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Megan Johnson

Licensed Professional Counselor

If you are looking for someone to work with virtually, Megan is a warm, bright, empathetic, and patient counselor. She is welcoming and non-judgmental of anyone she has the opportunity to
engage with. Megan believes that there are times in all of our lives when we need a little extra support, encouragement, and guidance. She is here to offer this to you, while also teaching you skills to regain strength, empowerment, and hope. Megan values diversity among each of her clients. Megan views counseling as a collaborative experience in which each individual, couple, and family can bring their struggles, doubts, worries, and concerns into a safe space with a compassionate and competent counselor. She uses encouragement, validation, and directivity to facilitate growth within her clients’ lives at every stage. Megan is here to help you and your family build trust, facilitate behavioral change, increase emotional awareness and expression, establish safety within your relationships, learn new skills, foster self-awareness and
understanding, and find strength from within. She meets each individual, couple, and family wherever their needs are most focused in that moment by using a variety of approaches and
techniques including Parent-Child Interaction Therapy, Client-Centered Therapy, Emotionally Focused Therapy, Dialectical Behavior Therapy, Attachment-Based Family Therapy, Cognitive
Behavioral Therapy, and Solution-Focused Brief Therapy.
Megan is a Licensed Professional Counselor who earned her Master of Arts degree in Marriage, Couples, and Family Counseling/Therapy from the University of Northern Colorado. She
became a part of the Parent-Child Interaction Center in early 2020 and can’t wait to work with you!
At the Parent-Child Interaction Center, Megan works with:

Children and adolescent issues including trauma, abuse and/or neglect, anxiety, depression, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, abandonment, domestic violence, parental conflict, adjustment and

attachment issues, anger management, developmental delays, social/relational issues, coping skills, self-esteem, self-image, peer-pressure, school conflicts, grief and loss, effective
communication issues, divorce, step/blended families, and self-injurious behaviors. Couple issues include the building of trust and effective communication, expression of needs, grief
and loss, infidelity, attachment issues, trauma, anxiety, depression, chronic illness, sexual/intimacy issues, and more.

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