Loss or Grief therapists in Lower Allen, Pennsylvania PA
Lisa Vespico-Mull
Licensed Professional Counselor, LPC, SAP, ICAADC
Dealing with grief and loss is a process. There is no right way to grieve nor a timeline. I can help educate clients on the stages of grief, techniques to assist in processing the loss, and ways to move forward.
11 Years Experience
Dr. Ruhama Hazout
Psychologist, Psy.D.
My approach to loss and grief therapy focuses on facilitating the healing process and fostering a renewed sense of purpose, using compassionate support and strategies that honor your unique journey through mourning. This method is designed to help you navigate the complexities of grief, allowing for personal growth and healing in the aftermath of loss.
13 Years Experience
Crystal Taylor - Soulful Hearts In Nature
Life Coach, RSMT
"Simply touching a difficult memory with some slight willingness to heal begins to soften the holding and tension around it." - Stephen Levine
Loss and grief can be a lonely and isolating experience but you don't need to be alone with it. Together in a safe and supportive working relationship, we will move through the grief process at a pace that is comfortable for you using a multi-modal approach that brings richness and color and joy back to life when everything feels gray and muted due to the loss.
15 Years Experience
Bamboo Center for Grief, Growth, & Well-being
Psychologist, PsyD
YOUR HEART ACHES AS YOU WALK THE DIFFICULT PATH OF GRIEF AND LONGING
Though we desperately wish we could, we cannot take away your pain – your broken heart. What we can and will do, however, is share our heart, knowledge, skills, and time with you. We promise to listen without judgment and to give you our full attention: to be someone you feel safe sharing the sacredness of your loved one and grief with. We are here, ready to mourn with you and share our supportive tools and presence as you transform your devastating loss into deeper love, a quiet sense of peace, maintained connection with your beloved, and meaningful new life purpose.
7 Years Experience
Michelle Bloom, PsyD
Psychologist, PsyD, PsyPact
Loss is inevitable. We all die and we all lose people, relationships, and states of being that we once loved. If we open ourselves to live an authentic, honest, interdependent life, we are sure to experience loss and grief. Many of us fear it so much that we develop a multitude of ways to avoid it, strike a connection balance that we believe will help us protect ourselves later (yet that often robs our joy in the meantime), and use substances or other numbing techniques to help us avoid the complicated process of grief. I believe we can all benefit from learning to appreciate that loss is inevitable, and to learn to grieve in a way that enables us to move forward with compassion and fulfillment.
27 Years Experience