Supervision for clinicians who want to go deeper
Because who you are is how you practice.
What Good Supervision Is, to Me
Are you looking for supervision that goes beyond the alphabet soup of techniques and acronyms that dominate clinical training these days? Do you want something deeper, more authentic—maybe even a little "old school"? If so, my approach might be the right fit.
In my experience, good supervision can be as transformative as good therapy. My two best supervisors changed my life. I'm a better therapist—and a better person—for having worked with them. That's because the best supervision isn't just about ethics, techniques, or theory. It's about becoming the kind of therapist you would want to see.
And that requires depth—not just into the case, but into yourself: your blindspots, habits, and fears. Why you hold back. Why you push too hard. Why you're too nice, too distant, too sharp, too accommodating, too—whatever.
It also means identifying what I call your therapist "superpowers"—the innate gifts every dedicated clinician brings to the work. The more you cultivate those strengths, the better you can harness them in service of your clients.
If we work together, we'll take an integrative-functional approach that blends psychodynamic, experiential, and strategic methods, with a clear focus on the intersection of self-as-person and self-as-therapist. The goal is an approach to therapy grounded in theory and shaped by real human connection—where clinical skill meets interpersonal artistry.
All so you can do work that's not just competent, but life-changing, thought-provoking, authentic, and fun. And so your clients can go beneath the surface, into the emotional and experiential core of their struggles, and get at the roots of what's bothering them.
My Theory and Method of Supervision
Supervision should be collaborative and active. I'll challenge you when you're playing it safe, and support you when you're stretching your edge. My approach draws from several key frameworks:
The discrimination model informs how I think about the roles and functions of both supervisor and supervisee. In this model, the supervisor takes on three roles—teacher, consultant, and therapist—to support development across three skill-domains: intervention, case conceptualization, and personalization.
I view relational dynamics in therapy and supervision through the lenses of multicultural and feminist theories:
The intersection of your identities and your clients'
The power dynamics embedded in the therapy relationship
The focal, identity-shaping experiences (yours and theirs) that must be treated with care
...as well as trauma-informed and functional constructions of distress:
How symptoms function as attempted solutions, not just pathology
The role of implicit memory and unprocessed affect in maintaining distress
Where a presenting complaint might be adaptive, protective, or trying to tell you something
I use theory-informed strategies to explore transference, countertransference, and the use of self-disclosure and authenticity. Together, we'll clarify what's yours and what's theirs, when and how to disclose, and how to stay authentic without losing clinical intentionality.
I supervise and teach theory and intervention using integrative psychotherapy and memory reconsolidation frameworks, emphasizing experiential and transformative work grounded in memory reconsolidation research, using:
Strategic interventions
Gestalt and two-chair techniques
Provocative, emotion-driven, bottom-up change
Who It's For
You'll fit here if:
You want more than just compliance supervision
You're seeking personal and professional growth, not just hours
You're navigating complex trauma, enactments, deep affect, or hard-to-reach clients
You're a therapist who wants to do therapy better, not just do more of it
Details
Individual Supervision: $250 per hour
Group Supervision: $75 per 90-minute session
*Available virtually in all states.
**If pursuing licensure hours, verify eligibility with your board.
Let's Work Together
If you're serious about becoming a deeper, braver, and more effective therapist, let's talk.
Supervision FAQs
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No, but there can be moments when blurring that line is reasonable. Supervision focuses on your clinical work: your cases, your interventions, your blind spots as a clinician. But because who you are is how you practice, we'll inevitably touch on your own material too. I won't turn supervision into your therapy, but I won't pretend the two are cleanly separable either.
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Most people I work with come weekly or every other week. If you're accruing hours toward licensure, your board's requirements set the floor—I'll work within whatever cadence you need. If you're already licensed and coming voluntarily, we can be more flexible; what matters more than frequency is whether you're bringing your hardest cases, not just the easy ones.
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Yes, please do. Bring the case that's stuck, the client who's under your skin, the session you keep replaying. That's where the real work happens. Theory is useful, but supervision earns its keep in the specifics. When people want to, we even can sort through the necessary paperwork to get clearance to record sessions, too.
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Yes. My own approach is integrative-functional, but I'm not trying to convert you to it. Psychodynamic, CBT, humanistic, somatic—whatever your lens, I can meet you inside your own framework and help you get sharper in it, while offering mine as one more tool if it's useful.
Change begins with discomfort.
Let’s get uncomfortable.
Or, start smaller. Request a free 15-minute consult. Let’s see how we fit, first.

