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Therapy for Blended Families in Colorado

Connect with therapists throughout Colorado who help blended families navigate change, strengthen relationships, and support each family member’s unique experiences, goals, and emotional wellbeing.

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Use the filter options to find available therapists by specialty, insurance, location and age group.

Appointments may be available in as little as 48 hours. Many major insurance plans accepted.

How Blended Family Dynamics Can Affect Communication & Family Relationships

Blended Families can affect emotional wellbeing, relationships, communication, confidence, routines, and the ability to feel emotionally present throughout daily life. Many individuals experience stress, emotional overwhelm, anxiety, frustration, exhaustion, avoidance behaviors, difficulty concentrating, or feeling disconnected from others while navigating challenges related to blended families.

Over time, these experiences may affect work, school, parenting, intimacy, emotional regulation, self-esteem, decision-making, and overall quality of life. Some individuals notice ongoing strain connected to burnout, family dynamics, major life transitions, identity concerns, health-related stress, or difficulty balancing personal responsibilities and emotional needs.

Therapists across Colorado provide support for blended families through approaches tailored to each individual’s experiences, goals, relationships, lifestyle, and emotional wellbeing.

Support That Reflects Your Experiences and Goals

Therapy is not one-size-fits-all. Many people look for support that feels collaborative, respectful, and responsive to their individual experiences, communication styles, relationships, and personal goals.

Emotional Safety

A supportive therapy environment can help people speak openly, process difficult emotions, and explore challenges without fear of judgment.

Communication & Relationships

Therapy may help people navigate communication patterns, relationship dynamics, conflict, boundaries, and interpersonal stress.

Stress, Burnout & Daily Pressures

Many people seek therapy while managing ongoing stress, burnout, emotional exhaustion, or major life transitions.

Identity, Growth & Self-Understanding

Therapy can create space for self-reflection, personal growth, emotional insight, and exploring values, goals, and life experiences.

Why Therapist Fit Can Matter in Therapy

Many people look for therapy that feels supportive, collaborative, and responsive to their individual needs and experiences. Research on the therapeutic relationship consistently shows that feeling comfortable with a therapist can play an important role in the therapy process. Feeling heard, respected, and able to communicate openly may help people feel more engaged in therapy and more comfortable exploring difficult emotions, relationships, stressors, and personal goals over time.

Feeling Comfortable & Understood

Many people begin therapy looking for a space where they can speak openly without fear of judgment or misunderstanding. Feeling comfortable with a therapist may help create a stronger foundation for honest conversations, emotional reflection, and discussing experiences that feel difficult, personal, or emotionally overwhelming.

Collaborative Communication

Therapy is often most effective when clients and therapists work together in a collaborative and supportive way. Some people may prefer structured guidance and practical strategies, while others may value a more conversational or reflective approach. Open communication can help therapy feel more personalized and responsive to changing needs over time.

Personalized Support

Therapists may differ in their communication styles, therapeutic approaches, and areas of focus. Because therapy is not one-size-fits-all, many people benefit from exploring different approaches and personalities when searching for support. Finding the right fit may help therapy feel more comfortable, meaningful, and aligned with a person’s goals and preferences.

Trust & Long-Term Growth

Therapy often develops gradually through consistency, trust, and ongoing communication. For many people, building a supportive therapeutic relationship may help create space for self-reflection, emotional growth, coping strategies, and navigating challenges or life transitions with greater support over time.

Exploring therapists with different backgrounds, approaches, and communication styles can help people find support that feels aligned with their individual needs, comfort level, and goals for therapy.

Frequently Asked Questions About Therapy for Blended Families

Blending families is a significant life transition that often involves much more than simply bringing people together under one roof. When parents remarry, move in together, or combine households, every family member is adjusting to new relationships, routines, expectations, roles, and family dynamics. Even when everyone is excited about the changes, the process can be more emotionally complex than many people expect.

One of the most common misconceptions about blended families is that they should quickly function like a traditional family unit. In reality, trust, connection, and family cohesion often take time to develop. Parents may be learning how to co-parent in new ways, children may be adapting to new authority figures, and stepparents may be trying to find their place within existing family systems. Each family member brings their own experiences, expectations, and emotions into the transition.

Therapy can provide a supportive space for families to navigate these changes together. Counseling helps family members improve communication, understand one another's perspectives, manage conflict more effectively, and establish realistic expectations. Therapy can also help identify patterns that may be creating tension and develop healthier ways of responding to challenges.

Many blended families experience difficulties that are completely normal but can feel discouraging when they are not anticipated. Feelings of grief, loyalty conflicts, frustration, jealousy, uncertainty, or resistance to change are common. Therapy helps normalize these experiences while providing practical strategies for building stronger relationships over time.

Counseling can also help families create new traditions, establish healthy boundaries, clarify roles, and strengthen family connections without erasing the importance of existing relationships. The goal is not to force instant closeness but to support the gradual development of trust, respect, and emotional safety.

Blending a family is a process rather than a single event. Therapy can provide guidance and support throughout that process while helping families create a foundation for long-term stability and connection.

Every blended family is unique, but certain challenges appear frequently as family members adjust to new relationships and routines. Understanding that these difficulties are common can help reduce frustration and create more realistic expectations about the adjustment process.

One of the most common challenges involves role confusion. Children may be unsure how to relate to a stepparent, while stepparents may struggle to determine how involved they should be in discipline, decision-making, or caregiving. Biological parents may also feel caught between supporting their partner and maintaining strong relationships with their children.

Differences in parenting styles can create additional stress. Parents who come from different family backgrounds often have different expectations regarding rules, discipline, communication, responsibilities, and family traditions. Without clear communication, these differences can become sources of ongoing conflict.

Blended families may also encounter challenges related to schedules, custody arrangements, holidays, financial responsibilities, and interactions with former partners. These practical concerns can create tension even when family members generally get along well.

Emotional challenges are equally common. Children may experience grief related to divorce, separation, or changes in family structure. Some worry about losing connections with a biological parent, while others struggle to accept new family relationships. Adults may also experience disappointment when family bonding takes longer than expected.

Therapy can help families navigate these challenges by improving communication, strengthening problem-solving skills, and helping family members better understand one another's experiences. Counseling does not eliminate every challenge, but it can provide tools that make transitions smoother and relationships healthier.

The presence of challenges does not mean a blended family is failing. In many cases, these difficulties are a normal part of creating a new family system and can be successfully addressed with support, patience, and realistic expectations.

Yes. Building relationships between stepparents and children is often one of the most delicate aspects of forming a blended family. While some connections develop naturally, many relationships require time, patience, and intentional effort before trust and closeness emerge.

Children and adolescents may have complicated feelings about the changes occurring within their family. They may still be processing the effects of divorce, separation, loss, or major life transitions. Some children worry that accepting a stepparent could somehow betray their relationship with a biological parent. Others may feel uncertain about what role a stepparent should play in their lives.

Stepparents often face their own challenges. Many want to build meaningful relationships with children while avoiding actions that feel intrusive or overbearing. Some feel rejected when attempts to connect are not immediately successful, while others struggle to balance patience with the desire to be accepted.

Therapy can help both children and adults understand that healthy relationships often develop gradually. Counseling provides a safe environment where family members can discuss concerns, improve communication, and establish realistic expectations about the relationship-building process.

Rather than forcing emotional closeness, therapy often focuses on creating opportunities for trust, consistency, respect, and positive interactions. Small improvements in communication and understanding frequently lay the foundation for stronger relationships over time.

Counseling can also help biological parents support healthy connections without creating additional pressure on children or stepparents. By addressing misunderstandings and improving family communication, therapy can make it easier for relationships to develop naturally.

Strong stepparent-child relationships are rarely built overnight. With time, support, and realistic expectations, many blended families develop meaningful and rewarding connections that continue to grow over the years.

Loyalty conflicts are one of the most common—and often misunderstood—challenges within blended families. A loyalty conflict occurs when a child feels caught between important relationships and worries that showing affection, respect, or connection toward one person may hurt or betray someone else.

For example, a child may feel guilty about developing a positive relationship with a stepparent because they fear it could upset their biological parent. Others may worry that enjoying time in one household means they are somehow disloyal to family members in another household. These concerns often exist even when adults have not intentionally communicated such expectations.

Loyalty conflicts can create significant emotional stress for children and adolescents. Some may withdraw emotionally, resist relationships, act out behaviorally, or avoid situations that trigger uncomfortable feelings. Adults sometimes interpret these reactions as rejection or defiance when they are actually signs of internal conflict.

Parents and stepparents can also experience loyalty-related challenges. Adults may feel hurt when children appear distant or resistant, not realizing the emotional complexity behind those behaviors. Misunderstandings can quickly escalate when family members interpret actions through their own perspectives rather than considering the broader family dynamic.

Therapy can help families identify and address loyalty conflicts in healthy ways. Counseling often focuses on creating emotional safety, reducing pressure, improving communication, and helping children understand that caring about multiple people does not require choosing sides.

One of the most powerful messages therapy can provide is that relationships are not competitions. Children benefit when they are given permission to maintain meaningful connections with all important adults in their lives. When loyalty conflicts are reduced, family relationships often become healthier, more secure, and more resilient.

Yes. Effective co-parenting is often one of the most important factors influencing the wellbeing of children after divorce or separation. While co-parenting can be challenging under any circumstances, additional complexity often arises when new partners, blended family relationships, and multiple households become involved.

Many parents enter co-parenting arrangements with different communication styles, parenting philosophies, expectations, and emotional responses to the end of the relationship. Unresolved conflict, trust concerns, or disagreements about parenting decisions can create ongoing tension that affects both adults and children.

Therapy can help parents improve communication, establish healthier boundaries, and develop strategies for managing disagreements more effectively. Counseling may also help individuals separate relationship-related conflict from parenting responsibilities so that decisions remain focused on the needs of the children.

Children generally benefit when important adults in their lives are able to communicate respectfully and consistently. Even when parents do not agree on every issue, reducing conflict and improving cooperation often creates greater stability and emotional security for children.

Therapy can also help parents navigate difficult topics such as scheduling, discipline, major decisions, holiday arrangements, introductions of new partners, and communication expectations between households. Having a neutral environment for these discussions often reduces misunderstandings and promotes more productive problem-solving.

Successful co-parenting does not require former partners to become close friends. It requires developing a working relationship that supports children's emotional wellbeing while allowing parents to navigate challenges constructively.

One of the most common concerns blended families have is the feeling that things should be progressing faster than they are. Parents often enter new family arrangements hoping everyone will quickly adapt, connect, and feel comfortable. When challenges arise, they may worry that something is wrong.

In reality, blended families often take longer to adjust than people expect. Building trust, developing new routines, forming relationships, and creating a shared family identity is a gradual process. Research and clinical experience suggest that meaningful adjustment often takes several years rather than several months.

The timeline varies depending on many factors, including the ages of the children, previous family experiences, co-parenting dynamics, custody arrangements, family communication patterns, and the amount of change occurring simultaneously. Some relationships develop quickly, while others require significantly more time.

Progress is also rarely linear. Families may experience periods of growth followed by setbacks, particularly during major developmental transitions, school changes, relocations, holidays, or other life events. These fluctuations are normal and do not necessarily indicate a problem.

Therapy can help families develop realistic expectations while focusing on steady progress rather than immediate perfection. Counseling often emphasizes relationship-building, communication, patience, and flexibility rather than rushing emotional connections.

Many blended families find that once they stop measuring success by how quickly everyone bonds, they become better able to appreciate the gradual development of trust and connection. Healthy family relationships are built over time, and lasting progress often occurs through small, consistent steps rather than dramatic changes.

Yes. Family therapy can be particularly valuable for blended families because it provides a structured environment where multiple perspectives can be heard and understood. Unlike individual therapy, family counseling allows family members to work together on challenges that affect the entire family system.

Blended families often involve complex dynamics that cannot be fully understood from the perspective of a single individual. Parents, stepparents, children, and other family members may each experience the same situation very differently. Family therapy creates opportunities for these perspectives to be explored in a supportive and constructive way.

Counseling can help improve communication, reduce conflict, strengthen relationships, clarify family roles, and address recurring challenges. Therapy may also support families during major transitions such as remarriage, relocation, custody changes, or the introduction of new family members.

Family therapy does not focus on identifying a single person as the source of problems. Instead, it examines patterns, interactions, and family dynamics that may be contributing to stress or conflict. This collaborative approach often helps reduce blame and encourages teamwork.

Many blended families benefit from therapy even when they are not in crisis. Counseling can be used proactively to strengthen relationships, improve communication, and establish a healthier foundation for long-term success.

Blended families often face challenges that require patience, flexibility, and support. Family therapy can provide practical tools and guidance while helping family members build stronger, healthier, and more connected relationships.

We Work With Your Insurance

Westside Behavioral Care works with many major insurance providers to help make therapy more accessible and affordable. Coverage for counseling may vary depending on your plan, therapist availability, and whether you are seeking virtual or in-person sessions.

You can filter therapists based on your plan to find covered care quickly.

Browse Therapists

View the full directory of therapists who meet your selected criteria, including those with availability beyond the soonest openings shown above.

Bella Ouaknine
Bella Ouaknine

Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist

5.0· 1 review

Seeing patients over 18 years old. No couples.

Bella provides holistic, mindfulness-based therapy for adults in Colorado, helping them heal from anxiety, depression, and trauma through an inclusive, authentic, and collaborative approach.


  • Depression, Anxiety, and Grief & Loss
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Louisville, CO 80027
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Heather Steffen
Heather Steffen

Doctor of Psychology

5.0· 1 review

Heather specializes in ADHD, postpartum anxiety, and life transitions for adults and elders, using a compassionate, eclectic approach to foster lasting growth and wellbeing.


  • Postpartum Depression, Relationship Challenges, and LGBTQIA+
  • Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Sue Crawford
Sue Crawford

Licensed Professional Counselor

5.0· 2 reviews

Sue supports children and adults facing trauma, grief, and neurodivergence using an eclectic, holistic approach with EMDR and CBT to foster healing and growth.


  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, PTSD, and Autism Spectrum Disorder
  • Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Ben DeVoss
Ben DeVoss

Licensed Professional Counselor

5.0· 1 review

Ben provides affirming, solution-focused therapy for teens and adults, using CBT and ACT to help them overcome anxiety and ADHD through his supportive and motivating approach.


  • Anxiety, Depression, and ADHD
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Denver, CO 80218
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Beth Strong
Beth Strong

Licensed Professional Counselor

4.8· 6 reviews

Beth supports adults navigating relationship issues and life transitions with a holistic, interactive approach, helping her clients find spiritual growth and emotional healing.


  • Relationship Challenges, Depression, and Major Life Transitions
  • Humana and Self Pay
  • In-Person · Denver, CO 80222
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Brianna Roggow
Brianna Roggow

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

5.0· 6 reviews

Brianna uses CBT, DBT, and play therapy to help children, teens, and adults overcome trauma, anxiety, and depression through a supportive, person-centered approach.


  • Anxiety, Depression, and Trauma
  • Aetna, Humana, Self Pay, and United/Optum
  • In-Person · Boulder, CO 80301
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Lauran Jacks
Lauran Jacks

Doctor of Psychology

4.6· 30 reviews

Lauran does not prescribe medication

Lauran provides compassionate CBT and psychodynamic therapy for teens and adults, specializing in anxiety, OCD, and trauma to empower clients toward lasting emotional health.


  • ADHD, Anxiety, and Depression
  • Cigna, Humana, Self Pay, and United/Optum
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Laurie Tonelli
Laurie Tonelli

Doctor of Philosophy in Psychology

4.4· 9 reviews

Laurie specializes in couples and family therapy, using evidence-based methods like CBT and the Gottman Method to help adults and youth build empathy, reduce conflict, and find healing.


  • Anxiety, Depression, and Relationship Challenges
  • Humana and Self Pay
  • In-Person · Littleton, CO 80127
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Brittany McCrann
Brittany McCrann

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

5.0· 2 reviews

Brittany specializes in maternal and perinatal mental health, using a compassionate, evidence-based approach to help young adults and adults navigate grief, infertility, and life stressors.


  • Postpartum Depression, Grief & Loss, and Relationship Challenges
  • Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado

Need Help Finding the Right Therapist?

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