Co-parenting after separation, divorce, or a major family transition is one of the most emotionally demanding challenges parents face. Even with the best intentions, conflict, resentment, and communication breakdowns can make collaboration feel impossible. Bhava Therapy Group offers co-parenting and communication therapy in Westchester to help parents reduce conflict, improve collaboration, and create a more stable environment for their children.

Common co-parenting challenges
- High conflict, recurring arguments, or complete communication breakdowns
- Differing parenting styles, values, or approaches to discipline
- Emotional reactivity that spills over and impacts children
- Difficulty setting and maintaining healthy boundaries
- Ongoing resentment, mistrust, or unresolved hurt from the relationship
Bhava’s approach to co-parenting therapy
Co-parenting therapy at Bhava is focused, practical, and child-centered. Sessions help parents in White Plains and across Westchester County work toward:
- Clearer, more effective communication and mutual understanding
- Reduced emotional reactivity and more grounded responses
- Child-centered decision-making that prioritizes family stability
- Healthier boundaries and realistic expectations for both parents
The goal is not perfection, but stability, respect, and emotional safety for the whole family.


Who this approach works best for
- Divorced or separated parents in Westchester navigating ongoing conflict or tension
- Parents struggling to communicate effectively about their children’s needs
- Families seeking healthier, more sustainable co-parenting patterns
Location & access
Bhava Therapy Group offers in-person co-parenting and communication therapy in White Plains, serving families throughout Westchester County. Virtual therapy is also available across New York State. Ready to take the first step? Contact us today to schedule a consultation. We’re in network with major insurance providers.
FAQs
Ideally yes, as co-parenting therapy is most effective when both parents participate. However, therapy can begin with one parent and expand from there.
No. The focus of co-parenting therapy is improving communication and parenting collaboration, not the romantic relationship or reconciliation.
Yes. One of the primary goals of co-parenting therapy is reducing children’s exposure to conflict and increasing their sense of emotional safety at home.
Therapists at Bhava are trained to structure conversations in a way that feels safe and productive, even when tensions are high.
Bhava focuses on voluntary, collaborative therapeutic work and may not meet the specific requirements of court-mandated programs. We are happy to help clarify what may be the right fit for your situation.