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Check out therapists located nearby or offering teletherapy in Texas below.

Online Therapists

Photo of Patrick David Randolph, Psychologist in Gaines County, TX
Patrick David Randolph
Psychologist, PhD
Verified Verified
2 Endorsed
Lubbock, TX 79424
My focus is providing integrated care that improves wellness and health, including pre-surgical assessments to help patients have positive outcomes to surgery. Our network coordinates with the medical profession to treat distress arising from long-term illness and chronic pain. Based on extensive experience providing behavioral health services in medical settings, I provide an online wellness screen designed to identify risk factors and coping skills influencing your health and outcomes to medical care, which includes an individualized report and recommendations. Telehealth ready.
My focus is providing integrated care that improves wellness and health, including pre-surgical assessments to help patients have positive outcomes to surgery. Our network coordinates with the medical profession to treat distress arising from long-term illness and chronic pain. Based on extensive experience providing behavioral health services in medical settings, I provide an online wellness screen designed to identify risk factors and coping skills influencing your health and outcomes to medical care, which includes an individualized report and recommendations. Telehealth ready.
(806) 853-9489 View (806) 853-9489
Photo of Jaime Coy, Licensed Professional Counselor in Gaines County, TX
Jaime Coy
Licensed Professional Counselor, MS, LPC, EMDR
Verified Verified
6 Endorsed
Lubbock, TX 79423
Trauma and its aftershocks suck. Trauma wounds the mind, body and spirit. It's confusing and debilitating, and it leaves you wondering whether life will get better. Trauma can make you feel, and believe, that there is something wrong with you, that you are going crazy, or that you are broken or stupid. But none of it is true. The truth is this: trauma is healable.
Trauma and its aftershocks suck. Trauma wounds the mind, body and spirit. It's confusing and debilitating, and it leaves you wondering whether life will get better. Trauma can make you feel, and believe, that there is something wrong with you, that you are going crazy, or that you are broken or stupid. But none of it is true. The truth is this: trauma is healable.
(806) 454-5850 View (806) 454-5850
Photo of Joann Gasbarro Lpc-A (Supervised By Shari Sawyer Lpc-S), LPC Intern in Gaines County, TX
Joann Gasbarro Lpc-A (Supervised By Shari Sawyer Lpc-S)
LPC Intern, MA, LPC-A
Verified Verified
Lubbock, TX 79407
Accepting new clients. My extensive experience has afforded me a viewpoint that brings hope to others. My passion and motivation have always been to work alongside individuals at the most vulnerable time of their lives. It can be difficult to manage environmental and social pressures that compromise our decision making, leaving us with feelings of no way out.
Accepting new clients. My extensive experience has afforded me a viewpoint that brings hope to others. My passion and motivation have always been to work alongside individuals at the most vulnerable time of their lives. It can be difficult to manage environmental and social pressures that compromise our decision making, leaving us with feelings of no way out.
(806) 454-7240 View (806) 454-7240
Photo of Phoenix Arise, Licensed Professional Counselor in Gaines County, TX
Phoenix Arise
Licensed Professional Counselor
Verified Verified
3 Endorsed
Lubbock, TX 79414
Current daytime and evening availability! Phoenix Arise is a group counseling office owned by Dr. Nicole Black, PhD, LPC-S, LCDC, RPT in Lubbock, TX. When creating Phoenix Arise, she envisioned a counseling office that would be focused on treating clients through a trauma informed lens. Phoenix Arise has 13 therapists who offer counseling to a wide range of populations with various modalities such as EMDR, DBT, solution focused therapy, talk therapy, and more. What makes our counselors unique is the underlying focus and emphasis on trauma recovery.
Current daytime and evening availability! Phoenix Arise is a group counseling office owned by Dr. Nicole Black, PhD, LPC-S, LCDC, RPT in Lubbock, TX. When creating Phoenix Arise, she envisioned a counseling office that would be focused on treating clients through a trauma informed lens. Phoenix Arise has 13 therapists who offer counseling to a wide range of populations with various modalities such as EMDR, DBT, solution focused therapy, talk therapy, and more. What makes our counselors unique is the underlying focus and emphasis on trauma recovery.
(806) 203-6023 View (806) 203-6023

Addiction Therapists

What is the best therapy for addiction?

Addiction treatment will be tailored to the individual. People seeking help for addiction—whether with a psychotherapist, in an outpatient clinic, or in a residential program—should expect to engage in multiple types of treatments, sometimes including medication. For anyone recovering from addiction, avoiding situations in which one has typically used a substance is essential, as is the support of close connections. Since substance use disorders tend to co-occur with underlying mental health conditions such as anxiety or depression, those must also be addressed as part of any recovery plan.

How long does therapy for addiction take?

There is no set timeline for recovery from addiction. Patients and their families should expect the work to last several months, if not longer. Residential treatment programs may be based on a stay of 30, 60, or 90 days, with continuing work after release, but only about 1 percent of people are treated in such facilities. Ceasing use is just the first step; therapy to help maintain abstinence and effect behavior change must follow. The process of recovery, neuroscience has shown, involves brain cells recovering the capacity to respond to natural sources of reward and restore control over the impulse to use. Another definition of recovery is restoring voluntary control over one’s substance use and retaking all of one’s previous responsibilities.

How effective is drug addiction treatment?

Substance use disorders are treatable and remission is achievable for many who seek recovery; by some estimates, more than three-quarters of people who become addicted to alcohol or drugs recover. But that success rarely occurs quickly or on a set timeline; relapse is not only common, but many therapists and clinicians view it as a normal part of the process—not always a sign that a person has returned to addiction, but a signal that their treatment should be adjusted to help them regain control. Overall, research suggests, five years after the end of substance use, one’s risk of relapse is no greater than that of others who had not faced addiction. Other experts believe that complete abstinence is not the only measure of recovery, and that, through effective treatment, many people can learn to control their use.

How can you get addiction treatment for someone?

The most important factor in recovery from addiction is widely understood to be an individual’s commitment to change. For that reason,“interventions” in which friends and family gather to urge or force someone to begin immediate treatment often backfire; even when such efforts do lead someone to begin treatment, they may be less likely to stay than those who are self-driven. Still, family members can play an important role in supporting an individual who seeks help and can take part in family therapy as one element of a loved one’s treatment.