In-Person Therapy

My practice is centered on in-person sessions. The work breathes through grounded presence, through silence, and through experiential learning. For regular clients, meeting online remains an option when travel or distance comes into play.

_____________________________________
The Risk of the Forest
Modern Times! Almost everything is migrating online (work, entertainment, friendships, shopping, even flirting and love) which can make life itself feel less tangible. What we gain in convenience we often lose in depth. Healing, however, depends on depth. It is facilitated by presence.

While I occasionally meet clients online, I work mostly in person because change moves differently when we are in the same room. Nervous systems regulate each other through eye contact, breath, and subtle gestures. These currents of human connection are more difficult to replicate through a screen.

My studio is a third space, separate from home and work, designed for slowing down and turning inward. Like entering a forest, the studio is a place to wander, to pause, and to discover hidden paths. It is where quiet surprises and new resources appear, often when least expected.

Come visit the studio and you’ll understand (the first consultation is offered at no cost).

In the studio, therapy is not only conversation: it is a living process. The pause in your voice, the shift in your posture, the silence that holds us. Sometimes it arrives through music, sometimes through therapeutic play, where an image or a gesture carries more truth than words. Healing is not only an idea to be understood. It is an experience to be lived, through presence, through discovery, and through the quiet witnessing of what is ready to emerge.

Every tradition has honoured the solitary path, yet across cultures and centuries people have also healed through gathering together, through embodied contact. The forest was a sacred ground of metamorphosis, a place to wander into mystery and return transformed. This ancestral way of meeting is even more essential today.

Therapy in person also helps to explore digital and cognitive overload, attention fragmentation shaped by hyperconnectivity, and the nervous system’s reduced tolerance for boredom, silence, and organic rhythms.

Sharing the same physical space is a way of letting another human being bear witness to our struggles as they take shape in real time, and of being changed through that felt encounter. Here, the truth of your path can slowly emerge. Together, we will listen for it.

Studio West Wall & Details

search previous next tag category expand menu location phone mail time cart zoom edit close