SUPERVISION
Relational, trauma-informed clinical supervision for social workers and counselors.
I provide clinical supervision to social workers and counselors at all levels of experience, from new graduates working toward licensure to seasoned clinicians seeking consultation, reflection, and professional growth.
PURPOSE
A reflective space for clinical growth
Supervision with me offers a space to reflect on your clinical work, strengthen your use of self, deepen your case conceptualization, expand your skills, and increase your confidence in helping clients achieve their goals.
Who supervision is for
New graduates
Support with navigating clinical licensure hours, developing confidence, and building a strong clinical foundation.
Experienced clinicians
Consultation and reflection for therapists who want to deepen their relational, trauma-informed, and socially conscious work.
Clinicians seeking a relational supervisor
Support for therapists who want to better understand what they bring into the therapy room and how to use themselves ethically and effectively.
Clinicians managing complex trauma cases
Support with trauma, attachment, boundaries, countertransference, safety, and clinical framing.
LENS
My supervision lens
I draw from psychodynamic, Gestalt, trauma, attachment, feminist, anti-racist, EMDR, IFS, and CBT frameworks. My supervision supports clinicians in thinking deeply about the therapeutic relationship, social location, clinical boundaries, ethics, and the emotional impact of the work.
For clinicians becoming the therapists they want to be
Supervision is not only about managing cases. It is also about becoming more thoughtful, grounded, ethical, and confident in your clinical presence. I support clinicians in clarifying their goals, deepening their skills, and developing a sustainable relationship to the work.
EXPERTISE
Areas supervision may include
Reflect on what you bring into the therapeutic relationship and how identity, power, privilege, and lived experience shape the work.
Social location & use of self
Explore client-therapist dynamics and the emotional responses that arise in clinical relationships.
Transference & countertransference
Theory & case conceptualization
Understand how to apply theory to clinical cases in a grounded and useful way.
Clinical frame & boundaries
Strengthen clarity around boundaries, safety, consistency, and mutual respect.
Trauma-informed practice
Deepen your ability to support trauma survivors while maintaining safety and regulation.
Self-disclosure
Clarify when self-disclosure may be useful, ethical, or clinically appropriate.
Compassion fatigue & self-care
Address the emotional demands of clinical work and prevent burnout.
Dual relationships
Navigate complexity with care, ethics, and clinical judgment.
Interested in supervision?
Reach out to ask about clinical supervision availability, fit, and next steps.