Parenting and Family Therapy

Every family is as unique as its individual members, its dyad relationships, and the ways in which the family functions as a team. My Family Counselor provides top-rated family therapy services virtually and in the Murrells Inlet, South Carolina area. Our primary focus is to ensure that your family can build on existing strengths and minimize potential barriers to continued physical, spiritual, and emotional growth.

My Family Counselor

Parenting and Family Therapy

 

Family relationships and dynamics can be challenging, and parenting is often best described as a messy and bittersweet privilege. Whether establishing appropriate disciplinary strategies, navigating co-parenting or blended family issues, Melanie’s teaching background and focused studies during graduate school have prepared her to help.

Melanie’s Experience

 

As a former K-12 teacher, mother, wife, friend, and one of six daughters with a few years under her belt, Melanie has seen what’s behind the curtain in quite a few families. Sometimes, she has just caught a glimpse and other times she has been invited to enter more fully into the lives of other families. 

“With my own family and with others, I have experienced great joy and devastating heartache. I have learned a lot through formal education and even more by walking with God and others.”

My Family Counselor

Melanie’s Areas of Specialization: 

  • Custodial concerns during separation or divorce
  • Grief, loss, or trauma
  • Co-parenting
  • Blended family life
  • Life as an empty nester
  • Mental health concerns
  • Overall family wellness
My Family Counselor

My Family Counselor:

Offering heart-centered, biblical, evidence-based treatment.

Transformation is our privilege and our passion.

Reach out today for a complimentary insight call.

Frequently Asked Questions for Family Therapists:

What is a typical session like?

While there are some things common to most sessions, each therapy session varies. 

What you might cover in therapy sessions also varies. For example, your therapist may go through specific exercises with you, or you might have a more general discussion about how you’re feeling. Your councelor may ask you about:

  • your current and past relationships
  • your childhood and past experiences
  • situations or events you find difficult
  • how you feel
  • how you behave
  • what you think about things
  • issues that have come up in previous sessions

It’s important to remember that you don’t have to discuss something that you’re not ready to talk about, or do anything you don’t want to do.

What approach do you use for family therapy?

At MFC, we take an integrative approach combining evidence-based methods and theories as well as a biblical perspective as directed.

A family is a complex, deeply connected system and it is important to examine it as a whole system made of diverse individuals (family systems theory.) We also use a prayerful, solutions-focused approach while examining the goals and values of the family unit.

Finally, as a Christian counselor, most (but not all) of my clients want to discuss God’s biblical plan for marriage and the family. This is an area of study that I am passionate about and love to share (with permission) with families.