Center For Conscious Living
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Center For Conscious Living
At the Center for Conscious Living you will learn to make positive changes in your life. Dr. Carol B. Low, a licensed clinical psychologist, is your guide to growth-oriented solutions and deeper self-knowledge. While predominantly focused on individual and family therapy, we also offer group psychotherapy as well as weekend intensives for out-of-town clients.

Specializing in efficient psychotherapeutic techniques such as clinical hypnosis and cognitive, rational-emotive, and experiential therapy, the Center offers effective solutions to enhance your life. The Center for Conscious Living has a unique practice philosophy. We believe your psychotherapy should be guided by a few basic principles.
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D. is a licensed clinical psychologist. She received her Doctorate in clinical psychology from the Forest Institute of Professional Psychology, later known as the Illinois School of Professional Psychology. Dr. Low has a Masters in Clinical Psychology, a Masters in Family and Child Studies, and a Montessori teaching certificate, as well as training in preparing families for childbirth and parenting.
Founding partner Stephen R. Lloyd, Ph. D. received his doctorate in clinical psychology from the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC). Dr. Lloyd received specialized training in psychotherapy, alcoholism treatment, and clinical hypnosis during an APA-Approved Internship in Clinical Psychology at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Knoxville, Iowa.
The answer to the above questions lies in determining what will work for you to promote euphoria and happiness. At the Center for Conscious Living, we believe the answer is Unconditional Self-Acceptance. Social scientists have been struggling for years to measure self-esteem. It turns out to be a rather elusive concept.
Depression is a state of mind: A powerfully negative mood that interferes with your daily life. Depression is more than sadness. When you are depressed, you are sad, despondent, disinterested, lethargic. You feel hopeless or helpless. You may cry all the time or feel as if you absolutely cannot get out of bed in the morning.
We are all afraid of something. Fear helps to keep us alive. It keeps us from running into the street and touching the stove and jumping out of 10-story windows. It reminds us to wash our hands and handle broken glass carefully. When normal fear starts to limit your life in seemingly irrational ways, we call that a phobia.
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