What is Psychotherapy?
Learn more about psychotherapy and the standards of practice I follow through the College of Registered Psychotherapists of Ontario
Integrative Therapy
Our process will be collaborative. My approach to therapy is integrative, trauma-informed, relational, and somatic (body-based) — drawing from different modalities unique to clients’ needs and experiences.
Together, I hope to create a space that feels safe, warm, non-pathologizing, and grounded in openness and curiosity — so that you may explore the challenges you have been facing and experience movement toward well-being, at your own pace.
I practice from an anti-oppressive framework and am affirming of all gender identities and expressions, sexualities, races, and ethnicities.
I accompany adults and adolescents in navigating grief, trauma, anxiety, depression, life transitions, interpersonal challenges, and self understanding.
Incorporating art-based and somatic practices into psychotherapy can help with connecting to emotions and inner experiences. Learn more about art therapy here
Together, I hope to create a space that feels safe, warm, non-pathologizing, and grounded in openness and curiosity — so that you may explore the challenges you have been facing and experience movement toward well-being, at your own pace.
I practice from an anti-oppressive framework and am affirming of all gender identities and expressions, sexualities, races, and ethnicities.
I accompany adults and adolescents in navigating grief, trauma, anxiety, depression, life transitions, interpersonal challenges, and self understanding.
Incorporating art-based and somatic practices into psychotherapy can help with connecting to emotions and inner experiences. Learn more about art therapy here
Liberation Oriented,
Anti-Oppressive Care
I am responsive to how broader systems impact clients’ experiences of feeling unheard, marginalized, or disempowered. Historically, models of psychology have often, both directly and indirectly, “served to reinforce oppressive structures by shifting focus away from those structures and toward individual factors” (Ignacio Martín-Baró, Writings for a Liberation Psychology, 1994). I am committed to examining the systems I work within. I engage in liberatory-oriented trainings and ongoing supervision.
Guided by principles of cultural humility, I maintain an openness to complexity, discomfort, and being in process — within myself and in how I practice. If you would like to learn more, please feel free to contact me