Meet Sarah

Founder | Licensed Mental Health Counselor

Therapeutic

Approaches

My work integrates evidence-based therapy with nervous system-informed and somatic approaches to support deep, lasting change. Each modality is tailored to your unique needs and experiences.

  • Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, or EMDR, is an evidence-based therapy designed to help process and integrate distressing memories and experiences that continue to affect your life. EMDR works with the brain’s natural ability to process information, allowing past experiences to be re-evaluated and stored in a way that no longer triggers intense emotional or physical responses.

    Through EMDR therapy, you can reduce the emotional charge of difficult memories, release self-limiting beliefs, and create more adaptive ways of responding to challenges. This approach supports your nervous system in updating old patterns so you can move forward with greater ease, presence, and self-trust.

  • Nervous system-informed therapy focuses on understanding how your body responds to stress and threat. By recognizing how your nervous system reacts, we can build strategies for regulation, safety, and connection.

    A key element of this approach is co-regulation through the therapeutic relationship. Your nervous system can feel supported and guided into safety by the attuned presence of another, allowing you to experience grounding, stability, and regulation in real time. This relational safety creates a foundation for you to explore difficult experiences, develop resilience, and strengthen your capacity for self-soothing, attunement, and grounded decision-making.

  • Somatic Parts Work therapy helps you connect with the different parts of yourself that developed in response to life experiences. These parts can show up as tension or ease in your body, as well as in patterns of thinking, behavior, or ways of relating to yourself and others.

    This work supports healing the inner wounded child, softening self-critical patterns, and transforming protective or stuck parts into sources of strength, love, and freedom. Through guided practices, body awareness, and reflective exploration, you build a felt connection to your core self.

    By integrating these parts, you increase self-compassion, strengthen your internal resources, and remove barriers that have held you back in relationships and in creating the life you want. The focus is on gentle, nervous system-informed exploration so your growth feels safe, embodied, and sustainable.

  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy helps you understand how your thoughts, emotions, and behaviors interact. By identifying unhelpful patterns, you can develop practical strategies to shift thinking, manage emotions, and respond to challenges more effectively. CBT supports both short-term symptom relief and long-term skill development for navigating life with greater clarity and resilience.

  • Nature-Based Therapy integrates the natural environment into the therapeutic process to support grounding, reflection, and nervous system regulation. Sessions can take place at the beach, in a park, during walk and talk therapy, or by incorporating mindful movement and yoga outdoors.

    Being in nature provides a calming and restorative context that encourages the body and mind to slow down, shift out of stress responses, and increase awareness of internal sensations. Time outdoors can enhance perspective, foster mindfulness, and support the integration of insights gained in session.

    This approach is especially helpful for reducing anxiety, improving emotional regulation, and deepening the mind-body connection. Nature becomes a partner in your healing, allowing you to engage with yourself more fully, practice presence, and develop resilience in a supportive and grounding environment.

  • Yoga Therapy integrates mindful movement, breathwork, and somatic awareness into the therapeutic process to support emotional regulation, nervous system balance, and overall well-being. Sessions may take place in the office or outdoors, allowing the environment to complement the healing experience.

    This approach helps you connect more deeply with your body, release tension, and cultivate presence and grounding. Through guided movement and breath practices, you can develop tools for managing stress, reducing anxiety, and responding to emotional challenges with greater ease.

    Yoga Therapy also encourages integration between mind and body, helping you access inner resources of strength, calm, and resilience. By combining movement with reflective awareness, it complements talk therapy and supports lasting change in both your physical and emotional experience.

Specialties

We provide compassionate, nervous system-informed therapy for adult and college-aged women navigating anxiety, trauma, self-doubt, life transitions, and patterns that feel difficult to shift. Our work supports clients in slowing down, deepening self-understanding, and creating more connected and sustainable ways of moving through daily life.

  • Anxiety can feel like a constant undercurrent of tension. You may experience racing thoughts, difficulty slowing down, and a sense that your body and mind are always on. Many women appear high functioning on the outside while internally feeling exhausted, restless, overwhelmed, or stretched thin.

    Anxiety is not simply something to eliminate or suppress. It is often a signal that something within you is asking for attention, protection, or care.

    Rather than focusing only on symptom reduction, anxiety therapy can become a space to slow down and become more curious about what anxiety may be communicating. Through exploring underlying patterns, experiences, and nervous system responses, many clients begin developing greater awareness, emotional capacity, and self-understanding.

    Through relational therapy, somatic awareness, and nervous system-informed approaches, it becomes possible to build a different relationship with anxiety rooted in steadiness, connection, and self-trust rather than fear or avoidance.

    Over time, many women find they are able to move through life with greater clarity, resilience, and a deeper sense of internal support without anxiety running the show.

  • Experiences that disrupted your sense of safety, whether recent events or early developmental stress, can continue shaping how you see yourself, move through relationships, and respond to the world around you. Trauma may show up as hypervigilance, emotional shutdown, perfectionism, people pleasing, difficulty trusting yourself, or persistent self doubt.

    As Dr. Peter Levine describes it, trauma is not defined only by catastrophic events. Trauma can develop through experiences that felt too much, too soon, too fast, or through the absence of enough support, safety, or connection to fully process and integrate what was happening at the time.

    Healing is not about forcing yourself to relive painful memories or pushing through before you feel ready. Judith Herman describes trauma recovery as a phased process that begins with safety and stabilization, moves into processing and integration, and ultimately supports reconnection with self and others. In our work together, this process honors the pacing and protective wisdom of your body and nervous system.

    Rather than focusing only on symptom reduction, therapy can become a space to build internal support, emotional regulation, and a greater sense of connection with yourself. When enough stability is present, unresolved experiences can be processed more gently through approaches such as EMDR and somatic therapy so they no longer feel as emotionally activating or consuming in daily life.

    The goal is not to erase your story. It is to help your mind and body recognize that the threat is no longer happening, allowing for greater flexibility, connection, and freedom in the present.

  • Many women learn early on that being capable, agreeable, high achieving, or emotionally accommodating helps them feel safe, accepted, or valued. Over time, these protective strategies can become rigid patterns that lead to over functioning, difficulty setting boundaries, chronic self pressure, or a harsh inner critic.

    In therapy, perfectionism and people pleasing are not treated as flaws to eliminate. These patterns often develop as adaptive responses to early relationships, environments, or experiences. At one point, they likely served an important purpose.

    Rather than responding with shame or forcing change, therapy can become a space to slow down and approach these patterns with greater curiosity and understanding. What feels at risk if you stop striving, over functioning, or accommodating the needs of others? What has your system learned it needs to do in order to feel safe, connected, or enough?

    By understanding the protective role beneath these patterns, new choices and ways of relating to yourself can begin to emerge. Over time, many women find themselves developing greater authenticity, self compassion, and boundaries that feel more grounded and sustainable rather than forced or performative. Confidence begins to grow not from constantly proving yourself, but from learning to trust yourself more deeply.

  • Overworking, emotional withdrawal, numbing, avoidance, constant busyness, and similar patterns often begin as intelligent adaptations. The list can go on. At some point, these strategies likely helped you manage stress, maintain connection, avoid overwhelm, or protect yourself from perceived or real threat.

    Rather than viewing these patterns as problems to fix, therapy can become a space to slow down and explore what they may have been protecting you from. What feels at risk if this pattern were to soften or step back? What has this part of you been trying to carry, manage, or prevent?

    By understanding the protective role beneath these responses, new possibilities and ways of relating to yourself can begin to emerge. As your nervous system develops greater flexibility and internal support, it becomes less necessary to rely on rigid or exhausting strategies for survival.

    Over time, change becomes less about forcing discipline or control and more about building self awareness, choice, emotional capacity, and a deeper sense of trust in yourself.

  • Periods of change, loss, or major life transitions can feel both meaningful and deeply destabilizing. Career shifts, relationship endings, relocation, parenthood, evolving identity, or the loss of a loved one often bring uncertainty, grief, and a sense of disorientation.

    Transitions naturally involve discomfort. There is often a strong desire to move through this stage quickly, resolve the uncertainty, or regain a sense of solid footing. In therapy, the goal is not to rush the process, but to slow down and compassionately attend to what is unfolding in this in-between space. Both your emotional experience and the ways your body responds to change deserve care and attention.

    Therapy can provide a supportive space to explore what these transitions mean for you while developing greater awareness, grounding, and emotional support through the process. Anxiety, self doubt, grief, or emotional heaviness are not signs that you are failing. They are often understandable responses to uncertainty, change, and loss.

    Over time, many clients begin building a deeper sense of trust in their ability to move through endings, transitions, and new beginnings without abandoning themselves in the process. The goal is not to avoid discomfort, but to feel more supported, connected, and emotionally resourced while navigating it.

  • College is a time of tremendous growth, but it can also feel overwhelming. Academic pressure, high expectations, evolving relationships, and identity exploration can leave many students feeling anxious, emotionally exhausted, disconnected, or unsure of themselves.

    Therapy can become a space to slow down and better understand what may be contributing to feelings of overwhelm, burnout, anxiety, self doubt, or difficulty feeling grounded and connected. Rather than viewing these experiences as personal failures, we approach them with greater curiosity, compassion, and understanding.

    Together, we explore how past experiences and relational patterns may continue shaping the way you respond to stress, pressure, relationships, and uncertainty. The goal is not simply to manage symptoms, but to build greater emotional regulation, resilience, self trust, and a stronger sense of connection with yourself.

    Over time, many students find they are able to move through college with greater confidence, presence, and steadiness both inside and outside the classroom.

    Reduced rates are available for college students.