Roderick Foley
LPCWyoming · 13 yrs exp
I believe the cornerstones of effective therapies begin with honesty, dignity and respect.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Parenting · Self esteem · +12 more
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Welcome to our Wyoming directory for psychodynamic-trained therapists. All clinicians listed here are licensed and trained in psychodynamic approaches - explore profiles to find a good fit for your goals.
Wyoming · 13 yrs exp
I believe the cornerstones of effective therapies begin with honesty, dignity and respect.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Parenting · Self esteem · +12 more
Read profileWyoming · 26 yrs exp
Michael's practice areas include stress and anxiety, trauma and abuse, anger management, depression, and ADHD.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Anger · Depression · +10 more
Read profileWyoming · 40 yrs exp
I believe in treating everyone with respect, sensitivity, and compassion.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Grief · Self esteem · +1 more
Read profileWyoming · 15 yrs exp
Anita's practice areas include addictions, relationship issues, family conflicts, trauma and abuse, and grief.
Addictions · Relationship · Family · Trauma and abuse · +12 more
Read profileWyoming · 11 yrs exp
Kayla's practice areas include stress and anxiety, trauma and abuse, intimacy-related issues, self esteem, and depression.
Stress, Anxiety · Trauma and abuse · Intimacy-related issues · Self esteem · +15 more
Read profileWyoming · 5 yrs exp
Amanda's practice areas include stress and anxiety, grief, depression, coping with life changes, and ADHD.
Stress, Anxiety · Grief · Depression · Coping with life changes · +2 more
Read profileIf you are searching for a depth-oriented form of therapy in Wyoming, psychodynamic-trained clinicians offer an approach that emphasizes long-term patterns, attachment history, and the relationship between you and your therapist. Psychodynamic work is not simply about managing symptoms; it is about exploring the underlying threads that shape how you feel, relate, and respond to life events. In Wyoming, many therapists have adapted psychodynamic principles to contemporary practice, integrating relational and attachment perspectives while maintaining a focus on unconscious processes and defense patterns.
Online therapy has expanded access across rural and urban areas of Wyoming, making it more feasible to connect with clinicians who have post-graduate training in psychodynamic or psychoanalytic traditions. For people who have experienced repeated relationship difficulties, persistent mood concerns that have not fully responded to shorter-term interventions, or those who want to understand the deeper causes of recurring life problems, psychodynamic therapy can provide a framework for sustained, reflective work. The emphasis is on building an ongoing therapeutic relationship where insights about recurring patterns can emerge over time and be worked through in the context of the sessions.
Psychodynamic therapy is applied to a broad range of concerns that often involve patterns rather than isolated symptoms. If you find that similar problems keep showing up in different relationships - such as repeated conflict, avoidance, or feelings of being unseen - psychodynamic work invites you to trace those patterns back to earlier experiences and attachment dynamics. It is commonly used for persistent anxiety or depression that has not fully responded to short-term skills-based treatments, because it aims to uncover deeper emotional conflicts and meaning-making processes that maintain distress.
People also seek psychodynamic therapy for issues of identity, self-esteem, and life transitions when the question becomes less about coping skills and more about "why does this keep happening to me?" It is frequently recommended for processing developmental or relational trauma, complicated grief, and attachment-related difficulties that affect intimate and family relationships. The work tends to unfold over months to years, with the pace and duration determined collaboratively between you and your therapist based on the nature of your goals and the patterns that emerge in treatment.
Psychodynamic therapy is largely talk-focused and less structured than many short-term interventions, which means the core elements translate well to video sessions. Online sessions allow for continuity of care across Wyoming, whether you are living in a denser community or a remote area. Many therapists who started their training preferring in-person contact have incorporated video as a viable option, finding that a consistent weekly appointment with the same clinician can preserve the continuity and relational depth this approach requires.
In online psychodynamic work, the therapeutic relationship remains central. Regularity of scheduling, a consistent setting for your sessions, and a willingness to reflect on what unfolds between you and the therapist are all important. You will likely notice attention to your emotional responses, recurrent themes from your past, and the ways those themes appear in the therapy itself. While the medium is different, many clients report that meaningful insight and relational repair are achievable through thoughtful, well-attended online psychodynamic work. Keep in mind that clinicians must be authorized to practice in Wyoming to provide ongoing care to residents of the state, so licensing status is an important consideration when you select a clinician.
Confirming a therapist's professional standing is a practical step before beginning work. Start by asking the clinician for their license number and the specific license type they hold, for example licensed clinical social worker, licensed professional counselor, or psychologist. Once you have that information you can use Wyoming state licensing board resources to look up current status, expiration date, and any public disciplinary history. Most state boards maintain online lookup tools where you can enter a name or license number and view official records.
If you are unsure which board to check, you can ask the therapist which Wyoming board regulates their practice and request the direct link to their license profile. It is reasonable to ask about relevant post-graduate psychodynamic training and any affiliations with recognized psychodynamic or relational organizations. If the online record raises questions, you can contact the licensing board directly for clarification. Verifying licensure helps ensure that the clinician is authorized to provide ongoing care in Wyoming and can also inform you about telehealth permissions and scope of practice rules that may apply.
Selecting a psychodynamic therapist is often about more than credentials alone; relational fit plays a central role because the therapeutic relationship is itself a vehicle for change. Look for clinicians with post-graduate psychodynamic or psychoanalytic training and ask about how they integrate attachment-informed and relational perspectives. Affiliations with recognized professional divisions or psychodynamic training institutes can indicate additional focused study, but the way a therapist speaks with you in an initial consultation is a powerful indicator of fit.
When you contact a therapist, you might ask about their approach to relating to past experiences, how they think about recurring patterns, and what you can expect from the therapeutic relationship. A psychodynamic clinician will often describe attention to transference and countertransference in accessible terms - that is, how your feelings toward the therapist and the therapist's reactions can illuminate old patterns. Pay attention to how comfortable you feel expressing concerns about process or pacing, because psychodynamic work tends to deepen over time and benefits from an open dialogue about the relationship itself.
Deciding between in-person and online care in Wyoming depends on your circumstances and the intensity of the work you want to do. If you live near a clinician with deep psychodynamic training, in-person sessions can offer a particular kind of embodied presence. If you live in a more remote area or need scheduling flexibility, online work can provide consistent access to clinicians who specialize in psychodynamic approaches. Ultimately, choose a therapist whose training, theoretical orientation, and relational style align with your goals, and who you can imagine working with over time to explore the patterns that matter most to you.
Psychodynamic therapy offers a reflective path for people who want to explore the roots of recurring problems and strengthen their relational capacity. In Wyoming, the growing availability of online psychodynamic-trained clinicians makes it possible to find practitioners who combine contemporary relational thinking with careful attention to unconscious patterns and attachment dynamics. Take time to verify credentials, ask about specialized training, and assess relational fit in an initial consultation so you can begin a therapeutic process that aligns with your needs and pace.
Addictions
1369 therapists
ADHD
1175 therapists
Anger
1578 therapists
Bipolar
1216 therapists
Depression
2122 therapists
Eating Disorders
621 therapists
Grief
1828 therapists
Guilt and Shame
1680 therapists
Impulsivity
1006 therapists
Mood Disorders
1426 therapists
OCD
767 therapists
Panic Disorder and Panic Attacks
1210 therapists
Post-Traumatic Stress
1516 therapists
Postpartum Depression
729 therapists
Self Esteem
2087 therapists
Sleeping Disorders
702 therapists
Social Anxiety and Phobia
1489 therapists
Stress & Anxiety
2245 therapists
Trauma and Abuse
1920 therapists