When Talking at Home Isn't Working Anymore
You've had the same conversation a dozen times. Nothing changes. Your child is refusing school. Your teenager is shutting down. You're watching your family drift apart and you don't know how to reach them.
Maybe you've tried setting new rules, making deals, or reading every parenting book you can find. Maybe you and your partner are on completely different pages about what to do next. You feel stuck, and the longer it goes on, the worse the tension gets.
Families dealing with a child's mental health diagnosis face a specific kind of exhaustion. You love them. You want to support them. But you don't always have the language or the tools. And it's hard to get everyone in the room talking productively when emotions are running high.
Family therapy gives you a neutral space and a structured approach. You don't have to figure this out alone.
What Family Therapy Actually Is
Family therapy is structured counseling that brings family members together to work through challenges as a group. Sessions may include everyone together, or Krista may work with different configurations (mom and child, dad and child, or all of you together) depending on what's most helpful at each stage.
The goal isn't to assign blame. It's to help each person understand the others' perspective, build shared communication tools, and make real, practical progress on what's bringing you in.
Family therapy works well for families navigating a child's mental health diagnosis, school refusal, communication breakdowns, anxiety-driven conflict, and major life transitions.
A Therapist Who Keeps It Fair and Builds Real Skills
Krista Smith, MS, LPCC-S, has been working in the mental health field for over 10 years and holds a supervision designation, a credential indicating advanced professional standing in Ohio's clinical counseling community.
Her approach to family therapy is rooted in DBT (Dialectical Behavior Therapy), one of the most researched behavioral frameworks available. In practice, this means families leave sessions with concrete skills they can actually use. When parents and children learn the same vocabulary and the same coping techniques, they can support each other more effectively at home.
Krista's family sessions are deliberately structured to prevent triangulation. No one in the room should feel like the odd one out.
- DBT and CBT-informed family work with a focus on practical, transferable skills
- Trained in TF-CBT (Trauma-Focused CBT) for families dealing with trauma history
- Particular experience with school refusal, anxiety in young people, and parents learning to navigate a child's mental health diagnosis
What to Expect When You Book
1. Your first session together
2. A structure that fits your family
3. Skills you can use between sessions
What Families Often Gain
A shared language for hard moments. When everyone in the family understands the same coping skills and communication tools, you're no longer speaking different languages during a crisis.
A fair space where everyone gets heard. Krista uses a structured approach to make sure each person has the chance to speak and no one feels ganged up on.
Practical tools for the specific challenges your family faces. Whether it's school refusal, anxiety, a diagnosis no one knows how to talk about, or communication that keeps breaking down, the work is built around your actual situation, not a generic family therapy protocol.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. Krista's family sessions are deliberately structured to avoid triangulation, the dynamic where one family member feels like the therapist has aligned against them. Every perspective gets heard. The goal is understanding, not verdicts.
It depends on your situation. Krista may work with the whole family together, meet with different pairings, or alternate configurations across sessions. In early sessions, it's common to have everyone present. She'll guide you on what makes sense as things progress.
This is one of the most common situations Krista sees. She's experienced in working with reluctant participants, including teenagers and young adults who feel pressured into attending. Part of her job is earning that buy-in.
It varies based on what you're working on. Sessions are 50 minutes to an hour. Many families see meaningful progress within 8 to 12 sessions, though some continue longer. Krista will talk through what to expect at your first appointment.
a CLEar Mind Therapy
6559 Wilson Mills Rd, Suite 108Cleveland, OH
44143-6402
Receptionist@aclearmindtherapy.com
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