Understanding Dependent Personality Disorder
Dependent Personality Disorder (DPD) is characterized by a pervasive and excessive need to be taken care of, that leads to submissive and clinging behaviour and fears of separation. People with DPD have difficulty making everyday decisions without an excessive amount of advice and reassurance from others, need others to assume responsibility for most major areas of their life, have difficulty expressing disagreement with others because of fear of loss of support or approval, and feel uncomfortable or helpless when alone. DPD typically has its roots in early attachment experiences – often involving overprotective or controlling caregiving that prevented the development of confidence in one’s own judgments and capacities. The pervasive self-doubt and need for external guidance that characterize DPD are not weakness – they are the predictable outcome of early experiences that failed to foster autonomy.

Therapists Offering Dependent Personality Disorder Support
About Dependent Personality Disorder Therapy
Why seek therapy?
People with DPD seek therapy when the pattern of dependency has created significant costs – relationships that have become exploitative or unhealthy because of the need for closeness and care, the inability to function adequately when a relationship ends, or a growing recognition that their life is being shaped by others’ preferences and decisions rather than their own. Many come following the end of a significant relationship that they experienced as catastrophic.
How therapy helps
Therapy for DPD uses CBT and Schema Therapy as the primary approaches – addressing the core beliefs about self (incompetence, helplessness) and others (that they will leave if you are not sufficiently compliant and dependent) that maintain the DPD pattern. Behavioural work builds practical autonomy – gradually developing the capacity to make decisions, tolerate disagreement, and function independently. The therapeutic relationship provides a safe context in which autonomy is supported rather than undermined.
Benefits of Dependent Personality Disorder Therapy
Building Genuine Self-Trust
DPD is maintained by a profound belief in one’s own incompetence and need for others to guide and care. Therapy builds a more accurate and confident sense of one’s own capacities – providing the foundation for genuine autonomy.
Tolerating Independence
The fear of independence and of being alone is one of the most anxiety-provoking features of DPD. Graduated approaches build genuine tolerance for independence – demonstrating through experience that it is safe and manageable.
Healthier Relationships
DPD typically produces relationships that are unequal, often unhealthy, and sometimes exploitative. Building healthier self-confidence and autonomy produces the capacity for more genuine, balanced, and mutually respectful relationships.
Genuine autonomy is possible – even when DPD has made it feel completely out of reach.
Start Feeling Better.
Our Hamilton therapists provide compassionate, expert therapy for Dependent Personality Disorder. No referral needed. Book online or call (905) 962-2220. Evening and weekend appointments available in person in Hamilton or online anywhere in Ontario.
Our Approach to Dependent Personality Disorder Therapy
DPD therapy at Empire begins with creating a therapeutic relationship that models and supports autonomy rather than fostering further dependency – an important feature of effective DPD therapy.
CBT addresses the core beliefs about helplessness and incompetence that maintain DPD, building a more accurate and confident self-perception. Behavioural work gradually builds practical independence – starting with small, manageable autonomous decisions and building progressively.
Schema Therapy addresses the early maladaptive schemas – particularly vulnerability to harm, incompetence, and subjugation – that underlie DPD, tracing their origins in early caregiving experiences.
Relationship patterns are addressed directly – helping clients recognize the costs of dependency-based relational styles and develop the capacity for more equal, authentic, and mutually respectful connections.

Common Questions About Dependent Personality Disorder Therapy
I cannot seem to make decisions without checking with others first. Is that DPD?
The inability to make decisions without excessive reassurance-seeking is one of the hallmark features of DPD. If it is significantly impairing your functioning and autonomy, a clinical assessment is warranted.
I am terrified of being alone. Is therapy going to push me toward independence before I am ready?
No. Effective DPD therapy builds autonomy gradually and at your pace – never by forcing independence but by progressively building the confidence and capacity that make independence feel manageable rather than terrifying.
Is a referral required?
No. You can book directly online or by calling (905) 962-2220.
History of Dependent Personality Disorder Treatment
Evolution of Treatment
Personality disorders were long considered untreatable or extremely difficult to treat, and the stigma associated with them contributed to inadequate care. The development of Dialectical Behaviour Therapy by Marsha Linehan in the late 1980s was a watershed moment – providing the first strongly evidence-based treatment specifically developed for personality disorder presentations, particularly BPD. Subsequent decades have seen significant advances in understanding and treating personality disorders.
A Modern Approach in Canada
Current best practice in Canada uses evidence-based psychological therapies – DBT, Schema Therapy, Mentalization-Based Treatment, Transference-Focused Psychotherapy – as the primary treatments for personality disorders. Medication may address specific symptoms but is not a primary treatment. The field increasingly emphasizes the role of early relational experiences in personality disorder development, and the importance of a strong, stable therapeutic relationship as the primary vehicle of change.
Your own judgment matters. Therapy helps you trust it.
Ready to Take the Next Step?
No referral needed. Our Hamilton therapists provide compassionate, expert therapy for Dependent Personality Disorder. Book online today or call (905) 962-2220. Evening and weekend appointments available in person in Hamilton or online anywhere in Ontario.