IFS THERAPY FOR POSTPARTUM MOMS
Welcoming anxious postpartum moms seeking connection and healing through depth-orientated psychotherapy…
Healing is not a departure from who you are. It is a return…
Mothercented Wellness
There is a self beneath the exhaustion. She’s been waiting. The time to tend to your roots, and not just everyone else’s is now.
We take time to explore who you are as a whole person , not just a role. This is for the mother who has a loud inner critic and who is ready to find out what she’s protecting.
You’re not your worst moment as a mother.
Transforming Anxiety, Guilt, and Anger
Calm isn’t something you perform. It’s something you uncover.
Therapy for postpartum moms is not about parenting better. It’s about living more fully in yourself. Mindful self compassion therapy for moms offers a gentle, thorough reckoning with the innner life that motherhood stirs.
Step One: Tending to Your Inner World: With Compassionate Inquiry
Self compassion is a skill. Therapy helps you practice it with the parts of you that need it most. We will look at what you are worried about, and what you are tolerating in your life right and where you are ready to shift.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
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That is a hard question to answer, and we will use a variety of modalities to find the best fit for you. However, I do tend to consistently lean on my training in Internal Family Systems (IFS) which is a therapeutic model that understands the mind as made up of parts-inner voices, feelings, and patterns that developed to protect you, often long before you became a mother. Rather than trying to eliminate or manage difficult emotions, IFS helps you get curious about them. Instead of fighting the part of you that snaps at your kids or shuts down under pressure, you learn what that part is carrying-and what it needs. It’s less about fixing yourself and more about coming home to yourself.
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This is one of the most honest questions you can ask, and it deserves a real answer. Therapy won’t empty your calendar. What it can do is change your relationship to everything on it. When you understand why you over-give, why certain moments with your kids hijack you, or why you can’t seem to put yourself on your own list-things begin to shift. The fullness of your life doesn’t have to mean the emptiness of you.
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Many people come to IFS after years of talk therapy that felt helpful on the surface but didn’t quite reach the deeper patterns. IFS works at the level of the parts underneath your story-not just the narrative of what happened, but the internal landscape that formed in response to it. If you’ve ever felt like you “know” something intellectually but can’t seem to feel it or change it, IFS often gets to exactly that gap.
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Yes-and those parts are often where the most important work lives. IFS doesn’t pathologize difficult emotions or judge protective behaviors. Anger, resentment, withdrawal, and perfectionism are not character flaws. They are parts doing their best with what they were given. In IFS, shame is never the destination. Understanding is.
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You don’t need to be falling apart to deserve support. Many of the moms I work with are functioning, even thriving in some areas. Yet they still feel a persistent sens of disconnection, depletion, or something they can’t quite name. IFS is as much a path towards depth and meaning as it is a response to pain. You don’t have to be in crisis to want to know yourself more fully
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The early sessions are about building a foundation-understanding your history, getting to know the parts that show up most readily, and establishing a sense of safety in the work. IFS isn’t a linear process, and it doesn’t rush. Some clients notice shifts quickly; for others, the work unfolds more gradually. What most people feel early on is a sense of relief that there’s finally a space where all of them is welcome.