Get treatment for all your mental healthcare needs. You are the expert on you—but sometimes you need the help of a trained professional to help you make sense of it all. Our therapists offer a variety of treatment modalities so you can get the help you need in a way that works best for you.

Therapy for eating disorders, disordered eating, and body image

Compassionate, weight-inclusive care for people who want a healthier relationship with food, their bodies, and themselves.

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When food or body struggles take over, everything else can feel harder

Eating disorders and body image struggles rarely exist on their own. They can quietly take up space in your relationships, your work, and your sense of self — leaving you feeling isolated, ashamed, or disconnected from the people around you.

You might notice:

  • Food or body thoughts dominating your day

  • Pulling away from friends, partners, or family

  • Feeling stuck between wanting support and wanting to hide

  • Wondering if your struggles are “serious enough” to ask for help

If this feels familiar, you’re not alone.

At Conason Psychological Services, eating disorder treatment is the core of our work. We also understand that food and body struggles often intersect with relationships, mood, identity, life transitions, and emotional overwhelm. Our therapists are experienced in holding that complexity with care.

Whether you’re seeking support for your relationship with food, your body, yourself, or the people in your life, we’ll meet you where you are and help you find a path forward — without judgment, pressure, or diet-culture-driven goals.

With support, many people begin to experience more space around food and body thoughts, deeper connection in their relationships, and a greater sense of steadiness, peace, and satisfaction in daily life.

Healing is possible. And you don’t have to do this alone.

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How we can support you

Therapy is a collaborative process grounded in trust, transparency, and care. You are the expert on your own experience — and sometimes it helps to have skilled support to make sense of what’s happening and find a way forward.

We offer several ways to work together, depending on your needs and where you are right now:

Individual therapy focused on eating disorders, body image, relationships, and other emotional concerns

Group therapy for eating disorder recovery and body image concerns, offering shared support and connection

Couples therapy for relationship and intimacy concerns, including when food, body image, or emotional patterns are impacting connection

Virtual and in-person options to support access, continuity, and flexibility

You don’t need to know exactly what kind of therapy you’re looking for to get started. We’re happy to help you think through what might be most supportive.

Who we work with

We specialize in working with people whose relationship with food and their bodies has become a source of distress, disconnection, or overwhelm. Eating disorders and disordered eating are the core focus of our practice.

This includes support for people navigating:

Eating disorders and disordered eating, including binge eating disorder, bulimia, anorexia, ARFID, orthorexia, and patterns that may not fit neatly into a diagnosis.

Body image concerns and experiences shaped by weight stigma and diet culture

Support around eating and body concerns that can arise in the context of GLP-1 medications or bariatric surgery

Because eating and body struggles rarely exist in isolation, we also work with the emotional and relational concerns that often intersect with them, such as:

Anxiety, depression, and mood concerns

Relationship and intimacy challenges

Life transitions (emerging adulthood, parenthood, career changes, retirement)

Identity, self-esteem, and sexual concerns

You don’t need to fit neatly into a category to reach out. Most people don’t; we’ll take the time to understand what’s going on for you.

Schedule a complimentary 15-minute consultation to see if working together feels like a good fit.

 
 
 
 
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The curious paradox is that when I accept myself just as I am, then I can change
— Carl Rogers
 
 
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