When individual therapy may be right for you
Sometimes the most important healing work begins alone — before, alongside, or independent of relationship work. You don't need to be in crisis to benefit from individual therapy. You just need to sense that something is keeping you from living and relating the way you want to.
For high-achieving professionals, that something is often invisible to everyone around them. You perform at the highest level. You manage complexity with ease. And yet certain patterns keep repeating — in relationships, in the way you relate to yourself, in the quiet moments when the performance stops. Individual therapy creates the space to look at what's actually there.
Individual therapy may be right for you if:
- You notice the same painful patterns repeating in your relationships — and you don't fully know why
- Anxiety, depression, or emotional overwhelm is affecting your daily functioning and joy
- You carry trauma — from childhood, relationships, or life events — that has never been fully processed
- You feel disconnected from yourself — your emotions, your body, your sense of who you are
- You're navigating a major life transition: a loss, a career change, a move, a shift in identity
- Grief has left you unable to find your footing and the people around you don't understand why it's taking so long
- You experience persistent shame, low self-worth, or a chronic sense of not being enough
- Your cultural identity, immigration experience, or minority stress is taking a toll on your wellbeing
- Spiritual wounds — from religion, church, or a faith community — have left you confused, hurt, or lost
- You are navigating grief — from death, divorce, estrangement, or the loss of a life you expected to have
- Sexual trauma has affected your sense of self, your body, or your capacity for intimacy
- Addiction or compulsive behavior — including pornography — is creating shame and affecting your relationships
- You want to show up differently in your closest relationships but don't know how to change
What makes this therapy different
Many therapy approaches focus on managing symptoms — reducing anxiety, changing unhelpful thoughts, improving coping skills. These have value. But I work at a deeper level. I am interested in the underlying emotional landscape — the unprocessed feelings, the unmet attachment needs, the moments in your history when your nervous system learned that the world wasn't safe, or that you weren't worthy of love and care.
When we reach and begin to shift those deeper layers, symptoms often resolve on their own — because we're addressing the source, not just the surface.
The foundation: Emotionally Focused Individual Therapy (EFIT)
At the core of my individual work is Emotionally Focused Individual Therapy (EFIT) — the individual application of EFT, developed by Dr. Sue Johnson and Dr. Leanne Campbell. As one of a small number of ICEEFT-certified EFIT therapists, I bring the full depth of this evidence-based, attachment-informed approach to individual therapy.
EFIT recognizes that many of our most painful struggles — anxiety, depression, shame, relationship problems, emotional dysregulation — are rooted in disruptions to our attachment system. These are not character flaws or signs of weakness. They are wounds in the relational fabric of who we are.
In EFIT, we work to:
- Access and process the deeper emotions that drive distress — not just talk about them
- Develop a more secure, compassionate relationship with yourself
- Shift the internal working models — the core beliefs about yourself and others — that keep you stuck
- Build the emotional flexibility and resilience to engage more fully with your life and relationships
Integrative approaches I draw from
Depending on what you bring and what serves you best, I weave in additional evidence-based modalities alongside EFIT:
Brainspotting (BSP)
A powerful brain-body trauma processing approach for trauma, grief, and emotional material that lives below the level of words. Particularly effective when talk therapy alone hasn't been enough. Brainspotting accesses and processes what the body is holding — often moving faster and deeper than traditional approaches.
Parts Work — Internal Family Systems (IFS) Informed
A compassionate way of working with the different inner parts of yourself — the inner critic, the people-pleaser, the protector, the wounded child. Rather than trying to silence or override these parts, we develop a relationship with them — understanding what they're trying to do and helping them find new, less costly ways to keep you safe.
Family of Origin Exploration
The patterns we learned in our families of origin — about love, safety, worth, and belonging — shape everything. This work helps you understand where your patterns came from, grieve what you didn't receive, and differentiate — becoming more fully yourself outside of your family system's script.
Somatic & Body-Informed Approaches
Emotions live in the body. A purely cognitive approach to therapy often misses the deeper layers of experience. I attend to what your body is communicating — sensations, tensions, the subtle signals of a nervous system that has been working hard to keep you safe — and integrate this into the work.
Existential & Spiritual Integration
As a former pastoral counselor with a deep respect for the spiritual dimension of human experience, I welcome questions of meaning, purpose, faith, and identity into the therapy room. For many clients, healing includes reclaiming a relationship with the sacred — or reconstructing one after spiritual wounding.
Multicultural & Identity-Affirming Practice
I bring a genuinely multicultural perspective — having lived and worked across multiple cultures and communities. I understand the particular weight of navigating minority identities, immigration, acculturation, and the intersection of cultural expectations with personal wellbeing. Your full identity is welcome here.
What I treat
- Trauma — acute, complex, developmental, and relational
- PTSD and complex PTSD
- Anxiety disorders — generalized anxiety, social anxiety, performance anxiety
- Depression and dysthymia
- Grief, loss, and complicated bereavement
- Shame and chronic low self-worth
- Attachment wounds and intimacy struggles
- Sexual and intimacy concerns
- Spiritual trauma and religious deconstruction
- Multicultural identity stress and minority stress
- Life transitions — career, relationships, faith, identity
- Mood disorders — major depression, bipolar — and daily life management
- OCD, BPD, ADHD as they affect self-experience and relationships
- Missionary and cross-cultural worker wellbeing
- Grief and complicated bereavement
- Sexual trauma and childhood sexual abuse
- Pornography addiction and compulsive sexual behavior
- Addiction recovery and relational healing
Grief, sexual trauma & addiction
These three areas carry layers of shame and isolation that most people navigate in silence for far too long.
Grief & loss
Grief is not only about death. It lives in divorce, estrangement, infertility, the loss of a career or a faith or a version of yourself you once knew. Our culture gives very little space for grief, and unprocessed loss often shows up as depression, numbness, or an inability to move forward. I create genuine room for grief to be honored, processed, and integrated into a life that still holds meaning.
Sexual trauma
Sexual trauma — from childhood sexual abuse, assault, exploitation, or experiences within intimate relationships — leaves deep marks on the body, the self, and the capacity for intimacy. Many survivors carry enormous shame and have never had a truly safe space to speak about what happened. I bring specialized trauma, somatic, and attachment-informed approaches to this work — creating a deeply non-pathologizing environment where healing is genuinely possible.
Addiction & pornography
Addiction — including pornography addiction and compulsive sexual behavior — is almost always about pain, disconnection, and unmet attachment needs rather than moral failure. I work with individuals and couples navigating this with honesty and compassion — understanding what the behavior has been trying to do, addressing what is underneath it, and building a life grounded in genuine connection rather than compulsion and shame.
A note on individual therapy alongside couples work
Individual and couples therapy can complement each other powerfully. Sometimes individual work before or during couples therapy allows each partner to show up with greater emotional availability and self-awareness. I am thoughtful about how to coordinate this in a way that serves both the individual and the relationship.
What to expect
We begin with a complimentary 20-minute consultation — a chance for you to share what you're carrying and for us to get a sense of whether we're a good fit. Individual sessions are 50 minutes, conducted online via a secure, HIPAA-compliant platform throughout Tennessee and Malaysia. Most clients begin with weekly sessions, especially in the early stages of therapy.