Suzanne Brabant
I am licensed in Florida with 20 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
20 years experience Florida

Deciding to seek support is a brave step, and you’re in the right place to connect with therapists focused on self-love who can support your goals.
Online sessions offer flexibility, privacy, and convenience, making it easier to fit care into your life – browse the listings below to explore professionals and find someone who feels like a good fit.
I am licensed in Florida with 20 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
20 years experience Florida

I am licensed in Florida with 24 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
8 years experience Florida

I am credentialed in the UK with 8 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with...
8 years experience United Kingdom
As a licensed therapist in Florida, I specialize in supporting individuals through life's complex transitions and emotional challenges. With over...
14 years experience Florida

I am licensed in Florida and New Jersey with 18 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping...
18 years experience Florida

I am licensed in California with 24 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress,...
24 years experience California

Are you feeling overwhelmed, sad, anxious, lost, unmotivated, fearful, stressed? Maybe you’re grieving the death of a loved one or...
19 years experience United Kingdom

I’m Suzanne (Sue) Grabowski, a Level 3 Registered Counsellor with the Australian Counselling Association (ACA), based in South Australia. With...
3 years experience Australia
Hi there. I am a Licensed Professional Counselor with 20 years of experience. Life can be challenging and I believe...
20 years experience Texas

I am licensed in California with 15 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with stress...
15 years experience California

I am a Licensed Clinical Social Worker in New York with over 10 years of experience working as a Social...
12 years experience New Mexico
If you’re someone who struggles with anxiety, self-doubt, or constantly putting others’ needs before your own, you’re not alone. I...
9 years experience New York

I am credentialed in the UK with 17 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with...
17 years experience United Kingdom

Hello! I am a licensed marriage and family therapist with 24 years of experience in Illinois, serving both my private...
25 years experience Illinois

Hello! I have been a licensed social worker in Florida since 1997. I have also been teaching Yoga, breathwork and...
5 years experience Florida

I am currently providing counselling sessions for BetterHelp clients and a local charity, where I provide both face-to-face counselling and...
3 years experience United Kingdom

I am licensed in Florida with 3 years of clinical experience. I spent over twenty years providing solutions in multiple...
3 years experience Florida

As a licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in California, I specialize in supporting individuals navigating complex emotional landscapes. My approach...
3 years experience California
I am licensed in Maine with 4 years of professional work experience. I have experience in many areas of mental...
4 years experience Maine
I am Licensed Clinical Social Worker based in Philadelphia. After graduating from of the University of Pennsylvania MSW program, I...
3 years experience Pennsylvania

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

Hello. I am a Licensed Clinical Mental Health Counselor and as a Licensed Clinical Addictions Specialist in the state of...
18 years experience North Carolina

Hi...I’m Suzanne and I’m a Licensed Clinical Mental Health Counselor (therapist) with many years (38 years) of experience. I received...
38 years experience North Carolina

When individuals are experiencing challenges and confusion in their lives they often seek counseling with a trained professional. Most end...
15 years experience Georgia

I am a fully qualified counsellor and insured to practice in the UK. I am registered member of National Counselling...
3 years experience United Kingdom

I am a Licensed, Registered and Accredited Counsellor, CBT Practitioner and Psychotherapist in the UK with 8 years of professional...
8 years experience United Kingdom

I am credentialed in the United Kingdom with a Master’s in Pluralistic counselling, and 4 years of professional work experience....
4 years experience United Kingdom
My name is Svetlana Sokol, LCSW. I have been licensed since 2007. I utilize Cognitive Behavioral, Solution Focused and Client...
18 years experience Florida

I am licensed in Tennessee and Texas with over 10 years of professional work experience. I have experience helping clients...
10 years experience Texas

“I am a licensed mental health professional in Delaware with three years of professional work experience. My extensive 15-year background...
3 years experience Delaware

I am licensed in North Carolina with 3 years of professional work experience. I have experience in helping clients with...
3 years experience North Carolina

My name is Sydney. I am a licensed MFT in the state of California. I completed my Masters in Psychology...
24 years experience California

I am a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, licensed in Arizona and Nevada with 8 years of professional work experience. I...
10 years experience Nevada

“You are not alone, I am here to help!” It is what I do and who I am. I started...
8 years experience United Kingdom

I am a Licensed Professional Counselor in Oklahoma, Missouri, & New Jersey, & Licensed Clinical Mental Health Counselor in Utah....
6 years experience Oklahoma

I am licensed in Maine and Wyoming with 15 years of professional work experience. I completed my Undergraduate in Social...
15 years experience Maine
As a licensed therapist in Maryland, I help people work through their emotional challenges. I focus on issues like depression,...
6 years experience Maryland

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

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

I’ve had a spiritual near-death experience, lost my loving mother to Cancer, immigrated as a child, lived under an oppressive...
3 years experience California
Developing self-love is a process of learning to treat yourself with kindness, respect, and acceptance. Many people come to therapy wanting to reduce self-criticism, heal from past hurts, and create a more compassionate relationship with themselves. Online therapy makes it easier to connect with therapists who specialize in self-compassion, self-esteem, and identity work, so you can begin that process from wherever you feel most comfortable.
Self-love is not narcissism or a static destination. It is an ongoing practice that includes self-care, realistic self-acceptance, healthy boundaries, and an ability to meet your own needs without excessive self-judgment. When self-love is low, people often struggle with perfectionism, people-pleasing, chronic self-criticism, difficulty setting boundaries, or making decisions from fear rather than values.
Therapy aimed at fostering self-love helps you understand the origins of negative self-beliefs, learn skills to shift internal dialogue, and build daily habits that reinforce a kinder relationship with yourself. Often this work overlaps with healing from trauma, treating anxiety or depression, and improving relationships with others.
People often look for therapy focused on self-love when they feel stuck in patterns that undermine their wellbeing. This can show up as persistent feelings of unworthiness, comparing themselves to others, or staying in unhealthy relationships because they fear rejection. It can also surface after major life changes – after a breakup, career shift, loss, or becoming a parent – when identity and self-worth are being reevaluated.
Others seek support when they notice perfectionism is limiting their success or when self-criticism is tied to past trauma or cultural messages that discount their value. Some want to learn how to practice self-compassion without feeling selfish, or to develop assertiveness that aligns with their true needs. Therapy for self-love meets a range of needs from emotional healing to practical skill-building.
Online therapy can make self-love work more accessible, consistent, and tailored to your life. Being in your own familiar space during sessions can make it easier to open up and try new ways of relating to yourself. Virtual sessions also allow you to practice self-care strategies in the environment where daily habits happen, making translation from session to real life smoother.
Because online therapy removes geographic limits, you can find therapists who specialize in self-compassion, shame resilience, or trauma-informed approaches even if those specialists are not available locally. Many therapists also offer digital tools, worksheets, and message-based check-ins that reinforce learning between sessions, supporting steady progress in cultivating self-love.
Online therapy offers convenience and flexibility that often helps people stay consistent with treatment. Scheduling is usually easier, commute time is eliminated, and you can more readily fit sessions into a busy life. For people with mobility limits, social anxiety, or caregiving responsibilities, remote sessions can remove barriers to getting support.
Another benefit is access. Online therapy expands your options so you can search for clinicians with specific experience in self-compassion, cultural competency, or modalities like cognitive-behavioral therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy, or compassion-focused therapy. This makes it more likely you’ll find someone who fits your needs and values.
That said, in-person therapy has strengths too. Some people feel more anchored meeting face-to-face, and certain therapeutic activities may feel easier in a shared physical space. Online therapy is not a lesser option; for many people it is the practical choice that yields better continuity and access to the right expertise.
Early sessions usually involve assessment and goal-setting. You and a therapist will explore where self-critical beliefs come from, what situations trigger harsh self-talk, and what you most want to change. Together you will create compassionate, measurable goals that reflect your values.
Therapeutic techniques can include gentle cognitive restructuring to challenge unhelpful beliefs, mindfulness and self-compassion exercises to change how you relate to emotions, behavioral experiments to practice new behaviors, and boundary-setting skills to protect your wellbeing. If trauma is involved, a trauma-informed therapist may integrate pacing, stabilization, and specific trauma therapies as appropriate.
Online therapy often includes homework-like practices: short daily exercises, journaling prompts, audio-guided meditations, or brief check-ins via secure messaging. Progress tends to be incremental. You will likely notice small shifts first – less self-blame in a particular situation, or the ability to pause before reacting – that build over time into more stable self-acceptance.
Start by looking for therapists who list self-compassion, self-esteem, trauma-informed care, or related specialties in their profiles. Read descriptions to see which approaches they use – for example, cognitive-behavioral therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy, compassion-focused therapy, or mindfulness-based approaches.
Cultural fit is important. Choose someone who understands your background and life context, whether that involves race, ethnicity, gender identity, religion, or family dynamics. This can make it easier to feel seen and to address internalized messages that affect self-worth.
Consider practical factors like session format (video, phone, messaging), availability, fees, and whether they offer brief introductory calls. Many therapists provide a free consultation, which is a good opportunity to ask about their experience helping clients build self-love, what a typical session looks like, and how they measure progress. If the connection does not feel right, it is okay to try another therapist – finding the right fit matters.
Beginning therapy can feel vulnerable, but small first steps make it manageable. Use a directory to search for therapists who specifically mention self-compassion or self-esteem work and filter by online availability. Reach out to one or two providers and ask a few questions about their approach and experience. Schedule a short consultation to see how it feels to speak with them.
Remember that progress happens over time and that seeking support is a meaningful act of self-respect. Finding the right therapist and committing to regular sessions creates the structure and guidance many people need to transform harsh self-criticism into kindness and resilience. You do not have to do this alone – help is available, and taking that first step is a powerful move toward treating yourself with the care you deserve.