couples, married and not-married and anyone looking to repair any relationship.
13 Years Experience
Online in Carneys Point, New Jersey
Alan Brandis, Ph.D.
Psychologist, Ph.D., Licensed Psychologist
Having worked with hundreds of couples over the last 40 years, I have developed a set of beliefs or ideas which, if adopted, help to ensure that a relationship will last. One of the most important is: Arguing helps nothing, so don't do it.
I like to say that I never met the person who started the fight! When two people argue, each of them believes that he or she is merely reacting to something the other one did or said. Neither one believes that they started the fight; but it started somehow, didn't it?
It is better to be close than it is to be “right.”
Blaming each other for the argument is counterproductive. So is trying to change the other person's opinion. Most couples who argue, argue about whose perception is "correct," whose way of doing something is the "right" way, and so on. The only possible outcome of these arguments is that someone will be "right" and someone will be "wrong." Do you know anyone who enjoys being wrong? Most people will fight tooth and nail to avoid being "wrong."
Commitment is the Foundation of the Therapy
Commitment implies that you are in the relationship "come Hell or high water," barring certain behaviors your partner might do such as having an affair (although I have seen a number of relationships recover from those, too). Unless each partner believes that the other one is committed, they will not feel safe to take risks in facing, addressing and working out the real, underlying issues that affect the relationship.
34 Years Experience
Online in Carneys Point, New Jersey