Therapy for Therapists in Orem, Utah

Also available virtually in Arizona, Idaho, and throughout the state of Utah

Compassionate support for burnout, secondary trauma, and emotional overwhelm

A Safe Space for the Helpers Who Need Support Too

If you’re a therapist, counselor, psychologist, or mental health professional, you spend your days holding space for others.

You listen to trauma stories.

You sit with grief and pain.

You help clients navigate some of the hardest moments of their lives.

But sometimes… therapists need support too.

Seeking therapy as a therapist isn’t something to hide or feel ashamed of. In fact, many of the most grounded, compassionate clinicians are those who have done their own therapeutic work.

Working with a therapist who understands the emotional weight of this profession can help you reconnect with yourself, process what you're carrying, and return to your work with greater clarity and balance.

Why Therapists Seek Therapy

Therapists often come to therapy for many reasons, including:

  • Burnout and compassion fatigue

  • Secondary trauma and vicarious trauma

  • Navigating difficult cases or client dynamics

  • Personal trauma or unresolved past experiences

  • Anxiety, depression, or emotional overwhelm

  • Identity shifts related to the therapist role

  • Boundaries and work-life balance

  • Life transitions, relationships, and personal growth

Being a therapist does not make you immune to life’s challenges.

If anything, the emotional awareness that comes with this work can make those challenges feel even more present.

Therapy provides a space where you get to be the one supported.

A Therapy Space Where You Don’t Have to Be “The Therapist”

Many therapists say the same thing when they begin therapy:

"I know all the tools… but it’s different when you're the one struggling."

In therapy, you don’t have to analyze your own experience or show up as the expert.

You can simply show up as a human being.

In our work together, we can explore:

  • Emotional exhaustion and burnout

  • Trauma and dissociation

  • The impact of holding others’ stories

  • Self-criticism and perfectionism

  • Identity outside of the therapist role

  • Reconnecting with meaning and purpose in your work

You deserve a space where you don’t have to hold everything alone.

Therapy for Therapists Who Work With Trauma

If you work with trauma survivors, you may carry the weight of those stories in ways others don’t fully understand.

Over time, this can lead to:

  • Secondary traumatic stress

  • Emotional numbness or overwhelm

  • Difficulty disconnecting from work

  • Heightened sensitivity to others' pain

  • Compassion fatigue

As a trauma-informed therapist, I specialize in helping professionals process the impact of trauma work while maintaining emotional health and resilience.

Therapy for Therapists in Utah (In-Person or Online), also in Arizona and Idaho (Online Only)

I provide therapy for therapists across Utah, Arizona, and Idaho including:

• Orem

• Provo

• Lehi

• American Fork

• Salt Lake City

• Telehealth throughout Utah

• Telehealth throughout Arizona

• Telehealth throughout Idaho

Sessions are available in-person or through secure online therapy depending on your preference.

What Therapy for Therapists Can Help You Reclaim

Therapy can help you:

  • Reconnect with yourself outside of your professional identity

  • Process secondary trauma and emotional fatigue

  • Strengthen boundaries and work-life balance

  • Rediscover meaning and passion in your work

  • Feel grounded and emotionally regulated again

When therapists care for their own wellbeing, it benefits both their lives and their clients.

You Deserve Support Too

Being the one who helps others doesn’t mean you have to navigate your own struggles alone.

Therapy can be a place where you are seen, supported, and understood — not as a therapist, but as a person.

If you're ready to take that step toward your own healing and growth, I invite you to reach out.

Start Therapy for Therapists Today

If you're a therapist seeking therapy in Utah, you’re welcome here.

Reach out today to schedule a consultation and learn more about how therapy can support you.

Contact Healing Ground Counseling to get started.

Questions Therapists Often Ask About Seeking Therapy

  • Absolutely! Many therapists seek therapy at different points in their careers. In fact, personal therapy is often encouraged or even required during graduate training for many mental health professionals.

    Therapy can help therapists process personal experiences, prevent burnout, and maintain emotional health while supporting others. Seeking therapy is not a sign of weakness—it is often a sign of professional responsibility and self-awareness.

  • Yes it is! Therapists are human first. Like everyone else, they experience stress, grief, trauma, relationship challenges, and life transitions.

    Because therapists often sit with clients’ trauma and emotional pain, they can also experience secondary trauma, compassion fatigue, or emotional exhaustion. Therapy provides a space where therapists can receive the same care and support they offer to others.

  • Therapist burnout occurs when the emotional demands of the profession begin to overwhelm a clinician’s capacity to cope.

    Common signs of therapist burnout include:

    • Emotional exhaustion

    • Feeling disconnected from clients

    • Reduced empathy or compassion fatigue

    • Difficulty separating work from personal life

    • Increased anxiety or irritability

    • Loss of passion for the work

    Therapy can help therapists process these experiences and restore balance, clarity, and resilience.

  • Secondary trauma (also called vicarious trauma) occurs when therapists are repeatedly exposed to the traumatic experiences of their clients.

    Over time, this exposure can affect a therapist’s emotional wellbeing, worldview, and nervous system.

    Therapy can help clinicians process the impact of trauma work, develop healthy emotional boundaries, and maintain long-term resilience while continuing to support their clients.

  • Yes! Therapists frequently work with other therapists within the same professional community. Ethical guidelines simply require that therapists maintain appropriate professional boundaries and avoid dual relationships.

    Many therapists prefer working with a clinician who understands the unique challenges of the profession.

  • Therapy for therapists is similar to therapy for anyone else, but it often includes conversations about the unique experiences that come with working in the mental health field.

    Sessions may explore:

    • Burnout and emotional exhaustion

    • Secondary trauma from client work

    • Personal trauma or life stressors

    • Professional identity and boundaries

    • Imposter syndrome

    • Work-life balance

    • Reconnecting with meaning and purpose in clinical work

    Therapy provides a confidential space where therapists can step out of the helper role and focus on their own wellbeing.

  • Knowing therapeutic tools intellectually is very different from processing personal experiences emotionally.

    Therapy allows therapists to move beyond analysis and into deeper self-reflection, emotional processing, and healing. Even highly trained clinicians benefit from having a supportive space where they do not have to carry everything alone.

  • Yes! Therapy for therapists follows the same strict confidentiality standards as any other therapy service.

    Your privacy and professional reputation are respected and protected.

  • Yes, of course! Many therapists choose online therapy (telehealth) because it offers flexibility, privacy, and convenience.

    Online therapy allows therapists to receive support without needing to travel or worry about running into colleagues in a waiting room.

  • Starting therapy is simple. The first step is reaching out to schedule a consultation where we can talk about what you’re looking for and whether it feels like a good fit.

    Seeking therapy can be one of the most meaningful ways therapists invest in both their personal wellbeing and their professional growth.

Many therapists search for therapy when they are experiencing burnout, compassion fatigue, or personal stress. Therapy for therapists in Utah provides a space for counselors, psychologists, social workers, and mental health professionals to receive support while navigating the emotional demands of their work. At Healing Ground Counseling, therapy for therapists is designed to support clinicians who are seeking help for therapist burnout, secondary trauma, professional stress, and personal growth. Whether you are a therapist in Orem, Provo, Lehi, Salt Lake City, or elsewhere in Utah, Arizona, or Idaho, therapy can provide a confidential place to reconnect with yourself and care for your own mental health.

Redwood Forest Path

Let’s work together

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