I approach clients with warmth, empathy and openness, knowing that our patients come from all walks of life and with a variety of experiences, traumas, and difficulties they would like to address in therapy. Through frequent check-ins and opportunities for feedback, I encourage patients to lead the therapeutic process and communicate what’s most important to address in therapy, what they are interested in learning, what’s working and what is not working. It’s my belief that patient-led therapy leads to increases in both client empowerment and satisfaction with the therapeutic process.

A common reason that clients seek therapy is assistance with processing distressing emotions. My most important task with these (and all) clients is normalizing and validating all emotions as part of the human experience. I also enjoy being a companion in self-exploration if this is desired by the client. This typically includes connecting distressing thought and behavioral patterns to adverse experiences from both childhood and adulthood and providing tools for further awareness and integration as appropriate.

I seek to ensure there is balance between therapeutic self-exploration and real-life safety planning and intervention. These safety planning and intervention strategies can look like naming harmful behavior, providing education on intimate partner violence and other types of abuse and oppression, clarifying barriers to social, emotional and physical safety, connection to community resources and practicing empowerment-based skills like boundary-setting. These kinds of interventions are becoming increasingly important as more research is completed on how social factors influence health outcomes (social determinants of health). Additionally, we live in a society where survivors of all types of harm are frequently gaslit, and their experiences minimized, by both the people who do harm and by society as a whole.

It is my hope that my clients come away from our time together with not only a deeper understanding of themselves but with tools that they can continue to use and build on throughout their lives.

I was born in San Antonio, TX and raised in rural Pennsylvania. I have also lived in NY, VA and FL. I moved to Denver in 2016. I enjoy nature walks, gardening, plants, photography, writing, reading, singing, dancing, creating art, cooking, music, and going to concerts and shows.

Ubicaciones

Lunes: 7:20am - 4:30pm
Martes: 7:20am - 4:30pm
Miércoles: 7:20am - 4:30pm
Jueves: 7:20 a. m. - 4:30 p. m.
Viernes: 7:20 a. m. - 4:30 p. m.
Sábado: Cerrado
Domingo: Cerrado

Cualificaciones y experiencia

Especialidades
Salud Mental y Comportamiento, Trabajador Social Clínico
Género
Femenino
Idiomas hablados
Inglés
Educación
Graduado
Florida State University (2016)

Certificación de la Junta
Agencia de certificación Especialidad Año
CO Dept of Regulatory Agencies Trabajador social clínico con licencia 2021
Interés clínico para los pacientes

My clinical interests are PTSD, depression, anxiety disorders, trauma, domestic violence/intimate partner violence, emotional abuse, narcissistic abuse, sexual trauma, substance use, grief and loss, adjustment to illness, and societal re-entry post incarceration, support for those with criminal justice involvement.

Interés de investigación para los pacientes

My research interests are as follows:
- The connection between trauma, nervous system dysfunction and chronic illness
- IPV education as a public health campaign starting in grade school
- The connection between trauma and substance use
- The ethics of organ transplant approval in regards to oppression and social determinants of health

Seguro
UCHealth le recomienda encarecidamente que consulte con su aseguradora de salud para determinar información precisa sobre su cobertura y beneficios para un servicio de atención médica en particular proporcionado en un centro de UCHealth. Más información aquí.