Client focus Areas [age 18+

Coming home to the body

  • Polyvagal theory and understanding the mind/body connection

  • Understanding and exploring the emotional body

  • Exploring gender and sexuality

  • Pleasure and sensuality

  • Inner child work

  • Trauma

  • Anxiety

Disordered eating

  • Eating disorder recovery maintenance

  • Body image

  • Size acceptance

  • Body respect

  • Sexuality & Asexuality

  • Gender exploration

  • body dysphoria

  • chronic pain & illness

  • Reproductive related

  • disability

  • Neurodivergence,
    Autism & ADHD

Religious loss or departure

  • Doubt and/or Questioning

  • Spiritual or Religious Abuse

    Obsessive thinking patterns

    Deconstruction, de-conversion

  • Loss, Identity Reclamation

  • Gender/Sexual identity and faith

  • Purity Culture

  • Ritual and Familial ties

Therapy for those in the helping profession

  • Vocational burnout and stress

  • Self-care

  • Growth and career exploration

  • Life transitions and adjustment

  • Personal relationships

  • Counter-transference

Relational work

  • Co-dependency, co-regulation, boundaries

  • Estrangement from family or friendship

  • Breakups

  • Attachment work

  • ENM and polyamorous relationship

Identity work

  • Personhood

  • Vocation

  • Burnout

  • Sexuality

  • Gender Exploration

  • Grief & loss

  • Death anxiety and

    Existential concerns


Invariably the failures of organized religions, by which they cut themselves off from mystery and therefore from sanctity, lies in the attempt to impose an absolute division between faith and doubt, to make belief perform as knowledge.

When they forbid their prophets to go into the wilderness, they lose the possibility of renewal. And the most dangerous tendency in modern society is the tendency toward human order. The severance, once and for all of the umbilical cord fastening us to wilderness and creation.

The threat is not only in the desire for absolute control, it lies in the willingness to ignore an essential paradox; the natural forces that so threaten us are the same forces that preserve and renew us.
— Wendell Berry