Online Therapy for Adoptive Parents in Pleasanton & the Tri-Valley, CA

Therapy for adoptive and foster parents struggling with stress, disconnection, and burnout in Pleasanton, Dublin, San Ramon, Danville, and surrounding East Bay communities.

Therapy for Adoptive & Foster Parents in the Bay Area

You were ready for the hard parts. You read the books, took the training hours, sat through the home study. You knew there would be grief, behavioral challenges, adjustment periods. What you were not ready for was how alone you would feel inside it.

Your child threw a shoe at your head during homework and you stayed calm on the outside, walked to the kitchen, and stood at the counter with your hands shaking. Your partner came home and asked how the day went and you said fine because you didn’t have the energy to explain it again. You went to bed replaying the whole thing, wondering if you handled it wrong, wondering if you’re making things worse.

Or maybe it’s quieter than that. Maybe your child is doing well by most measures, school is fine, friendships are forming, but you feel disconnected from her in a way you can’t explain. You watch her playing and you feel something that isn’t quite love and isn’t quite numbness and it scares you because you waited so long for this. You don’t tell anyone because what kind of parent feels that way.

Some adoptive parents come to me when an adoption falls through, when a match didn’t work out or a birth parent changed their mind and the grief hit harder than they expected. Some come during the foster-to-adopt waiting period, when the uncertainty about whether this child will stay or go makes it impossible to sleep or focus at work. Some come years after finalization, when the initial survival mode has worn off and what’s left is exhaustion, distance from their partner, and a growing sense that something is wrong with them for not enjoying this more.

More about my approach to working with adoptive parents here.

When Talk Therapy and Parenting Classes Don’t Help the Stress

If you’ve already tried therapy or parenting workshops, you probably noticed that knowing what to do doesn’t always translate to being able to do it in the moment. You can understand intellectually why your child behaves the way she does. You can memorize the scripts about staying calm and connecting with your child before correcting them.

But when the shoe hits the wall, your body takes over before your brain catches up.

That’s because what you’re carrying isn’t just stress. Your body has been soaking up your child’s distress for months or years, and now you’re stuck on high alert all the time, even when things are calm. You can’t think your way out of that. Talking about it helps you understand what’s happening, but it doesn’t change how your body reacts in the moment.

The approaches I use work with your body’s stress responses directly. The goal is to get you a few more seconds of space between the moment your child escalates and the moment you react, so that you can respond the way you want to.

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What changes with specialized, adoption-competent therapy

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You'll stay in the room when your child is falling apart. Right now when the screaming starts, your body takes over before your brain catches up, your heart races, your jaw locks, and you either match their intensity or shut down completely. After doing this work, you'll feel the activation start and be able to stay with it instead of being hijacked by it. Your child will melt down at dinner and you'll keep your voice steady, not because you're performing calm, but because your body has genuinely learned that their distress isn't an emergency you have to fix in the next thirty seconds. The meltdown will still be hard, but it won't ruin the whole evening, and your child will learn something about what it looks like when someone stays.

You'll feel things again, including the good ones. The numbness that settled in somewhere along the way, the one that makes you go through the motions of family life without feeling much of anything, will start to lift. Your child will say something funny at breakfast and you'll laugh before you've decided whether it's a good day or a bad day. You'll feel genuine warmth when they climb into your lap instead of just relief that they're not in crisis. You'll look at your partner across the room and feel something other than exhaustion and logistics.

You'll stop carrying the shame of struggling with something you chose. You wanted this child. You fought for this child. And some days you wonder what you were thinking, and the guilt of that thought is worse than the hard day that produced it. When the shame loosens, you'll be able to tell your partner you need a break without it feeling like a confession. You'll be honest with your close friends about the hard days instead of performing the grateful, happy adoption story everyone wants to hear. You'll advocate for your child at school without the fear that asking for help means admitting you can't handle this.

You'll grieve what you lost without the grief swallowing your whole week. Whether the grief is about infertility, a failed match, the biological connection you'll never have with your child, or the version of family life you pictured before reality set in, it won’t eclipse the joy. You’ll be able to attend a baby shower without needing to leave early. You'll fill out the school medical history form with its blank spaces and move on with your afternoon instead of carrying it into the next day.

You'll sleep through the night and have energy left for your own life. The 3am anxiety spirals, the ones where you replay every mistake and plan for every catastrophe, will lose their frequency and their intensity. You'll fall asleep without running through tomorrow's potential disasters, wake up without the dread already sitting on your chest, and have enough energy left after the kids are in bed to read something that has nothing to do with adoption or parenting or trauma.

You'll remember that you're a person outside of being this child's parent. Somewhere in the crisis management and the appointments and the IEP meetings and the constant vigilance, you lost track of the parts of yourself that existed before all of this. You'll pick up a hobby you abandoned three years ago, make plans with a friend and keep them, have a conversation about something other than your child's progress, and make a decision about your own career or your own life without the guilt telling you that wanting something for yourself means you're taking something from your family.

You'll have more of yourself to bring home at the end of the day. When your body stops running on high alert all the time, when the depression isn't draining your reserves before noon, when the shame stops taking up so much space, you simply have more to give. Not because you've tried harder or pushed through, but because the weight you've been carrying has gotten lighter. You'll return a friend's text, sit on the floor and play with your child without watching the clock, have a real conversation with your partner after the kids go to bed, and feel like a person who's living their life instead of just surviving it.

Online Adoption Therapy for Adoptive and Foster Parents Across the Tri-Valley and East Bay

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All sessions are conducted through secure, HIPAA-compliant telehealth. You can meet with me from a private room in your home, your parked car during a break, or any quiet space with a stable internet connection. There is no office to drive to, no waiting room, and no time lost to a commute.

I work with adoptive and foster parents throughout the Tri-Valley, including Pleasanton, Dublin, San Ramon, and Danville. I also serve families in Livermore, Walnut Creek, Fremont, Castro Valley, Lafayette, Orinda, and surrounding East Bay communities. I also see clients in San Jose.

Because sessions are online, I work with California residents statewide.

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Summer Verhines, LCSW, online adoption and pregnancy loss therapist

About Summer

Bay Area Therapist for Adoptive and Foster Parents

I spent nine years working in child welfare and adoption before becoming a therapist. I’ve completed home studies, facilitated placements, supported birth parents through placing their child, and walked alongside adoptive families through the years after finalization when the real challenges tend to surface.

I am C.A.S.E. certified in adoption competency, which is a post-graduate training program specifically designed to prepare clinicians to work with the lifelong impact of adoption on adoptive parents, birth parents, and adult adoptees.

This background means I understand the system you’ve been navigating, the training requirements, the court dates, the agency dynamics, and the particular kind of stress that comes from parenting a child who has been through hard things while managing your own response to it.

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More About Working Together

50-minute sessions are $250.

I also offer 90-minute sessions for $375 and intensive sessions (2-4 hours) ranging from $500 to $1,000 for people who want to work intensively.

I don’t take insurance directly, but I can provide Superbills for out-of-network reimbursement if your plan covers that.

I am available early mornings, evenings, and weekends. I provide services online only.

Self-Schedule or Contact Me Below

For the quickest and most confidential option, you’re encouraged to book directly into my calendar by clicking the Self-Schedule Here button below. That button will take you to my HIPAA-compliant calendar where you may request an appointment. Once I confirm your appointment request (typically within 24 hours), I will email you the new client forms to digitally sign. Then, we will meet on your scheduled day.

If you have questions prior to scheduling, you can also use the contact form below, and I’ll reply within 48 business hours. If you don’t see a reply, please check your junk/spam folder.

I look forward to hearing from you!

— Summer Verhines, LCSW

Contact Summer

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Most talk therapy helps you understand why you react the way you do, and that understanding matters. But knowing why the reaction is there doesn’t always stop the reaction. Body-based approaches like EMDR, Brainspotting, and ART work with the part of your brain that drives those automatic reactions, the part that talk alone often can't reach. And because you've already done the work of understanding your responses, you're coming in with a head start.

  • All three involve focusing on a specific memory or experience while your brain works through it in a new way. In EMDR, I guide your eyes back and forth while you hold a memory in mind. Brainspotting uses a fixed eye position to find where stress is stuck in your body. Accelerated Resolution Therapy uses guided imagery and eye movements and is designed to work in fewer sessions. None of these require you to describe painful experiences in detail out loud. Most clients say the experience is intense but manageable, and many notice a shift after just a few sessions. The memory is still there, but it doesn’t set you off the way it used to.

  • Sessions are $250. I’m a private pay practice, which means I don’t bill insurance directly. After each session, I provide a detailed receipt called a superbill that you can submit to your insurance company, and depending on your plan, they may reimburse you for a significant portion of the cost. You can call the number on the back of your insurance card and ask “do I have out-of-network mental health benefits?” to find out before we start.

  • No. You need to be physically located anywhere in California during our sessions because my license (LCSW #68507) covers the entire state. I’m also licensed in Maryland and Idaho.