Counselling for blended families in Edmonton, St. Albert, and virtually across Alberta. Registered Psychologists regulated by the College of Alberta Psychologists (CAP), Certified Canadian Counsellors regulated by the Canadian Counselling and Psychological Association (CCPA), and Registered Social Workers regulated by the Alberta College of Social Workers (ACSW). In-person and virtual sessions available.
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Maybe you have been thinking about this for a while without doing anything about it. You might be unsure whether the tension at home is just a rough patch that will settle on its own, or whether it is something that could use outside support. You might also wonder whether your situation is serious enough to bring to a counsellor, or whether other families seem to manage these transitions without help.
If your household has changed shape recently, you may recognize some of these patterns: conversations that start calmly but escalate over small things like chores, bedtimes, or whose rules apply. A child who has gone quiet or started acting out since the move. A partner who feels caught between their kids and the new family structure. A sense of walking on eggshells around topics that used to feel simple.
These reactions are common when families are reorganizing. They do not mean something is broken or that anyone has failed. They reflect the reality that blending households involves grief, loyalty, identity, and practical logistics all at once. Most families do not have a script for this, and most were never taught how to talk about it.
If you are weighing whether structured support could help your family find steadier ground, this page explains what blended family adjustment counselling involves, how sessions work, and what to expect. You may find it useful whether you are considering support for yourself, for your family, or gathering information for someone else.
This service is designed for families navigating the practical and emotional changes that come with blending households. That may include:
Wholesome Psychology is not an emergency or crisis service. If you or someone in your family is in immediate danger or at risk of harm, please contact:
Blended family adjustment counselling is a form of relational support focused on the transitions, roles, and communication patterns that emerge when families combine. It is not a diagnostic service. The International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11) includes relational and adjustment concerns under factors influencing health status, which means these experiences are recognized in clinical frameworks without being treated as disorders (World Health Organization [WHO], n.d.).
This service is not legal advice, a custody or access evaluation, or a crisis intervention. It is a structured, confidential space where family members can explore what is and is not working, at a pace that feels manageable.
Sessions may involve one person, a couple, a caregiver pair, or multiple family members, depending on the goals. The format is discussed collaboratively. The therapist does not take sides or decide who is right. Confidentiality applies to what is shared in sessions, and its limits are explained clearly at the start of care.
You may not think of what you are experiencing as something that needs professional support. Many people live with these patterns for months or years before recognizing them. You might notice:
These experiences are common responses to a significant life change. They do not mean the family is failing. They reflect the complexity of reorganizing relationships, routines, and roles. Structured support can help families work through these patterns with more clarity and less friction.
There is no fixed number of sessions. Some families find that a few focused conversations are enough to shift a pattern. Others benefit from longer-term work as the family continues to adjust over time.
The approaches used in blended family adjustment counselling draw on relational and family-focused frameworks. The research base specific to blended family counselling is still developing, and the evidence summaries below reflect what is currently available. Outcomes vary from family to family.
What it helps with: Patterns of communication, roles, and boundaries within the family unit as a whole.
Evidence summary: The Canadian Psychological Association [CPA] notes that relationship distress often involves patterns of interaction rather than individual pathology, and that psychological interventions can help couples and families develop healthier communication and conflict resolution skills (CPA, 2021). Family-focused approaches are widely used in clinical practice for relational concerns, though research specific to stepfamily or blended family configurations remains limited.
Limitations: Most family therapy research has focused on intact or separated families rather than blended family structures specifically. Individual responses vary, and family counselling requires willingness from participating members.
What it helps with: Building realistic expectations, parenting skills, and couple communication within stepfamily structures.
Evidence summary: A controlled study evaluating a structured, interactive programme for stepfamilies found that participants reported improvements in couple relationship quality, parenting confidence, and stepfamily adjustment (Gelatt et al., 2010). The programme used behaviour modelling and skill-building exercises tailored to the unique dynamics of stepfamily life.
Limitations: This study used a self-administered web-based format, which differs from in-person clinical counselling. Generalizability to diverse family structures and clinical populations has not been established.
What it helps with: Reducing conflict escalation, improving the quality of conversations between partners and between caregivers across households.
Evidence summary: Research on relationship distress indicates that how conflict is handled matters more than whether conflict occurs, and that structured communication skills training can help reduce distress in close relationships (CPA, 2021). The Canadian Mental Health Association [CMHA] identifies family support and open communication as key factors in maintaining wellbeing during family transitions (CMHA, n.d.).
Limitations: Communication-focused approaches work best when all parties are willing to participate. These methods address interactional patterns and may not be sufficient for families dealing with concurrent mental health concerns, substance use, or safety risks.
Recovery and adjustment are not linear. Some families notice a shift in how they communicate within the first few sessions. Others find that deeper patterns take longer to surface and work through. Some people find relief from just 2-3 sessions focused on a specific pressure point, while families dealing with layered transitions may benefit from a longer course of support.
Factors that influence outcomes include the nature and duration of the stressors, the willingness of family members to participate, current life circumstances, and the fit between the family and the therapist. No therapy guarantees a specific outcome.
If the therapeutic fit does not feel right, that is worth naming. The admin team can help match you with a different clinician, and changing therapists or approaches is always an option.
What you share in counselling is confidential. Depending on clinician designation, your therapist is bound by the ethical standards of their applicable professional body, including the College of Alberta Psychologists (CAP) for Registered Psychologists, the Canadian Counselling and Psychological Association (CCPA) for Certified Canadian Counsellors, and the Alberta College of Social Workers (ACSW) for Registered Social Workers. In Alberta, client information is protected under the Health Information Act (HIA) and the Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA).
There are limited legal exceptions to confidentiality:
When more than one family member participates in counselling, the therapist clarifies at the outset how privacy, participation, and information-sharing boundaries will be handled within the counselling process.
Your therapist will explain these limits clearly during the first session. You are welcome to ask questions before sharing anything personal.
Sessions are 50 minutes. You can meet your therapist in person at our Edmonton or St. Albert locations, or virtually from anywhere in Alberta.
We ask for 24 hours notice to cancel or reschedule. Late cancellations or missed appointments incur a fee.
Hours: Monday to Friday 8 AM to 9 PM, Saturday and Sunday 9 AM to 5 PM. Virtual counselling is available across Alberta.
Phone: 780-904-4880. Email: info@wholesomepsychology.ca.
No. You decide what you share and when. Some people prefer to start with present-day patterns and practical concerns rather than revisiting past events in detail. Your therapist follows your pace, not a script. You can work on communication, boundaries, or current tensions without disclosing anything you are not ready to discuss.
Yes. Counselling is confidential under Alberta's Health Information Act (HIA) and the Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA). There are limited exceptions, including risk of serious harm, suspected child abuse or neglect, and court orders. Your therapist explains these limits in the first session. For more detail, see the Confidentiality and Privacy section above.
There is no fixed number. Some families find that a few focused sessions are enough to address a specific concern or shift a stuck pattern. Others benefit from longer-term support as the family continues to adjust. Your therapist reviews progress regularly, and the plan adapts as your needs change.
Fit matters. If the approach, pace, or style does not feel right for your family, that is worth raising. The admin team can help you find a different clinician within the practice. New clients may access their first session at 50% off to help find the right therapeutic fit.
Yes. Virtual sessions are available across Alberta and follow the same confidentiality standards as in-person appointments. Many families find virtual sessions practical when coordinating schedules across multiple households.
No. Counselling can involve one person, a couple, a caregiver pair, or multiple family members. The format depends on the goals. Some families start with one or two people and bring in others later. Your therapist can discuss which arrangement may be most useful as a starting point.
Yes. If communication between co-parents, routines across homes, or transitions between households are part of the concern, those topics can be included in counselling. The therapist does not take sides or make custody recommendations. The focus is on building workable communication and reducing friction around shared parenting responsibilities.
If there is an immediate safety concern, please contact 911 or the Family Violence Info Line at 310-1818 (24/7, toll-free). Wholesome Psychology is not an emergency service. If someone in the family is experiencing ongoing risk, your therapist can discuss safety planning and appropriate referrals as part of the counselling process.
Wholesome Psychology's team includes Registered Psychologists, Registered Provisional Psychologists, Registered Social Workers, Certified Canadian Counsellors, Mental Health Therapists, and Student Therapists. Psychologists are registered with the College of Alberta Psychologists (CAP), Certified Canadian Counsellors are regulated by the Canadian Counselling and Psychological Association (CCPA), and Registered Social Workers are regulated by the Alberta College of Social Workers (ACSW). Provisional psychologists practise under the supervision of a senior registered psychologist.
Many clinicians on the team have training in family counselling, relational concerns, co-parenting, and adjustment-related issues. To review individual profiles, visit the Our Therapists page. For guidance on choosing a clinician, use the Match with a Therapist tool or call 780-904-4880.
Blended family transitions affect children and adolescents in ways that may not always be visible. A child who was settled in one household may struggle with new routines, new siblings, or changes in their relationship with a parent. These responses are common and do not necessarily indicate a clinical problem.
Wholesome Psychology offers counselling for children, adolescents, and young people. Therapists working with younger clients use age-appropriate approaches and collaborate with caregivers to support the child's environment. Related services include Child and Youth Mental Health and Adolescent Mental Health counselling.
If this service feels relevant to what your family is going through, here are the next steps:
New clients may access their first session at 50% off to help find the right therapeutic fit.
Starting the conversation is enough.
References