
Kaylyn Morris
MA, PLPC
Kaylyn is a highly skilled and compassionate therapist specializing in trauma, PTSD, co-parenting, anxiety, parental alienation, and marriage therapy. With a solid educational foundation and a commitment to continuous growth, Kaylyn is dedicated to making a profound difference in the lives of her clients.
About Me
Many couples seek therapy when communication has broken down, conflict feels constant, or emotional connection has begun to fade. In these moments, having a supportive and neutral space to talk, understand one another, and rebuild connection can make a meaningful difference.
Kaylyn works with individuals, couples, and families navigating trauma, high-conflict co-parenting, complex family dynamics, parental alienation, and family reunification. Her work frequently focuses on families experiencing the emotional and relational strain that can arise during divorce, custody disputes, and prolonged family court involvement, while also supporting individuals and couples working through anxiety, trauma, and relationship challenges.
Kaylyn earned her Bachelor of Science in Psychology from the University of Central Missouri in 2017, and her Master’s Degree in Clinical Mental Health Counseling from Geneva College in Beaver Falls, PA in 2023, graduating at the top of her class. She is an active member of the American Counseling Association and is certified in Psychological First Aid.
Kaylyn works extensively with individuals and couples and finds great meaning in helping couples strengthen their relationships, improve communication, rebuild trust, and reconnect with one another.
Kaylyn believes that healthy relationships are built through understanding, intentional communication, and emotional connection, and she works collaboratively with couples to help them reconnect and develop healthier relational patterns.
She also supports individuals experiencing trauma, PTSD, anxiety, and relational stress, helping them process difficult life experiences while developing effective coping strategies, emotional regulation skills, and greater personal resilience.
In addition to individual and couples therapy, Kaylyn has developed a specialized clinical focus working with families navigating high-conflict co-parenting and complex family dynamics, particularly when families are experiencing the emotional strain that can accompany divorce, custody disputes, and prolonged family court involvement.
Her work supports parents in developing healthier co-parenting dynamics, reducing conflict, and prioritizing the emotional well-being of their children despite ongoing legal or relational challenges. Kaylyn helps families move away from adversarial patterns and toward more stable, child-focused co-parenting relationships that support long-term emotional health for both parents and children.
A significant part of her practice involves working with families impacted by parental alienation, strained parent-child relationships, and disrupted family connections. Kaylyn helps guide families through the delicate process of rebuilding trust, repairing attachment wounds, and supporting safe and meaningful family reunification when relationships have been damaged or fractured over time or through prolonged family conflict.
Kaylyn understands that rebuilding parent-child relationships often requires patience, structure, and a thoughtful therapeutic process that prioritizes the emotional safety of the child while supporting healthy reconnection with parents.
Kaylyn approaches therapy with warmth, clarity, and a deep respect for the complexity of family systems. Her goal is to provide a balanced and supportive environment where individuals, couples, and families can begin to heal, reconnect, and build healthier relational patterns.
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My Specialties:
• Marriage & Couples Counseling
• Individual Therapy
• Trauma & PTSD
• Anxiety
• Relationship Conflict & Communication
• Co-Parenting Counseling
• Divorce & Separation
• High-Conflict Family Dynamics
• Parental Alienation
• Family Reunification Therapy
In supervision with Jessica Ginther, LPC, 2019040727
