Structural Family Therapy Bentonville AR

Structural family therapy, or SFT, is a form of family therapeutic intervention. Structural family therapists work to disrupt dysfunctional systems and restructure family systems. Dysfunctional families often display patterns of being overly enmeshed or disengaged, or have a pattern of triangulation of family members. Read on to learn more and to gain access to marriage and family therapists in Bentonville, AR who provide structural family therapy.

Ms. Connie Grubesich
Connie R. Grubesich

479-236-5020
4241 Gabel Dr.
Fayetteville, AR
Riqua Serebreni
(479) 756-6152
Springdale, AR
Zach Newcomb, LCSW
(479) 856-2602
4257 Gabel Drive
Fayetteville, AR
Chantal Karns, LCSW
479-790-2324
65 E Sunbridge Drive
Fayetteville, AR
Center For Psychology
(479) 254-1144
1601 Rainbow Rd
Rogers, AR
Mr. Lawrence Thompson
(479) 202-4193
Wellspring Healthcare Associates, P.A.324 N 2nd Street
Rogers, AR
Dr. Chandana Becker, PhD, MTI, RPP, SEP
479-442-2026
1835 E. Mission Blvd.
Fayetteville, AR
Dr. Amy M Adams
(479) 437-9916
Center for Psychology and Counseling118 East Sunbridge Drive
Fayetteville, AR
Diane Kunkel
(417) 223-2823
Pineville, MO
Northwest Arkansas Relational Therapy Clinic
(479) 254-0700
5206 Village Pkwy
Rogers, AR
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5 Steps to a Stress-Free Family Holiday

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Written by Annie Mueller   
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Child holding Christmas ornament

It's past Thanksgiving, which means it's open season for marketers, managers and your mother-in-law to tell you what you should be doing, buying, getting, giving, spending, baking, making and wrapping for the perfect family holiday. In order to preserve some of that holiday spirit for your whole family, here are a few ways to keep your sanity in check in the coming weeks.

1. Cut down on the tv. Television means advertisements; kids can find enough stuff to want , desperately so, without any encouragement. Get out the dvd collection. Kids can choose from that advertisement-free selection. Ads that run during kids' shows are designed to appeal to kids, and they work. The less your kids see of the shiny, gimmicky, plastic-toy sales pitches, the better.

2. Set a limit on gifts. Setting a limit on the amount of gifts you'll buy and/or the amount of money you'll spend on gifts makes sense anytime, more so in a tough economy. If you've got wiggle room in the budget, good for you, but don't let that turn you into a shopping monster. Choose a number - 3, 4, 5 - and buy that many gifts for each of your kids. Or choose a dollar amount. Stick to your limit .

3. Shop online. Shopping online allows you to get through the retail process, order the gifts you need, and avoid the spontaneous purchases that you'll regret later. That fuzzy leopard-print scarf from last year? Remember? It looked so good on the rack next to the cash register... and your neck was cold. It's easier to focus on what you actually need to buy when you shop online. Plus you can shop in your pajamas and drink as much coffee as you want, without having to pay $3 a cup for it.

4.  Choose one special holiday activity/event for each week. Okay, Super Mom. Put the glue gun down and back away from the craft supplies. You don't have to bake Christmas cookies, build a nativity scene from popsicle sticks, or conquer that make-your-own-dreidel kit just for your kids to have a good holiday. And you don't have to go to every holiday mus...

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