Adult Children of Alcoholics Therapy in Wyndmoor, Pennsylvania
- Apr 8
- 2 min read
Updated: Apr 10
Growing up in an environment shaped by alcohol use, drug use, or other family dysfunction can leave a lasting impact, often in ways that aren’t always obvious at first.
You may have learned to stay hyper-aware of others, to take on more than your share of responsibility, or to push your own needs aside. You might feel anxious in relationships, unsure of your boundaries, or disconnected from yourself in ways that are hard to explain.
If you identify as an adult child of an alcoholic (ACOA), you’re not alone, and your experiences make sense in the context of what you’ve been through.

ACOA Therapy is Trauma Therapy
Being raised in an unpredictable or emotionally unsafe environment is a form of complex trauma.
Even if things “looked okay” from the outside, the internal experience may have involved:
difficulty trusting yourself or others
people-pleasing or over-functioning
feeling responsible for others’ emotions
chronic anxiety, shame, or self-doubt
As a therapist who specializes in complex trauma, I approach this work with an understanding that these patterns didn’t come from nowhere, they were adaptations that helped you get through.
And they can be gently worked with, at a pace that feels safe.
Your Experience is Your Own
There is no single way to identify as an Adult Child of an Alcoholic (ACOA).
For some, group spaces like 12-step programs (such as Adult Children of Alcoholics) feel deeply supportive and healing. Therapy can be a meaningful complement to that work.
For others, those spaces haven’t felt like the right fit, or you may be looking for something more individualized.
Both paths are valid.
Therapy offers a space that is tailored to you, your story, your pace, and the specific ways your experiences have shaped you.
How ACOA Therapy Can Support You
Therapy for adult children of alcoholics can help you:
understand how your past experiences are shaping your present
build healthier, more secure relationships
develop boundaries that feel clear and sustainable
reconnect with your needs, emotions, and sense of self
work through underlying trauma held in the body and nervous system
move from survival patterns into a greater sense of stability and choice
Healing from complex trauma is possible, and you don’t have to do it alone.
I offer in-person therapy for adult children of alcoholics in my office in Wyndmoor, PA which is near Glenside and Philadelphia, PA. I also offer ACOA therapy virtually in Pennsylvania and Ohio.
If you’re looking for a space where you feel understood and supported, you’re welcome to reach out.