Find Parenting Counseling

Medically reviewed by Gabriela Asturias, MD on May 23, 2025
Written by the MiResource team

Parenting is one of the most rewarding — and challenging — roles a person can take on. It brings moments of deep love, joy, and connection, but also frustration, exhaustion, and self-doubt. That’s where parenting counseling comes in. Working with a licensed parenting therapist or engaging in parent coaching can provide insight, tools, and emotional support to help you become the parent you want to be — not just the one reacting in the moment.

  • Jamie Farrelly, Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker (LICSW)

    Jamie Farrelly

    Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker (LICSW)

    Remote only

    Jamie Farrelly is a Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker (LICSW) in undefined, undefined. They treat Parenting, Relationship(s) with Friends/Roommates, End of Life.

    College life can be overwhelming. I help young adults (18+) build coping skills in a safe, inclusive space to navigate stress, trauma, and life changes

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  • Kate Stewart, Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor (LPCC)

    Kate Stewart

    Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor (LPCC), Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC), Counselor, Psychotherapist

    1684 Medina Road, Medina, Ohio 44256

    Kate Stewart is a Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor (LPCC) in Medina, Ohio and has been in practice for 8 years. They treat Parenting, Sexual Identity, Anxiety.

    Our passion is creating a safe space to treat adults, children, couples, and families with their mental health needs.

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  • Orvon White, Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW)

    Orvon White

    Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW)

    Remote only

    Orvon White is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in undefined, undefined and has been in practice for 8 years. They treat Parenting, Trauma, Academic Concerns.

    My intention is to create a safe space where clients feel validated and affirmed in their lived experiences and that they feel lighter when they leave.

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  • Stephen Barlow, Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC)

    Stephen Barlow

    Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC)

    5540 Falmouth Street, Richmond, Virginia 23230

    Stephen Barlow is a Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC) in Richmond, Virginia. They treat Parenting, Avoidant Personality, Depression.

    I help people overcome anxiety, depression, and stress stemming from relationships or past experiences, in individual or couples counseling.

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  • Katy Jones, Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC)

    Katy Jones

    Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC)

    54 Park Place, Grand Chute, Wisconsin 54914

    Katy Jones is a Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC) in Grand Chute, Wisconsin and has been in practice for 22 years. They treat Parenting, Pregnancy/Loss of Pregnancy, Phobia.

    Katy specializes in divorce mediation, depression, anxiety and stress management, assertiveness training, and various relational issues.

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  • Katherine Lang, Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC)

    Katherine Lang

    Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC)

    255 S. 17th St., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103

    Katherine Lang is a Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and has been in practice for 10 years. They treat Parenting, Anxiety, Sexual Identity.

    You are enough. Let's work on helping you believe it, too. Come in-person or virtually to address life's difficulties: anxiety, esteem, body-image, etc.

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Whether you’re struggling with anxiety, carrying old emotional wounds, or feeling stuck in patterns that you can’t seem to break, Internal Family Systems therapy offers a way to approach those challenges from a new and deeply compassionate perspective. This approach resonates best with me as it asserts that everyone has parts of them that struggle, not just clients that come into therapy, but everyone. Also important, is that there are no bad parts (though it can sometimes feel that way!) I love that.

Terri Higgins, LPC

What is parenting counseling, and when should I consider it?

Parenting counseling is a specialized form of therapy that helps caregivers build the skills, confidence, and emotional awareness needed to navigate the complex world of raising children. It’s not about telling you how to parent “the right way.” Instead, it’s about working with a trained parenting therapist who helps you explore what kind of parent you want to be — and what’s getting in the way.

This kind of support is highly personalized. Some parents seek counseling to manage daily behavioral issues, while others want help processing their own childhood so they can break generational patterns. Still others come simply because parenting feels harder than they expected — and they don’t want to keep doing it alone.

What Does Parenting Counseling Help With?

  • Discipline and behavior management: Understanding tantrums, defiance, sibling rivalry, or screen-time struggles.
  • Parenting stress and burnout: Learning to regulate your emotions when you're stretched thin.
  • Emotional connection: Strengthening your bond with your child and fostering emotional safety.
  • Developmental transitions: Adjusting your approach as your child moves through stages (toddlerhood, puberty, adolescence).
  • Parental self-doubt: Replacing guilt and comparison with clarity and confidence.
  • Relationship dynamics: Navigating different parenting styles with a partner or co-parent.

When Should I Consider Parenting Therapy?

You don’t need a crisis to seek help. Consider working with a parenting therapist if:

  • You feel overwhelmed or unsure how to handle certain behaviors.
  • You and your partner are constantly clashing over discipline or routines.
  • You feel guilty, angry, resentful, or disconnected as a parent.
  • Your child is experiencing emotional or behavioral issues and you want to better support them.
  • You want to understand how your own upbringing is affecting your parenting today.

Some parents also use parent coaching — a more practical, goal-oriented form of support — when they’re looking for structured tools rather than deep emotional work. Coaching can be helpful for sleep training, screen-time limits, or school-related concerns.

The key takeaway? If something in your family life feels off — or if you simply want to strengthen your skills — parenting counseling is a smart, supportive step forward.


Can therapy help with parenting stress, burnout, or feeling overwhelmed?

Absolutely. Burnout and emotional exhaustion are incredibly common among parents, particularly in today’s fast-paced, high-pressure world. Juggling work, school schedules, social media comparisons, and the emotional demands of parenting can leave even the most loving caregivers feeling depleted.

Parenting counseling helps by:

  • Validating your emotional experience
  • Providing coping tools for stress and anger
  • Teaching emotional regulation techniques
  • Helping you set healthy boundaries with your children, co-parent, or extended family
  • Supporting you in making space for your own needs

Parent coaching can also offer practical tools for time management, discipline strategies, and emotional check-ins. Sometimes, even just having someone who listens without judgment can make a world of difference in reducing parental overwhelm.


How can therapy support me in managing my child’s behavioral or emotional challenges?

When your child is struggling — whether with tantrums, defiance, anxiety, or social difficulties — it can leave you feeling helpless, frustrated, or even blamed. A parenting therapist can help you decode your child’s behavior and provide insight into what might be happening beneath the surface.

Rather than focusing solely on controlling behavior, modern parenting therapy emphasizes:

  • Building secure attachment through responsiveness and empathy
  • Creating consistent routines and boundaries
  • Helping your child feel safe, seen, and emotionally understood

Whether you’re dealing with aggression, school refusal, sibling rivalry, or screen time battles, parenting counseling offers both emotional guidance and evidence-based tools to respond in ways that nurture your child’s development without sacrificing your own mental health.

This kind of therapy is especially valuable for children with ADHD, autism, anxiety, trauma histories, or sensory sensitivities. Parents learn to adjust expectations, reduce power struggles, and increase cooperation — all while strengthening the parent-child bond.


What types of therapy are used to help parents?

There are several therapeutic approaches designed to support parents. A few of the most common include:

  • Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT): Involves real-time coaching to improve communication and reduce disruptive behaviors.
  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT): Helps parents challenge unhelpful thoughts and develop more effective coping strategies.
  • Mindfulness-Based Parenting: Focuses on staying present, calm, and non-reactive in stressful moments.
  • Attachment-Based Therapy: Addresses early relational patterns that influence parenting instincts and emotional availability.

Additionally, parent coaching is a practical, solution-focused approach that emphasizes strategies and accountability over deep emotional exploration. It’s especially useful for parents looking for structured support around specific challenges.


Is parenting therapy only for families in crisis or also for preventive support?

While many parents seek counseling in times of crisis — such as after a divorce or during a behavioral escalation — parenting therapy can also be a powerful preventive tool. Much like couples counseling, it can help you strengthen your skills and emotional resilience before problems become entrenched.

Preventive parenting therapy might include:

  • Preparing for adolescence
  • Navigating transitions (e.g., new siblings, moves)
  • Learning to co-parent after separation
  • Developing a shared parenting philosophy

You don’t need to wait until you're “at your limit” to benefit. Taking the time to build strong emotional and behavioral foundations now can save your family from more distress later.


Can therapy help me understand and break patterns from my own upbringing?

Yes — this is one of the most profound aspects of parenting counseling. Many of us carry unconscious patterns from how we were raised, whether that involves harsh discipline, emotional neglect, enmeshment, or unrealistic expectations. Sometimes, despite our best intentions, we either repeat these patterns or swing too far in the opposite direction.

A parenting therapist can help you:

  • Identify inherited parenting styles that no longer serve you
  • Process grief or anger related to your childhood
  • Develop more conscious, intentional ways to parent your child
  • "Reparent" your own inner child alongside parenting your actual one

This deep emotional work is a gift not just to yourself, but to future generations


What is co-parenting therapy, and who can benefit from it?

Co parenting therapy is a form of counseling designed to help parents who are no longer in a romantic relationship work together in raising their children. It's particularly beneficial in high-conflict situations or when there’s confusion, inconsistency, or resentment that impacts the child.

This type of therapy is not about reconciliation — it’s about collaboration. Goals often include:

  • Establishing shared rules and routines
  • Improving respectful communication
  • Minimizing emotional harm to children
  • Navigating transitions like holidays, school decisions, or introducing new partners

Whether you’re amicable or barely speaking, co-parenting therapy helps you move from confrontation to cooperation.


Can co-parenting therapy help separated or divorced parents work together better?

Absolutely. Separation can bring a flood of emotions — grief, anger, guilt — all of which can spill over into the parenting relationship. Co parenting therapy creates a structured space to work through these emotions while staying focused on what matters most: your child’s well-being.

You’ll learn:

  • How to shift from “spouse mode” to “co-parent mode”
  • How to reduce triangulation (putting kids in the middle)
  • How to manage differing values and schedules respectfully
  • How to create stability across two households

When kids see their parents working together — even if they’re no longer together — it sends a powerful message of safety, respect, and emotional maturity.

Find care for you

Recovery is possible. With early intervention, a supportive community, and the right professional care, you can overcome challenges and build a fulfilling life. We’re here to help you find the support you need.

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