If you've never been in therapy before, I know it can be a scary step. Be proud of your bravery. If you have been in therapy before, I'm glad you chose to return. Either way, my job is to help you find your strengths to learn to manage any issues you are dealing with so you can find your peace again. It is a journey and it won't always be easy but it will be worth it. I have been a therapist and a psychology professor for 30 years. I have worked with children, teens, and adults, although I have spent the majority of my career working with teens. I enjoy teens because I have a lot of patience for them. I believe in psychoeducation in therapy. I think that it's not only important to understand what you are doing but why you are doing it. Only by understanding both can you make the changes necessary for long-term happiness. I also believe in working on both the present and the past. I want to help you figure out how to make the present better immediately, while also working to understand anything from your past that may have helped lead to any current issues. Working on both in combination will give the most thorough explanation and avenue for effective treatment. Most importantly, I believe in working together. I may be the "expert" but only you know what is working and what isn't. I will ask you for feedback and I will listen to what you have to say. I am more than willing to do phone appointments if you find them more comfortable than video appointments. Just let me know.
In our first session, I'll get a little background regarding the problem you're dealing with. I will also give you concrete suggestions of things you can do between sessions from the first session. I want to help you decrease your distress as soon as possible, rather than having to wait for several sessions before we talk about things that can help you.
My biggest strengths are depression and anxiety, particularly generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, and social phobia. I also have experience in working with ADHD in children and adults and in men and women. I have extensive experience in suicide assessment and safety planning. I am also diagnosed with depression, anxiety, and ADHD. Not only do I understand these disorders from a clinical perspective but I understand them from a subjective perspective. I have struggled with and learned to manage these issues. If you are looking for someone who truly understands what you are going through, I am right here.
Cognitive-behavioral therapy helps you learn to change the way you think about, or perceive, the things that happen in your life so you can change the way you feel and behave. It has been shown through research to be the most effective treatment, outside of medication management, for both depression and anxiety.
Acceptance and commitment therapy teaches you to tolerate your emotions and to function through them. It teaches you to accept how you feel, without judgment, make plans for action, and follow through on that action. It focuses on healing and stopping obsessive negative thinking.
Humanistic therapy focuses on a person's strengths and potential for growth. It assumes that the client is capable of determining what they need and has the ability to change. It is a very non-judgemental treatment with an assumption of unconditional acceptance from the therapist. It focuses on free will, self-esteem, and self-worth. The therapist will work to fully understand the client as a whole person, rather than just the presenting problem.