Family therapy at CFC addresses the relational dynamics that shape how families communicate, connect, and navigate challenges together. We work with the whole system, not just the individual, to help families build healthier patterns and stronger bonds.
Address the relational dynamics affecting the whole family, not just one person
Improve communication patterns so everyone feels more heard and understood
Navigate major transitions with professional support and a clear path forward
Benefit from coordination with CFC's broader interdisciplinary team
Rebuild trust and connection across generations
When one person in a family is struggling, the whole family feels it. A child’s anxiety shapes the morning routine. A teenager’s withdrawal changes the texture of dinner. A parent’s depression ripples through every room. Families are systems, and what happens to one person affects everyone else.
Family therapy is an approach that takes the whole system seriously.
Sessions may include parents and children together, parents only, sibling groups, or the full household, depending on what’s most useful at any given stage. A good family therapist moves fluidly between these configurations based on what the work calls for.
Key Insight
Family therapy brings together two or more family members with a therapist to address dynamics, communication patterns, and challenges that affect the family as a whole. It is not about identifying the problem person or assigning blame. It’s about understanding how the family system is working, where it’s getting stuck, and what changes might allow everyone to function and connect better.
At the Center for Connection, our family therapists work from a systems perspective informed by interpersonal neurobiology. We understand that families are more than a collection of individuals. They are relational environments where patterns form, where safety is established or disrupted. Each person’s developing brain and nervous system is profoundly shaped by everyone else in the room.
We look at communication patterns, both explicit and implicit. We look at how emotional information moves through the family, who is allowed to express what, and where the stuck places are. We believe that behavior is communication, and this applies as much to family dynamics as to individual experiences. When a child acts out after a new sibling arrives, or a teenager becomes hostile during a parental conflict, they are telling us something. We help families hear those messages and respond to them more effectively.
Tina Payne Bryson’s work on whole-brain parenting and connection-based approaches informs how our therapists think about what families need to thrive. The principles in books like The Whole-Brain Child and The Power of Showing Up are embedded in how we see family systems and what we work toward together.
Families come to us at the Center for Connection in Pasadena, Duarte, and Santa Barbara during many different kinds of difficult seasons:
A child’s diagnosis (ADHD, anxiety, autism, learning differences) is affecting how the whole family operates
Conflict between siblings has become constant and disruptive
A major transition (divorce, remarriage, relocation, illness, loss) has destabilized the family’s sense of safety
Parents feel they’re on different pages about discipline, expectations, or how to support their child
Adolescent rebellion or withdrawal has left the family feeling cut off from their teenager
A family member has returned from a difficult period and the family is learning how to reconnect
Communication has broken down to the point where family members feel they can’t speak honestly without conflict
The early sessions may feel uncomfortable. Real dynamics surface, and surfacing them requires some honesty that can feel exposing at first. Our therapists are skilled at holding that discomfort without letting sessions become unproductive. Over time, families typically develop more constructive ways of expressing needs, navigating conflict, and simply being together.
We partner with families, not just parents. Children’s voices matter in family therapy, even young ones. We create space for every person in the room to feel heard.
What to Know
Family therapy often starts with an assessment period, where the therapist meets with different family configurations to get a fuller picture before bringing everyone together. This isn’t delay; it’s the groundwork that makes joint sessions more productive.
One thing that makes family therapy at the Center for Connection distinct is our larger team. If a child in the family is also working with an occupational therapist, a speech therapist, or an individual clinician at CFC, our family therapist can coordinate with that team. We have the rare capacity to hold the full picture of a family’s needs without requiring the family to explain themselves from scratch to every provider. That kind of coordination makes a real difference.
This is especially true for families navigating a child’s neurodevelopmental differences, where the intersection of sensory, communication, and emotional needs can be complex. Having a team that communicates with each other, and with you, changes the experience of getting help.
We see families at all three of our Southern California locations. If you’re looking for family therapy or family counseling near you in the San Gabriel Valley or Santa Barbara area, we’d welcome the chance to connect. Telehealth options are available throughout California for families who prefer to meet virtually or whose schedules make in-person sessions difficult to coordinate.
To learn more about family therapy or get started, fill out our intake form. We’ll be in touch to understand your family’s situation and match you with a clinician whose experience fits your needs.
We’re here for your whole family.
The scientific lens that informs our work is interpersonal neurobiology, an exciting field of research about the neuroscience of change and of healthy, connected relationships.
We know that connected relationships matter and play a role in how our brains and lives change, so that's where we start.
Grounded in interpersonal neurobiology, our approach reflects the latest research on how relationships shape the developing brain.
Clients are matched to a therapist based on areas of specialty, relational fit, and availability, unless otherwise requested.
Learn more about this service at the Center for Connection.
Learn more about this service at the Center for Connection.
Learn more about this service at the Center for Connection.
Fill out our brief intake form and we'll be in touch within 24 hours to help match you with the right clinician.
We know this step takes courage. We're honored that you're considering us.
Choose the path that best describes your needs.