Anger Management

Brian Ashin, LCSW, LMSW, CGP
After more than forty years as a therapist, I have become humbled by both the human condition and the human spirit. Most people truly want to have meaningful lives of connectedness and emotional generosity. Yet all too often, difficult childhood experiences, trauma or painful life experiences derails one from sustaining a satisfying life. Therapy can help a person get back on track or even develop new ways of experiencing themselves and others. Happiness, better relationships with others, and freedom from crippling anxiety or depression shouldn’t have to be out of reach.

Brian Ashin, LCSW, LMSW, CGP
After more than forty years as a therapist, I have become humbled by both the human condition and the human spirit. Most people truly want to have meaningful lives of connectedness and emotional generosity. Yet all too often, difficult childhood experiences, trauma or painful life experiences derails one from sustaining a satisfying life. Therapy can help a person get back on track or even develop new ways of experiencing themselves and others. Happiness, better relationships with others, and freedom from crippling anxiety or depression shouldn’t have to be out of reach.

Alisa Kamis-Brinda, LCSW, LCADC

Alisa Kamis-Brinda, LCSW, LCADC

Karen Fraley, LCSW, BCD
A lot of my clients don’t know what is wrong with them, but they definitely know things are not right. As a therapist, I am often helping clients put things back together, inside, things that got disconnected or lost that need to be reclaimed.
Feeling is a way of thinking. I work with clients in a therapy session to keep both of these in mind, so that the thinking clarifies feeling and vice versa. In this way, I help clients affirm both their thinking and feeling. Just by talking with me, my clients say that they feel different and think better.
This is in-depth therapy: it is complex and elegant and takes time and dedication to master, and not every therapist is trained to do this. I have been learning and now teaching this method for 20 years. It’s not for every client. The clients who want this are those who want to make real change and need a therapist with empathy and expertise. That is what I bring to the work, to collaborate with my clients who are poised to accept and finally understand themselves.

Karen Fraley, LCSW, BCD
A lot of my clients don’t know what is wrong with them, but they definitely know things are not right. As a therapist, I am often helping clients put things back together, inside, things that got disconnected or lost that need to be reclaimed.
Feeling is a way of thinking. I work with clients in a therapy session to keep both of these in mind, so that the thinking clarifies feeling and vice versa. In this way, I help clients affirm both their thinking and feeling. Just by talking with me, my clients say that they feel different and think better.
This is in-depth therapy: it is complex and elegant and takes time and dedication to master, and not every therapist is trained to do this. I have been learning and now teaching this method for 20 years. It’s not for every client. The clients who want this are those who want to make real change and need a therapist with empathy and expertise. That is what I bring to the work, to collaborate with my clients who are poised to accept and finally understand themselves.

Angela Fucci, MSW, LCSW, BCD
Specializing in helping individuals cope with the everyday stressors of life, reaching their full potential and seeing themselves in a new light.

Angela Fucci, MSW, LCSW, BCD
Specializing in helping individuals cope with the everyday stressors of life, reaching their full potential and seeing themselves in a new light.
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