FrequentLy Asked Questions

  • I offer telehealth counseling to adults and people in relationships based in Texas. This takes place as either individual counseling or as relationship counseling where all partners can participate.

    I also conduct workshops and am available for speaking engagements on my areas of clinical interest: perinatal mental health, ethical nonmonogamy, alternative spirituality, race-based trauma informed care, and multiracial identity.

    Starting Summer 2026 I will provide clinical supervision to Texas-based LMSWs.

  • Reach out using the “Schedule with Me!” link above! I have partnered with a company called Headway for insurance verification, if you’d like to check that I take your insurance before scheduling a consultation you can do so here.

  • I currently accept:

    • Aetna

    • BCBS of Massachusetts

    • BCBS of Texas

    • BlueCross and BlueShield

    • Cigna and Evernorth

    • Horizon BCBS of New Jersey

    • United Healthcare

    If you don’t see your insurance listed, please visit my Headway profile here to verify! As a note, I do not accept insurance for relationship counseling.

  • I accept children and adolescents on a case-by-case basis. In my experience, telehealth creates unique challenges when working with minors, but scheduling a consultation is the best way to determine fit.

  • My approach to counseling acknowledges that treatment is as varied as humans are. Therapy focuses on the person’s goals and development, not the counselor’s desires for them. I am deeply compassionate, non-judgmental, and believe that the most effective therapy is truly collaborative between client and clinician. I work with individuals as well as couples and families, and am open to clients with “non-traditional” family styles such as chosen families and non-monogamous relationships with or without children.

    I am a holistic counselor, which means that I pull from multiple therapy types in our work together. I will sometimes pull from structured techniques to help you evaluate your thoughts and their connection to your emotions, but also use more emotion-centered modalities to help you move out of intellectualizing your emotions and towards actually feeling them.