You can, it's covered here
what does "add_experimental_option("debuggerAddress", "localhost:8989")" actually do when added to Options() on Python? Selenium related
So e.g.
If you do
(adjust the command for your needs, your chrone path.. and the user profile you want to use). chrome://version can show you the chrome user profile folder for whatever chrome user.
C:\Users\User>"C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --remote-debugging-port=8989 --user-data-dir="C:\Users\User\App
Data\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Profile 3"
C:\Users\User>
Then in your python program
from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.chrome.options import Options
opt = Options()
opt.add_experimental_option("debuggerAddress", "localhost:8989")
selclient = webdriver.Chrome(options=opt)
selclient.get("http://www.dogpile.com")
That python code will not launch a new chrome window. It will connect to the already existing chrome instance that you started from eg the command line.