Therapy for Therapists & Clinical Supervision

Specialization in serving those in the mental health and human services field; offering either therapy for therapists or reflective clinical supervision.

Supporting the healers. healing for healers. therapy for therapists. support for clinical supervision

With over a decade of experience supervising and mentoring new clinicians and interns, I am deeply committed to supporting therapists; particularly those in the early stages of their professional journey as they navigate the complex intersection of personal and clinical growth. The work of psychotherapy inevitably invites us to encounter our own histories, attachment patterns, and wounds. Developing awareness of how our personal experiences and early traumas may be activated in the therapeutic relationship is essential not only for ethical and effective practice, but also for authentic healing for both ourselves and for those we serve.

I offer both clinical supervision and therapy for therapists; two distinct yet complementary spaces for reflection, growth, and integration. While both emphasize self-awareness, emotional insight, and professional development, they serve different purposes and have distinct boundaries. Clinical supervision focuses on deepening clinical skills, ethical understanding, and reflective capacity within the therapeutic process. Therapy, on the other hand, provides a dedicated space to explore your own history, identity, and inner world as a person and clinician. To maintain the integrity of each role, and ethical practice, I do not provide both therapy and supervision to the same individual.

Therapists, social workers and mental health professionals hold space for the pain, trauma, and complexity of others every day, often while carrying their own untended wounds beneath the surface. I specialize in providing therapy for therapists, with an understanding of the unique vulnerabilities, pressures, and expectations that come with this profession.

Together, we’ll look at how complex trauma, anxiety, depression, or ADHD intersects with the demands of clinical practice and daily life. Many therapists come to therapy when their personal experiences begin to surface through their work or as they deepen their understanding of psychodynamic concepts and theories. For more seasoned clinicians, therapy can be a place to continue evolving, to be seen, held, and understood beyond the role of helper.

My approach is trauma-informed, attachment-based, and psychodynamic, integrating neuroscience and mindfulness to support nervous system regulation and self-awareness. I also incorporate parts work (IFS informed) as appropriate. Our work focuses on identifying patterns shaped by early experiences, strengthening self-compassion, and cultivating authenticity, balance, and healthy relationships so that you can sustain both your life and your work with greater ease.

My approach to supervision is grounded in the principles of reflective supervision, offering a safe, collaborative space to explore transference and countertransference, navigate complex cases, and to deepen your understanding of yourself in the work. I integrate ethics, diversity, anti-oppressive practice, and trauma-informed care as foundations for competent and sustainable clinical practice.

In supervision, we focus on cultivating self-awareness, developing professional identity, and building resilience through strategies that prevent burnout, strengthen therapeutic presence, and restore meaning in the work. Effective and compassionate practice requires ongoing reflection on both personal identity and the broader systemic context, and I aim to foster that reflection with care and curiosity.

While I have a deep passion for supporting new career therapists, social workers, and interns, I also value the rich, reflective process that emerges in supervision with seasoned clinicians who remain open to growth and evolving perspectives in our ever-changing field.