I didn't always plan to become a therapist.
For nearly a decade, I worked in corporate consulting — high stakes, long hours, constant performance. I was good at it. But beneath the surface, I was running on empty. It was only when I found myself sitting in a therapist's office of my own that something shifted. Not just for me, but in my understanding of what it means to truly help someone.
That experience changed everything. I went back to school, completed my master's in clinical psychology, earned my LMFT license, and opened my practice with a clear vision: to create the kind of space I wished I'd found sooner — one that's warm, honest, and genuinely transformative.
Healing isn't about fixing what's broken. It's about reconnecting with what was always whole.
Today, I specialize in working with high-performing individuals and couples who feel like they have it all together on the outside but are struggling underneath. People who are used to being capable and competent — and aren't sure how to ask for help. I get it, because I've been there.
My approach blends evidence-based methods (CBT, Gottman, EMDR, somatic work) with the kind of genuine presence that can't be taught in a textbook. I'll meet you where you are. I'll be direct with you — always with compassion. And I'll never pretend to have all the answers, because I believe you already do.