Relational psychotherapy is not something you apply — it is something you become.
Clinical Supervision Services
Clinical supervision is more than oversight - it’s a place to think, feel, and grow as a psychotherapist. I offer a collaborative, reflective space where your clinical work can evolve with curiosity, depth, and support, helping you provide ethical, attuned, and meaningful care to the adults and couples you serve.
In our work together, supervision becomes a living conversation. Through rich case consultation and thoughtful dialogue, you’ll strengthen your clinical confidence, sharpen your conceptual clarity, and reconnect with the satisfaction that comes from practicing with intention and integrity. This is a space to slow down and make sense of complex relational dynamics, ethical dilemmas, countertransference, and the emotional weight that naturally accompanies therapeutic work.
My supervision practice is for therapists who want more than strategies and techniques - it’s for those drawn to depth, authenticity, and relational presence. Together, we focus on the therapeutic relationship as the primary agent of change. Our supervision sessions are collaborative, curious, challenging, and emotionally alive, offering an experience that mirrors the kind of transformative, relational work you strive to offer your clients.
I offer one-to-one clinical supervision grounded in a relational, attachment-informed, and emotionally-attuned approach, supporting therapists who work with adults and couples and who want to master the subtleties of relational psychotherapy within the context of their current practice.
Sessions are held virtually on Mondays and Fridays.
60 mins | $150
90 mins | $225
The Power of the Therapeutic Relationship
Research consistently shows that the therapeutic relationship is the strongest predictor of client outcomes and therapist satisfaction across different therapeutic modalities. Key evidence includes:
Client Outcomes: The quality of the therapeutic alliance explains more variance in treatment success than specific techniques or interventions, contributing to symptom reduction, improved functioning, and lower dropout rates
Therapist Satisfaction: Therapists report greater professional fulfillment and lower burnout when they experience positive, collaborative relationships with clients
Cross-Modality Consistency: Alliance effects are significant across therapy modalities, suggesting the relationship itself - not the specific method - is crucial
Mechanism of Change: A strong therapeutic relationship fosters trust, empathy, and collaboration, which facilitates client insight, motivation, and behavior change
“It is the relationship that heals...
the relationship,
the relationship,
the relationship.”
A Relational Approach to Supervision
What To Expect:
A reflective, collaborative space
Attention to your internal experience
Depth over technique
Support with complexity and intensity
Thoughtful, honest feedback
A developmental approach
Supporting You In:
Developing greater emotional regulation and presence
Using countertransference as meaningful clinical information
Working skillfully with rupture and repair
Holding complexity, uncertainty, and intensity
Ethically-aware practice
Our Work Will Focus On:
Your presence as the primary instrument
Attunement and relational listening
Countertransference as clinical wisdom
Working in the here-and-now
Rupture, repair, and ethical relational work
Our Work Will Attend To:
Who you are in the room
How you are impacted by your clients
What unfolds between you, your client, and the relational field
How your presence facilitates or constrains therapeutic change
Work With Couples:
Modeling relationships through your presence
Staying regulated when partners escalate or polarize
Working skillfully with power, gender, culture, trauma, and attachment dynamics
Supporting repair without rescuing or becoming the referee
Supervision Informed By:
Psychodynamic, neuropsychotherapeutic, and coaching lenses
Attachment theory and developmental trauma
Emotionally-attuned and experiential approaches
Contemporary couples therapy models
Evidence-based interventions