My Services
My Services
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Individual Therapy
This is your time. I will be there to hold space for you and provide support and honest feedback, as we develop a relationship centered upon genuineness and healthy boundaries. Together, we will co-create a meaningful experience from which you can learn more about yourself and tend to what needs healing.
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Group Therapy
Grief is deeply personal and yet it doesn’t need to be journeyed alone. In group therapy, I facilitate a safe container for grieving people to come together, process their losses, witness and be witnessed, as well as develop new coping strategies. My groups tend to focus on young adult parent loss.
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Couples Therapy
You might be interested in couples therapy if you are feeling disconnected, struggling with conflict resolution, or preparing for or going through a transition. Couples work helps both individuals better understand their dynamic and reach deeper fulfillment as a unit. The core of our work will be on communication and shifting patterns in real time in the room.
Specialties
Though I welcome a variety of concerns to my practice, here are my areas of specialization:
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Whether you are experiencing grief over the recent death of a loved one or an estrangement or you are feeling ready to explore the impact of a loss that occurred long ago, you don’t have to do it alone. I have a great deal of personal experience with bereavement and mindfully carry this intimate and sacred knowledge into my clinical work around the subject. I believe that grief is not something to ‘get past’ but to integrate. In working with me, you won’t find empty platitudes and cheerleading that overlooks the depth of your pain. You’ll find companioning as you honor who and what you have lost and learn how to reclaim joy and fulfillment.
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Many people come to therapy to address challenges within their romantic and platonic relationships, seeking to shift patterns that are causing disconnection or stuckness. One area of relational work I am passionate about is family of origin - exploration of early or ongoing family experiences, familial wounds, and generational cycles. Another area I commonly see is codependency or emotional enmeshment, which can look like people-pleasing, disowning of your own authentic thoughts and feelings, or embodiment of the phrase “I’m not okay if they’re not okay”. Sometimes, work around codependency comes hand in hand with healing from narcissistic abuse.
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Sometimes anxiety presents as a specific phobia (for example: social anxiety) and sometimes we experience it as a general feeling of unease or low-lying dread. You may even describe yourself as an “anxious person”. Rather than using this self-knowledge as a restrictive label, we can reframe it as something to befriend and work with, managing with coping skills tailored to you.
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Life transitions, whether chosen or unchosen, can bring on stress and be destabilizing. Examples of common life transitions include moving, graduating, changing careers, forming or ending a relationship, or entering a new life role (ex. Caregiver). Therapy offers a grounding space to process the impact of a transition and the emotions that arise around it.
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Trauma is the emotional (hopelessness, anxiety, etc.) and physiological (sleep, energy, appetite disturbances, etc.) response to a distressing experience or a series of them. Acute trauma can occur after a singular event, such an accident, while chronic or complex trauma can manifest in response to repeated relational trauma (physical, emotional, sexual abuse). Trauma work can look like gentle processing of these experiences, exploration of impact on your life today, and fostering of coping strategies to help you ground into the present. I occasionally make recommendations for additional modalities (ex. EMDR) as needed.
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Therapy is not only a service to turn to when in crisis. You can also think of therapy as an outlet for you to deepen your relationship with yourself! This may look like engaging in shadow work to identify and reintegrate parts of yourself that you have disowned, exploring self-esteem challenges at the root, and writing a new story about who you are.
What Clients are Saying:
Individual Therapy
“Alex has been an empathetic, gentle supportive coach and guiding light during the last few years of complex family grief, loss, and trauma. I am beyond grateful for her open, curious approach and attentive warmth in our sessions together and would recommend her to anyone seeking assistance with walking through some of life's tougher challenges, no matter what stage of their journey they might be in at the time. Alex will meet her client at the point where they are and has been a wonderful trail partner toward a clearer Life path.”
— Ashe
“I initially started seeing Alex for grief therapy when I was feeling acutely sensitive, vulnerable, and out-of-sync with everyday life. Her compassion and gentle guidance encouraged me to move through my emotions at my own pace, while also offering questions that held a mirror to, and often challenged, my self-deprecating thoughts. I like to analogize therapy with Alex like a free swim in an open body of water. I’m able to move in any direction I want, but if I start to tread towards harmful ways of thinking, she’s the lifeguard who signals the departure and guides me back. It’s been over two years since we first met, and our sessions have gradually evolved from that place of processing grief and healing into facilitating a healthier and kinder mindset for myself.”
— Julien
Group Therapy
“Alex maintained a space where the group members and I felt empowered to share our unique experiences of loss and grief, without judgement or shame. I learned a lot about myself and grew to better understand my own grief, thanks to our group sessions.”
— Jeremy
“Though each individual in the group was a stranger to me, I felt so relieved to be around other people who understood pieces of what I had experienced with parent loss. Alex created a safe, supportive environment that I looked forward to being a part of each week. I walked away from our sessions feeling relieved and less alone in my grief journey.”
— Laura