You've been good at everything. Motherhood is the first thing that won't let you optimize your way through.
Therapists in Greenville, South Carolina
"I've always been good at everything I put my mind to. Motherhood is the first thing I can't optimize my way through."




+9 moreNo commitment. We'll confirm your coverage before your first session.
Virtual therapy for Greenville families
You moved to Greenville for the quality of life, the affordability, the revitalized downtown. The catch is that everyone else moved here for the same reasons, and the postpartum experience in a city full of transplants is often quieter than you'd expect. Postpartum depression and perinatal anxiety thrive when nobody around you knows you well enough to notice you're struggling. Families across Downtown Greenville, Augusta Road, Mauldin, and Simpsonville are dealing with this pattern constantly. The Upstate has grown faster than its specialist mental health infrastructure, and PMH-C certified perinatal therapists are limited in the local market. Phoenix Health therapists hold PMH-C certification, the specialty credential in perinatal mental health, and see Upstate South Carolina clients entirely by secure video. We specialize in postpartum depression, perinatal anxiety, birth trauma, and pregnancy loss. We're in-network with Aetna, BCBS Anthem, Cigna, Molina, and Tricare in SC. Reaching out earlier, before things get worse, is almost always the right call.
Greenville neighborhoods: Downtown Greenville Β· Augusta Road Β· Mauldin Β· Simpsonville
You might benefit from therapy ifβ¦
- βYou've always been the one who has it together, and motherhood is breaking that operating system
- βYou research everything obsessively and you still feel like you're failing
- βYou feel rage when things don't go the way you planned, especially small things
- βYou're comparing yourself constantly to other moms, even ones you don't actually want to be
- βYou feel like a fraud, like everyone is going to find out you don't actually know what you're doing
- βYou can't accept help because you don't want anyone to do it wrong

Dr. Emily Guarnotta
Psychologist & Founder
From our founder
I see a lot of high-achieving women in my practice who have used perfectionism their whole lives, often successfully. Motherhood is usually the first thing that doesn't respond to that strategy, and the collision is brutal. The work isn't to make you stop caring. It's to help you care without the part that keeps you up at 2 a.m. researching things that don't need researching.
What therapy looks like
Our Perfectionism & Motherhood specialists in Greenville, South Carolina
Most Phoenix Health therapists hold PMH-C certification β the gold standard in perinatal mental health.

Nadine Mejia
LCSW, PMH-C
Nadine is a licensed clinical social worker who helps parents navigate postpartum depression, grief, and major life transitions in California, South Carolina, and Florida.
Licensed in CA, SC, FL

Jessica Rudzinski
LPC, LMHC, PMH-C
Jessica works with hopeful and current parents facing infertility, pregnancy loss, and postpartum transitions in South Carolina, New York, and Florida.
Licensed in SC, NY, FL
Real clients. Real relief.
What our clients say about their experience.
βββββ
β"I was terrified of getting it wrong. Every decision felt permanent. My therapist helped me understand that the rigidity was about fear, not love, and that my daughter needed a present mother more than a perfect one. That one sentence is still the thing I come back to."β
β mom of 1
βββββ
β"I compared myself to every mother I saw online and came up short every time. My house wasn't organized enough. My patience wasn't infinite enough. My therapist helped me understand that perfectionism in motherhood is a form of anxiety, not a character trait, and that I'd been holding myself to a standard no real person could meet."β
β first-time mom
βββββ
β"I had spreadsheets. I had every developmental milestone saved. I was tracking sleep to the minute and feeding to the milliliter and I was miserable. My therapist gently pointed out that I was trying to control my way out of uncertainty, and that it wasn't working. Learning to tolerate good enough as a mother was harder than anything I'd done in my career."β
β type-A mom
βββββ
βI had a spreadsheet for everything. The baby didn't care about the spreadsheet. I spent the first six months trying to optimize my way out of suffering and only made it worse. Therapy helped me put the spreadsheet down. I am a better mother now, and a much less miserable one.β
β Kayla, mom of one
Expert care.
Covered in South Carolina.
- βAetna (incl. CVS Health, First Health, & Meritain)
- βBCBS (incl. Anthem, Blue Cross, Blue Shield, & state plans)
- βCigna / Evernorth
- βUnited Healthcare (UHC) / Optum (incl. UBH, UMR, Surest, Oscar, & Oxford)
- βMolina Healthcare
- βTricare (East, Prime, Select)
Most clients pay less than $20 per session.
Accepted Insurance Networks





Ready to start Perfectionism & Motherhood therapy? Hereβs how it works.
The whole process takes about 5 minutes. We handle insurance β you just show up.
- 1
Book your free call
A quick 15-minute chat to hear what you're going through, answer your questions, and make sure we're a great fit for your needs. No cost, no commitment.
- 2
Get matched
We'll pair you with the right specialist for your specific situation. We'll also check your insurance, so you know your exact cost per session before moving forward.
- 3
Start your first session
Meet your therapist from the comfort of home. No commute, no waiting rooms, no judgment. Most clients notice a real difference within just 2 to 3 sessions.
No commitment Β· Most insurance accepted Β· Available this week
Common questions
- Yes, and the goal is not to make you not care. Healthy striving and perfectionism are different things. The work distinguishes between the part of you that does excellent work and the part of you that's being run by fear. You keep the first one.
- Closely. Perfectionism is one of the strongest personality predictors of postpartum mood and anxiety symptoms. The gap between expectation and reality in motherhood is enormous, and perfectionism makes that gap feel like a personal failing rather than a normal feature of the transition.
- Information can be a good thing or a compulsion. If researching brings clarity and confidence, it's working. If researching feeds anxiety and never resolves it, it's functioning as a compulsion. Therapy can help you tell the difference and adjust how much you're doing.
- You'll have to redefine what good means. That's different from lowering. Most clients end up holding a more humane, sustainable, and ultimately more effective version of being a good mother, one that includes their own well-being as part of the equation.
- Yes. Phoenix Health provides telehealth therapy to residents of South Carolina. Sessions are conducted via secure video from your home, office, or anywhere private β no commute required. All Phoenix Health therapists are licensed and authorized to practice in South Carolina.
- PMH-C (Perinatal Mental Health Certification) is awarded by Postpartum Support International (PSI) to clinicians who have completed advanced training in perinatal mental health β covering postpartum depression, anxiety, OCD, birth trauma, and related conditions. It represents the gold standard of specialization in this field.
- If you're struggling β with your mood, your thoughts, your relationship, or just how you're coping β that's enough of a reason to talk to someone. You don't need a diagnosis. A free consultation is a low-commitment first step.
From the Phoenix Health resource center
Articles and guides about perfectionism & motherhood
Trusted by leading voices in parenting and mental health
OBs, doulas, and pediatricians refer their patients to us because we specialize in maternal mental health.
The sooner you start,
the sooner you'll
feel like yourself again.
You've been surviving. It's time to start healing.
No commitment Β· Covered by insurance Β· Available this week
Learning resources
β¨Read our Perfectionism & Motherhood guides βOften goes alongside





