Services
- Individual
About My Clients
You may not have words yet for what you are carrying. Only the sense that something went unmet early, and that it shapes everything now. Maybe your parent was absent, overwhelming, or simply not quite there. Maybe you are microdosing and want a therapist who takes the medicine and the psyche seriously. Maybe burnout finally broke through what competence could not protect. I work with people who are done managing and ready to go deeper.
My Background and Approach
I trained in counseling psychology with a focus on perinatal mental health and the ways early relational experience lives in the body and the mind long after the fact. My approach is depth oriented. Not a framework applied to you, but a way of listening carefully for what is underneath. The thing you almost said but did not. The way your breath changed when you mentioned your a parent. Before this work I spent years as a senior technical product manager. I know the particular shape of that life from the inside. I am queer and non-binary. If you have ever felt like the rooms you move through were not quite built for you, I will understand what you mean. I work privately, out of network. Superbills available.
My Personal Beliefs and Interests
I practice from a liberatory, intersectional feminist framework, which means I believe that suffering is never only personal. The exhaustion, the grief, the compulsive competence. These develop inside systems. I will not pretend the consulting room exists outside of power, race, gender, and economics. I am queer and non-binary, an active member of the LGBTQ community, and committed to a practice that is genuinely affirming. Not just in policy but in how I listen and what I name. Before I became a therapist I volunteered extensively with Plymouth Housing in Seattle, working alongside individuals in interim housing rebuilding their lives. That work grounded my understanding of structural violence and fueled a commitment to advocacy I carry into this practice. I hold reduced fee slots and take accessibility seriously. I am drawn to the question of psychedelic equity. Who gets access, whose healing is centered, and whose is not. That question matters to me clinically and politically.