Therapy for individuals, couples, families, and co-parents.
Kelly Baker Curry, MSW, MEd, LCSW offers individual therapy, couples therapy, family therapy, and co-parenting therapy in Fort Thomas, Kentucky, with virtual therapy options in Kentucky and Ohio.
Individual Therapy
Individual therapy provides a private, confidential space to explore what is happening in your life, your relationships, and your inner world. Sessions are typically weekly and draw on approaches rooted in CBT, ACT, and relational therapy.
Who this is for
- Adults navigating anxiety, grief, stress, burnout, or major life transitions.
- People noticing repeating relationship patterns or wanting deeper self-understanding.
- Clients who want a steady, honest space to reflect and make meaningful change.
Common concerns
- Anxiety & stress
- Burnout
- Grief and loss
- Life transitions
- Relationship patterns
- Self-worth & identity
- Emotional regulation
- Depression
What to expect
- A conversational pace that begins with what feels most important now.
- Reflection on patterns, emotions, relationships, and choices without judgment.
- Practical support alongside deeper insight when tools or next steps are helpful.
Approach
- Grounded in CBT, ACT, and relational therapy.
- Collaborative goal-setting that can evolve as the work deepens.
- Attention to both immediate relief and long-term self-understanding.
Couples Therapy
Couples therapy focuses on the relationship between two people — the patterns, the communication, the connection, and the conflict. Sessions are held with both partners and use emotionally focused approaches to strengthen the relationship.
Who this is for
- Partners feeling stuck in recurring conflict or emotional distance.
- Couples navigating a transition, repair after hurt, or questions about commitment.
- Partners who want help slowing the conversation down enough to hear each other.
Common concerns
- Communication patterns
- Recurring conflict
- Trust and intimacy
- Disconnection
- Navigating transitions
- Premarital support
What to expect
- Both partners are present and supported in naming their experience clearly.
- Sessions look for the cycle underneath conflict, not a person to blame.
- The work focuses on creating conversations that can move somewhere new.
Approach
- Emotionally focused, attachment-informed relationship work.
- Attention to communication, repair, boundaries, and emotional safety.
- A balanced structure where both voices matter and both people are invited in.
Family Therapy
Family therapy sessions can include parents and children, siblings, or any family configuration that is relevant. Structure and pace adapt to who is in the room and what the family needs.
Who this is for
- Families navigating conflict, communication difficulty, or relational rupture.
- Parents and children needing support around transitions, boundaries, or expectations.
- Family members who want help understanding patterns without escalating blame.
Common concerns
- Family conflict
- Parenting dynamics
- Communication
- Boundaries
- Life transitions
- Sibling dynamics
What to expect
- Sessions begin by clarifying who needs to be involved and what feels most pressing.
- Expectations are set early and revisited as the work evolves.
- The pace is structured enough to feel contained while allowing honest conversation.
Approach
- Systems-informed work that looks at patterns across the family, not one problem person.
- Practical support for communication, boundaries, repair, and shared expectations.
- Flexible session structure based on age, family configuration, and goals.
Coparenting Therapy
Co-parenting therapy provides a focused space for parents who share responsibility across separate homes, strained communication, or ongoing conflict. Sessions are practical, structured, and centered on reducing confusion while keeping children's needs in view.
Who this is for
- Co-parents who need clearer communication and steadier boundaries.
- Parents navigating separation, divorce, blended family stress, or shared decision-making.
- Families who want less reactivity and more practical structure around parenting responsibilities.
Common concerns
- Communication boundaries
- Parenting schedules
- Conflict reduction
- Shared expectations
- Transition planning
- Repair after strained conversations
What to expect
- Sessions focus on practical patterns, not deciding who is right or wrong.
- Kelly helps clarify what needs to be communicated, what needs a boundary, and what can be handled differently.
- The work stays grounded in the real conditions of parenting, scheduling, stress, and relationship history.
Approach
- Structured support for communication, expectations, and decision-making.
- Attention to emotional reactivity, trust, and recurring conflict cycles.
- A steady pace that keeps the work clear, respectful, and connected to day-to-day parenting.
Not sure where to begin?
Many people are not sure whether individual therapy, couples therapy, family therapy, or coparenting therapy is the right fit at first. The appointment request form helps the office understand what kind of support you are looking for, how scheduling should be coordinated, and whether therapy in Fort Thomas or virtual therapy in Kentucky and Ohio may be appropriate.
Start with individual therapy if you want one-on-one support for anxiety, grief, trauma, stress, self-understanding, or a life transition.
Consider couples therapy when recurring conflict, communication patterns, trust, or disconnection are affecting the relationship.
Family therapy may fit when several family members need a calmer way to talk through conflict, transition, parenting stress, or boundaries.
Coparenting therapy can help parents focus on practical communication, expectations, and child-centered coordination.
Services FAQ.
Does Kelly offer individual therapy?
Yes. Individual therapy is available for adults seeking support with anxiety, grief, trauma, stress, life transitions, relationship patterns, and personal growth.
Does Kelly offer couples therapy?
Yes. Couples therapy supports partners working on communication, recurring conflict, trust, disconnection, repair, and relationship stress.
Does Kelly offer family therapy?
Yes. Family therapy supports families navigating communication challenges, conflict, parenting stress, transitions, boundaries, and reconnection.
What concerns can therapy help with?
Therapy may support anxiety, grief, trauma, depression, relationship stress, family conflict, communication concerns, life transitions, and emotional overwhelm.
Ready to take the first step?
You do not need to have everything figured out. Reach out and Kelly will follow up about fit, availability, and next steps.