“Throughout my professional career, I have developed environmental adaptability by working with various populations, which has equipped me with the experience and knowledge to learn and understand different therapeutic techniques and interventions.”
What was your path to becoming a therapist?
Throughout my professional career, I have developed environmental adaptability by working with various populations, which has equipped me with the experience and knowledge to learn and understand different therapeutic techniques and interventions. I started as an applied behavioral analyst therapist, became a multisystemic therapist, and am now a licensed clinical psychotherapist. I have treated individuals of a variety of ages, from three years old to their early 60s.
What should someone know about working with you?
I formally specialize in trauma-based therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), and mindfulness therapy. Sessions are structured and a treatment plan will be implemented.
What are you most excited about within the evolving mental health landscape?
What I am most excited about within the evolving mental health landscape is that I can now treat clients virtually from the comfort of their homes. As a provider in New York City, there is a lot of hustle and bustle. So, having a therapist you can meet at your convenience is evolutionary.
Have you done any research-based work that you found particularly exciting? How does it inform your practice today?
I am currently involved in research pertaining to clinician burnout and the use of mindfulness skills and techniques to combat and prevent burnout.
“I formally specialize in trauma-based therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), and mindfulness therapy.”