Services
About My Clients
My clients often artist, teachers, other therapist, activist, etc. Clients often find me as they explore how their inner world is connected to the larger systems and vice versa. Many are drawn to inner child and shadow work and come from diverse backgrounds. I support people who experience emotional highs and lows and are ready to reflect on their inner landscape with curiosity, compassion, and honesty. Together, we explore meaning, healing, and connection that honors your lived experience.
My Background and Approach
My background as a therapist is shaped by years of working across diverse settings and relational contexts. I have training in Brainspotting, somatic embodiment and regulation, psychological first aid, which inform my body-based, trauma-attuned approach to healing. I draw from parts work, narrative therapy, and systemic and relational lenses to support clients in understanding how personal, relational, and cultural experiences shape their inner worlds. I have worked with individuals, partners, and communities navigating a wide range of relational dynamics, including relational anarchy, polyamory, monogamy, etc. This experience allows me to support clients in exploring attachment, boundaries, communication, and care. I aim to create a collaborative, grounded space that honors complexity and curiosity.
My Personal Beliefs and Interests
I continuously work towards holding an anti-capitalist and anti-colonial lens as a therapist, recognizing that many forms of suffering are not individual failures but responses to systems built on extraction, exploitation, and disconnection. Capitalism often teaches us to measure worth through productivity, speed, and profit, which can erode our relationships with our bodies, families and communities. Colonization has disrupted ancestral ways of knowing, relating, and healing, and its impacts continue to shape our lives, identities, and access to care. I believe healing includes naming and resisting these systems while reconnecting to interdependence, collective care, and liberatory ways of living. This does not mean placing blame on individuals, but rather honoring how resilience and survival emerge within oppressive structures. In therapy, I aim to create space to examine these influences, reclaim agency, and imagine ways of relating that center dignity and shared humanity.