15+ years as a New Jersey divorce attorney. Personally divorced. Credentialed anger management specialist. For Monmouth County residents navigating divorce — whether you filed, were served, or are somewhere in between — this is counseling built for your actual situation, not a textbook version of it.
No psychologist, social worker, or licensed therapist across Monmouth County can offer you what I offer. I'm not guessing what divorce court feels like. I'm not reading about it in a casebook. I've lived it from three angles — and every session reflects that.
15+ years practicing family law across all 21 NJ counties. I know what your attorney is doing, what the judge is weighing, and why certain emotional reactions destroy cases before they start.
I went through my own divorce. I know the 3 a.m. rage, the custody fear, the financial panic, the confusion over what changed. A therapist who has never been there is reading your pain through a textbook.
Court-approved, credentialed, and experienced with the exact emotional patterns divorce produces. This isn't generic anger work — it's surgical, divorce-specific, and built for people fighting to hold the line.
Monmouth County is a study in contrasts: the estate wealth of Rumson, Colts Neck, and Spring Lake sits minutes from the working neighborhoods of Long Branch and Eatontown. The shore dimension — with yacht clubs, beach clubs, and summer-house dynamics — adds a layer of social visibility to divorce that other counties don't have.
Many Monmouth divorces involve NYC finance commuters (who take the ferry from the Bayshore or the train from Red Bank), pharmaceutical executives, small-business owners along the Route 35 corridor, and multi-generational shore families whose second homes become contested assets.
Monmouth's commuters reach Manhattan via ferry from Atlantic Highlands, NJ Transit from Red Bank and Long Branch, or car via the Garden State Parkway. Shore-based business owners often work local hours. Our sessions flex around both.
Monmouth's Family Division sits at the Freehold courthouse and manages a calendar that spans shore affluent communities, executive suburbs, and more working-class inland townships — producing a broad range of divorce profiles in the same courtroom.
In Monmouth, we see a particular prevalence of the anger of infidelity (tight social communities where everyone knows everyone), the anger of betrayal (country-club and neighborhood-level social fallout), and the anger of the unknown (when a high-income spouse suddenly loses half the household's visible wealth).
You don't know what's happening to your life, your finances, your kids. The confusion becomes its own source of rage.
The questions with no answers keep burning out your capacity to think straight — the one thing court demands.
The betrayal is personal. The legal system doesn't care. That mismatch creates a specific rage we address head-on.
Equitable distribution can feel like legalized theft. Unprocessed, it sabotages every negotiation.
Not just infidelity — lies about money, kids, family, the legal process itself. Grief mixed with fury.
Watching your children turn against you is one of the most devastating angers in family law.
They're not honoring the order. Managed wrong, your rage makes you look like the problem instead of the victim.
Sometimes the ruling is wrong. The anger is legitimate — but it has to be channeled into strategy, not contempt.
Each Monmouth County town has its own divorce anger management page — with local context, nearest office, court information, and the specific dynamics of divorce in that community. Click your town to go deeper.
Three one-on-one sessions · Remote or in person · Either spouse welcome
Additional sessions available on a continuing basis — no pressure, no upsell required.
Three viewpoints. One counselor. $500 for three sessions. Serving every corner of Monmouth County — and all of New Jersey.
Divorce Enroll — Get StartedOr call (201) 205-3201