
Gretchen Graham
I am licensed in Arkansas with 6 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
6 years experience Arkansas

Deciding to look for support is a brave step, and you’re in the right place to find professionals experienced with guilt and shame. You deserve a compassionate, nonjudgmental space to explore what’s weighing on you and to find practical ways forward.
Online therapy can make connecting easier – offering flexibility, privacy, and convenience so you can meet from home or on your schedule. Browse the listings below to explore profiles and find someone who feels like a good fit for you.

I am licensed in Arkansas with 6 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
6 years experience Arkansas

I am a social worker licensed in Louisiana. I have worked with clients with a wide range of concerns including...
15 years experience Louisiana

Although I recently got the LMFT license in the state of California, I have six years of professional work experience....
6 years experience California

I am licensed in California with 12 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress,...
12 years experience California

I am licensed in California with 3 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
3 years experience California

I am licensed in California with 17 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress,...
17 years experience California

Licensed Therapist | Emotional Regulation Specialist | Helping you navigate the rollercoaster called LIFE! Hey there! Life can be tough,...
16 years experience Florida

I am an integrative counsellor. This means that I combine Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, Gestalt Therapy and Transactional Analysis which allows...
5 years experience United Kingdom

I am licensed in California and Florida with 16 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients...
17 years experience California

I am an integrative psychotherapist with a basis in person centred therapy and Jungian psychology. Currently I have over three...
4 years experience United Kingdom

My Approach I believe in treating everyone with respect, sensitivity, and compassion. Every person’s story is unique, and I tailor...
5 years experience United Kingdom

As a licensed therapist with extensive experience in California and Ohio, I specialize in supporting individuals ,couples and families, navigating...
35 years experience Ohio

I am licensed in Hawaii with 40 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with relationship...
40 years experience Hawaii

I am licensed in Arizona with 8 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
11 years experience Arizona

I am here to help guide you through life’s challenges, while providing a safe and empathetic space for healing and...
3 years experience Texas

Hello, my name is Gwendolyn Henry (you can call me Gwen). I am a Licensed Therapist and Life Coach with...
27 years experience Michigan

I am licensed in Florida with 14 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress,...
14 years experience Florida

I am licensed in Indiana with 4 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
4 years experience Indiana

I’m a down to earth, understanding, empathetic and compassionate therapist with a holistic and integrative approach to therapy. I walk...
6 years experience United Kingdom

I am credentialed in the UK with 3 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with...
3 years experience United Kingdom

I am licensed in Minnesota with 3 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
4 years experience Minnesota

I am licensed in Florida with 5 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress,...
5 years experience Florida

Fan Fan is a qualified Counsellor (since 2017) and an accredited Social Worker (Accreditation No. 498227, since 2023). I have...
3 years experience Australia

I am a licensed therapist in Florida working as a mental health professional since 2020. I specialize in helping clients...
4 years experience Florida

I am licensed in Georgia with 6 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress,...
6 years experience Georgia

I am licensed in Pennsylvania with 4 years of professional work experience. I have helped clients with stress, anxiety, trauma,...
4 years experience Pennsylvania

I am licensed in Florida with 7 years of professional experience. I enjoy helping others navigate life stressors by overcoming...
4 years experience Florida

I am credentialed in the UK with 3 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with...
4 years experience United Kingdom

I am licensed in the UK with over 16 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients...
16 years experience United Kingdom

About me Beginning this journey can be challenging, so let me first acknowledge the courage it takes to reach out....
3 years experience United Kingdom

I am licensed in Texas with 3 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
3 years experience Texas

I am a Licensed Professional Counselor in the state of Georgia with over 10 years of experience working as a...
11 years experience Georgia

Hi, My name is Haley Harmer and I am a licensed professional therapist. I have been doing therapy for about...
11 years experience Oklahoma

Hi, I’m Haley, it’s great to meet you! I am a licensed clinical social worker and therapist in Colorado with...
4 years experience Colorado

I am a professional counselor licensed in Louisiana with 8 years of experience working as a primarily community based individual/family...
9 years experience Louisiana

Hallie provides support to patients via messaging for a wide range of concerns including anxiety, depression, relationship issues, family conflict,...
4 years experience Minnesota

Hello, I’m Han, a licensed therapist in the state of Texas, and I’m excited to be a part of your...
7 years experience Texas

I am licensed in New York with 15 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with...
15 years experience New York

I am a USA-trained trauma-informed credentialed Counselor and Positive Intelligence Coach based in the UK with three years of counseling...
5 years experience United Kingdom

I am licensed in the UK with 3 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with...
3 years experience United Kingdom
Guilt and shame can feel crushing and confusing. They can make you replay past mistakes, avoid important relationships, or doubt your sense of self. If these feelings are getting in the way of your daily life, work, or relationships, finding a therapist who understands guilt and shame can help you move toward greater self-acceptance and healthier choices. This page explains what guilt and shame are, common situations that bring them up, how online therapy can help, and practical steps for finding the right therapist.
Guilt and shame are related but distinct emotional experiences. Guilt usually focuses on specific actions or behaviors – feeling bad about something you did or failed to do. Shame, by contrast, centers on the self – feeling fundamentally flawed, unworthy, or exposed.
Both emotions can be adaptive when they prompt reparative action or signal that a boundary was crossed. They become problematic when they are persistent, disproportionate, or prevent you from forgiving yourself and moving forward. Chronic guilt and shame can be linked to high self-criticism, social withdrawal, anxiety, depression, and difficulties in relationships.
Certain therapeutic approaches are commonly used to work with guilt and shame. Cognitive-behavioral strategies can help you challenge harsh self-judgments and test unhelpful beliefs. Compassion-focused therapy helps cultivate self-compassion and reduces self-criticism. Acceptance and commitment therapy supports clarifying values and taking committed action despite painful feelings. Trauma-informed approaches and processing therapies, including EMDR for some people, can be important when guilt or shame is rooted in traumatic experiences.
People seek therapy for guilt and shame for many reasons. You might be struggling with guilt after a relationship ended, a parenting decision, or a workplace error. Shame can arise from family messages, cultural or religious expectations, identity conflicts, or experiences of bullying and abuse. Some people carry shame linked to addiction, past legal issues, or social stigma.
Common patterns include ruminating about past actions, avoiding people or situations that trigger embarrassment, apologizing repeatedly without feeling relief, or feeling undeserving of care and success. Those patterns often lead to isolation, second-guessing, and emotional exhaustion. Therapy helps untangle the origins of these feelings, develop more balanced self-appraisals, and build practical skills for repair and resilience.
Online therapy makes it easier to connect with clinicians who specialize in shame and guilt without the constraints of geography. If you live in an area with limited specialized care, online sessions expand your options so you can find someone with relevant experience and a therapeutic style that fits you.
For many people, talking about shame feels safer from the privacy of home. The convenience of video, phone, or secure messaging can reduce barriers like transportation, scheduling conflicts, or physical mobility issues. Some people find it easier to open up through text-based sessions or messaging when emotions feel overwhelming in real time.
Online formats also support continuity of care. If you travel, move, or have changing work hours, virtual appointments make it easier to keep therapy going. This consistency is especially important when working through deep-seated guilt or shame that benefits from steady, ongoing support.
Online therapy offers flexibility that in-person sessions may not. You can often schedule appointments outside typical office hours and join sessions from safe, familiar spaces. This can reduce anxiety about leaving home or facing a waiting room, and it can help you engage more consistently in treatment.
Virtual therapy can also broaden your choices. You are not limited to therapists in your city, so you can find clinicians with specific training in compassion-focused work, trauma-informed care, or cultural competence that matters to you. Many people report feeling more comfortable being candid online, which can speed up the therapeutic process.
That said, some people prefer in-person interaction for the immediacy of face-to-face connection. If you value physical presence, sensory cues, or a particular office environment, in-person therapy can be a good fit. The right choice depends on your needs, comfort, and practical circumstances.
Your first few sessions will likely involve assessment and goal-setting. A therapist will ask about the history of your guilt and shame, triggering situations, how these emotions affect daily life, and any safety concerns. From there, you and the therapist will develop a plan that may include cognitive techniques to challenge shame-based beliefs, exercises to build self-compassion, and behavioral steps to make amends or set healthier boundaries.
Expect structured tools like thought records, exposure tasks, or role-playing to practice repair conversations. You may be offered journaling prompts or exercises to increase awareness of self-critical thoughts. Therapy often blends insight with skill-building so that you learn new ways to respond when guilt or shame arise.
Progress is usually gradual. You may feel relief early on, but deeper shifts in core self-feelings often take time. Regular attendance, trying suggested exercises, and honest communication with your therapist about what does or does not feel helpful will support steady change.
When searching a directory, look for therapists who list experience with shame, self-criticism, trauma, or related concerns. Read provider profiles to learn about their therapeutic approaches. If self-compassion or reparative work feels central to you, seek clinicians trained in compassion-focused therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy, or trauma-informed care.
Consider cultural competence and values. Shame is often tied to cultural, religious, or family expectations, so finding a therapist who respects and understands your background can be important. Check whether the therapist offers different formats, such as video, phone, or messaging, to match your communication preferences.
Most therapists offer an initial consultation or intake session. Use that conversation to ask about their experience with guilt and shame, typical treatment strategies, session frequency, and how they handle crises. Trust and rapport matter more than perfect credentials. If someone’s style doesn’t feel right, it is okay to try another therapist until you find a good fit.
Reaching out for help with guilt and shame is a brave and practical step. You do not need to have everything figured out before seeking support. A helpful first move is to make a short list of what you hope to change, and note any days or times that work best for sessions. Use a directory to find therapists who specialize in shame or related areas and check their availability for online sessions.
If you ever feel overwhelmed or are thinking about harming yourself, contact local emergency services or a crisis line right away. Otherwise, know that many people find relief and greater self-compassion through therapy. Finding the right online therapist can create a safer space to understand your feelings, repair where needed, and build a kinder relationship with yourself.