Welcome

Areas I can help with

I work with a wide range of issues, including anxiety, depression, sexual assault, childhood trauma, low self-esteem, body image, identity, sexuality, and gender. While I am neurotypical, I have experience supporting neurodivergent clients, and I welcome the opportunity to work together in a way that fits your needs and ways of being.

I have a particular interest and passion for supporting people navigating (in)fertility, pregnancy, and parenthood. Trying for a baby, becoming pregnant, giving birth, and adjusting to life as a parent are all profound and often disorienting experiences. Our bodies change. Our relationships shift. Our sense of self can feel unfamiliar.

Sometimes these changes are subtle and sometimes they’re seismic. I believe we need spaces to process, reflect and explore what this transformation means and how it’s reshaping your world. I'm here to offer support as you navigate this shifting landscape — wherever you find yourself in the process of becoming or being a parent.

My Approach

My practice is psychodynamic, relational, and informed by intersectional feminism. Let me share a little about what these terms mean to me, and how they shape the way I work.

We can’t live without relationships. At their best, relationships offer care, connection, and mutual support. But often, they can be sources of pain, confusion, or trauma. Working relationally means that I pay attention to the relationships in your life — how they impact you, and how past experiences may shape the present. It also means we may explore the relationship that develops between us, and what it can reveal about patterns or ways of being.

While a therapeutic relationship can be healing, it doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Our lives are shaped by wider cultural, social, and political forces. These influences affect how we see ourselves, how we’re seen by others, and how we move through the world. So while our work will focus on you, we’ll not lose sight of the world around us.

Being informed by feminist ethics, means that I believe in and affirm everyone’s right to be fluid, creative and authentic in how they live and love. It also means I continually reflect on how my identity and experiences shape my presence in the therapy room — and how these dynamics might show up in our work together.

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