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I’m a psychiatrist and psychotherapist drawn to the complexity of being human — the contradictions we live with, the stories we inherit, and the ways we carry longing, grief, and love in our bodies and minds.​

 

My clinical work is grounded in the belief that meaningful change happens not through fixing or managing symptoms alone, but through making space to feel, to reflect, and to come into deeper contact with oneself. I’m particularly attuned to the quiet ways people survive — the compromises we make, the roles we take on, the coping that worked once but no longer does. In our work together, I aim to create a space where those patterns can be safely explored and gently disrupted.​

 

I approach psychiatry as a relational and collaborative practice. My training includes medication management, but I view psychiatric care as something that must always be contextual — shaped by a person’s history, identity, and environment, not reduced to a checklist. Sometimes that means working with medication; often it means slowing down enough to hear what's unfolding beneath the surface.

 

​I’ve worked with people facing mood and anxiety challenges, relational trauma, existential stuckness, and the complexity of caregiving roles. I work best with people who are curious about themselves, even if they feel afraid or uncertain, and who are looking not only for relief but for greater self-understanding and emotional integrity.

 

​I am currently seeing adult individuals in psychotherapy, and I also offer psychiatric consultation for both children and adults. My practice is inclusive of all genders, sexualities, and identities. If you think we might work well together, I’d be honored to meet you.

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