Clinical Supervision for Therapists

I’m an encouragement fanatic.

I'm the type of supervisor who’s endlessly in your corner and a full-blown encouragement fanatic. With me, you can drop the “therapist voice,” stop performing, cry if you need to, and be real about imposter syndrome and burnout.

This is a space to be human first.

In Supervision, we’ll have honest conversations, laugh, and set clear expectations and goals, for you and your clients. If you love your modality, let’s fine-tune it. If you struggle with goal-setting or boundaries, let’s tackle it with care.

Supervision shouldn’t be a place where we feel additional insecurity and struggle with more imposter syndrome because we’re afraid that our supervisor is going to judge us or tell us we’re doing things wrong. Supervision can be nourishing and positive, even when things are hard.

What supervision with me is like:

  • I’m okay with tears, emotion, being human, talking about our faults

  • We can speak honestly and with vulnerability

  • We don’t have to be “professional” like we do at work with our clients

  • Real talk, clear goals, no therapist mask required.

  • I use self-disclosure (with boundaries) 😌 

What We’ll Do

Deep Dive

Navigating trauma work can feel overwhelming — but you don’t have to do it alone. Together, we explore clinical stuck points, strengthen your attunement, and unpack how trauma shows up — both in your clients and in you. This is a supportive, relational space where your growth as a trauma-informed therapist is nurtured with intention, curiosity, and care.

Hone our Modalities

Let’s fine tune that theory you love or the interventions you’ve been using or the values you believe in – so you can maximize your effectiveness, (which increases some therapists’ self-confidence), which also improves therapy’s efficacy!

Set Expectations & Goals

Let’s come home to the client’s needs and desires for therapy. That’s why we’re all here. Return to the goals. How do I know what’s realistic to expect & and in what time frame? What is my part and what is the part of my client(s)? If you aren’t clear on what the treatment plan is, we can work on it together!

Who I work with:

Fellow LICSWs 

I love working with those who understand the role of a social worker, which can be different than working as a therapist or mental health counselor.

Therapist Specialties

If you're a fellow therapist doing deep, person-centered work grounded in relational, psychodynamic and emotionally-focused approaches, and are working primarily with attachment issues, shame, or those quiet-but-powerful “little t” traumas, you're in the right place.

Groups

I tend to like working with people one on one, so there are no groups right now. But if you’re interested in group supervision, please reach out and I will add you to my list. At some point, I will offer group or dyadic supervision if there is enough interest, especially if it’s needed due to cost.  

Rates

  • Rates for one-on-one supervision can be determined based on your income level. We can make an agreement on an hourly or monthly basis. Reach out to discuss this in your consult call.

  • My hour for your hour.

    How much do you make per hour? Let’s trade one for one. We can do a parity rate, which means your session will cost what you’d make in one hour.

  • If you are in immediate need of supervision and cannot afford parity, please reach out to discuss a sliding scale for interim supervision. We all need good supervision and it should be within financial reach. I value giving back and would be happy to discuss your budget plainly.

  • In the future, I may offer lower-cost supervision with two or more clinician supervisees. Please reach out to let me know if you are interested in this option and I will add you to my list of people to contact once group supervision becomes available.

My Supervision Specialties

Trauma

Supervising therapists who treat trauma is crucial to ensure they understand the complexities of how it manifests in the body, mind, and relationships. I aim to strengthen clinical skills and support ethical, client-centered care. We can explore working with clients newly identifying their trauma, navigating dissociation, emotional regulation, identity shifts, and the nuanced behaviors that often follow traumatic experiences.

“Little t trauma”

Supervising therapists who work with little t trauma is essential to help them recognize the subtle yet impactful ways it shapes clients’ lives. I focus on deepening clinical insight and supporting ethical, attuned care. We can explore themes like chronic invalidation, people-pleasing, perfectionism, boundary confusion, and the slow erosion of self that often comes with these quieter forms of trauma. Just because it wasn’t “big” doesn’t mean it didn’t hurt.

Grief

Supervising therapists who work with grief means holding space for the complex, nonlinear, and deeply personal nature of loss. Whether it’s anticipatory, ambiguous, or disenfranchised grief, we’ll explore how to support clients while honoring their unique grieving process. Supervision is a space to process countertransference, strengthen your presence in the room, and stay grounded amidst the emotional weight. Let’s talk about how to show up with empathy, boundaries, and the courage to sit with what can’t be fixed.

Anxiety disguised as perfectionism

When working through perfectionism, it’s easy to get caught in the same patterns our clients do, over-preparing, self-doubting, trying to “get it right.” Supervision offers space to notice these dynamics and shift them. Let’s look at how perfectionism shows up in the room, in treatment planning, and even in you. This work is about loosening control, inviting compassion, and redefining what “good enough” really means.

Experiential Exploration

I bring an emotionally attuned, experiential approach to our work together. I support supervisees in slowing down and tuning into their own emotional responses — not just to understand the client, but to understand themselves in moments of reactivity, attunement, disconnection, or uncertainty as meaningful entry points for growth. This helps newer clinicians deepen their capacity to recognize what's happening in the therapeutic relationship, connect emotions to clinical instincts, and clarify both client needs and their own. It’s a collaborative space where emotional insight leads to clinical clarity and greater confidence in trauma-informed practice.

Anxiety disguised as People-Pleasing

Therapists who work with people-pleasing often carry some of those patterns themselves over-accommodating, avoiding conflict, or losing track of their own voice. In supervision, we’ll explore how to model boundary-setting, identify covert shame, and create safety without self-sacrifice. Let’s make space for you to be clear, kind, and honest, not just with clients, but with yourself.

Contact Us

Interested in working together? Fill out some info and we will be in touch shortly. We can’t wait to hear from you!