As an Approved Clinical Supervisor, I offer:
Patience and time to think deeply about the work.
Seasoned clinical perspective grounded in years of practice.
Specialized expertise in somatic therapy, embodiment, systems theory, compassion-based work, breathwork and movement, nervous system regulation, neuroscience, and trauma treatment. I also pull from an eclectic background informed by Gestalt, experiential, and psychodynamic traditions, cognitively based modalities, quantum psychology, and the traditions that emerged from the broader Human Potential Movement.
In addition to clinical modalities, I also incorporate years of my own meditation practice. The positive influence of teachers, lineages, and practices that have shaped me, steadied me, and helped me become a confident therapist is no longer separate from me; it is part of me. This will be an important part of any supervisory or mentorship experience. If we cannot sit in silence patiently with ourselves, we will not be able to with our clients.
Overall, I can offer a broad, interdisciplinary framework that integrates clinical skill, contemplative practice, self-awareness, and ethical clarity. What I have come to know in my years in the field is that there is not ONE way. There are MANY ways. And my motto is: “All the boats are good. Just get in one, and it will eventually take you to the next boat.”
Supervision with me is not only about case consultation and licensure requirements. It’s about helping you develop a grounded professional identity that can sustain the realities of this field. Together, we strengthen your capacity to stay present with complexity, hold boundaries, and remain connected to the work without sacrificing yourself in the process.
The aim is longevity. A career that is steady, thoughtful, and resilient enough to meet intensity without collapsing into burnout, exhaustion, or overwhelm.
For the professionals who hold everyone else together.
Supervision & mentorship, continuing education, and creative renewal for experienced clinicians and helping professionals at every stage of practice who want creativity and movement through burnout, embodiment, and a space to be or return to their full selves.
The focus here is not just on support, but on meaningful endurance. When the people doing the holding have somewhere to land, the work itself becomes more fluid and forgiving, more humane and compassionate, and more rewarding.
When the helpers are steady, the entire field becomes steadier.
Services
There are two ways to work with me: Individually or in a small group setting. For appointments and group times, please reach out to me.
Who This Space is For
This work is designed for professionals who carry responsibility for others and want a place to continue growing in a sustainable way. When the work is tough, we need more than coping strategies. We need imagination, movement & embodiment, perspective, and honest conversations to cultivate new ways of thinking and being.
This is where rigorous clinical work meets creative renewal. Creativity is part of restoring meaningful endurance. Through small groups, creative workshops, movement and embodiment, advanced study, creative expression, and reflective practice, we create space for experimentation, fresh perspectives, and the kind of thinking that restores energy rather than drains it. We focus on keeping the work sustainable, intelligent, and alive over the long arc of a career.
You may find yourself at home here if you are:
a therapeutic clinician in practice or training seeking supervision, consultation, or mentorship
a physician, nurse, chaplain, bodyworker, healer, or frontline professional recovering from depletion
a supervisor, educator, teacher, or leader in the helping fields, wanting to move within a system without waiting for approval
someone committed to doing meaningful and/or spiritual work
If you’re unsure whether this is the right fit, you’re always welcome to reach out and ask.
Whether you’re early in your career or decades in, the focus is the same: restoring vitality, confidence, and a sense of inner authority.
Creativity is not an extra here; it’s part of how we keep the work alive. But you can think of this as being less about producing art and more about cultivating a way of living and working that keeps a person responsive, curious, and internally anchored.
The work we do asks a great deal of us. Without spaces to pause, question, express, and create, our work can quickly become mechanical, depleted, and on the verge of burnout. This space is an interval. So even the most meaningful work doesn’t lose its vitality and begin to wear down the people devoted to it.
We need good caregivers with the capacity to remain present and connected in demanding roles over time. So, whether you’re a newly licensed therapist and looking for thoughtful supervision to front-load sustainable skills, or an experienced practitioner seeking depth and renewal, this is a place to step out of urgency and back into your wholeness.
Scope of the Work
This is a space for supervision, mentorship, consultation, professional development, and renewal.
It is not designed for crisis services, high-acuity clinical care, or ongoing weekly therapy.
What We Focus On
Creative recovery
Reconnecting with the part of you that makes, imagines, questions, and plays—especially after burnout, criticism, ethical dilemmas, over-structuring, or gridlock within systems that are themselves stuck.
Permission and self-trust
Learning to move without waiting for approval. Letting the inner voice that generates ideas carry more weight than the one that edits or doubts.
Restoring Safety and confidence
Returning to an internally dependent felt-sense of safety, not one predicated on the external environment. And above all, cultivating unflappability and confidence so you can be more of who you already are.
Attention and presence
Training yourself to notice what interests you, what energizes you, what feels alive. Creativity is treated as something that grows from attention.
Ritual and structure
Daily practices that create space for internal processing and reflection. Discipline in service of openness.
Play and curiosity
Reintroducing experimentation and low-stakes exploration. Taking things seriously without becoming rigid. Fostering humor, laughter, and compassionate wisdom.
Cultivating Meaningful Endurance and process
Showing up regularly rather than waiting for inspiration. Staying with the work long enough for something real to develop. Tolerating anxiety and discomfort in order to grow. This is not just putting up with something. It is staying in situations in a way that helps you become a more solid self. People who develop a solid sense of self can endure the discomfort of not getting what they want and still remain emotionally present.
Creative identity and intimacy
Allowing yourself to see your work—and your life—as a living process rather than a fixed role or performance. Building intimacy does not come by avoiding hardship, conflict, or discomfort. Intimacy is instilled by tolerating discomfort without losing yourself.
Strengthening the Sense of Self
Having a self-defined sense of Self is a core component of differentiation. This is what allows us to remain grounded, emotionally present, and intact while facing tension, conflict, unmet needs, and demands in our work, without collapsing into reactivity, compliance, withdrawal, or burnout patterns.
Recovery from depletion
Addressing burnout, empathic distress, perfectionism, comparison, imposter syndrome, and overwork by creating room for reflection and replenishment.
