About my work:
My aim is to meet you exactly where you are, providing a supportive space to explore your experiences, relationships, feelings, patterns, wounds, and gifts. Together we can foster a sense of self-compassion and curiosity in our work—you as the expert in your own life and me as a helper. These explorations can take shape through talk therapy, mindfulness, grounding exercises, movement, and creativity.
Before beginning my training in psychotherapy, I completed a PhD in Communication & Culture. My doctoral work focused on the cultural aspects of reproductive loss, grief, and mourning. Based on this work and my own lived experience, supporting people through pregnancy loss, infertility, and high-risk birth is something I am particularly passionate about.
I identify as white and cisgendered and have lived working class and middle-class subjectivities. It is my aim to practice therapy from a relational and anti-oppressive framework that acknowledges my social identity as a therapist and deals openly with how our individual experiences unfold within systems of power.