Being a therapist can be deeply meaningful work. You bring your presence, thoughtfulness, and care into the room each day, often holding complexity that few others see. At times, that steady holding can feel quietly exhausting — especially when there isn’t adequate space for your own experience.
The work can stir personal themes, touch old narratives, or surface questions about adequacy and identity, regardless of how long you’ve been practicing. It can illuminate tensions in your relationships, your history, or the expectations you place on yourself as a clinician.
My goal is to create a space where you can fully inhabit the role of client. We might explore your clinical work, your inner life, your personal relationships, and the places where your professional and personal selves intersect — guided by what feels most relevant to you. My approach is fluid and attuned, shaped by years of clinical experience and integration across modalities. The work is collaborative and spacious rather than protocol-driven, unless structure is something you actively want or need.
Therapy offers room to think, to feel, and to recalibrate — so your work can remain meaningful and your life feel more fully your own.