From the outside, your life may look steady.
You’re capable. Responsible. Thoughtful.
Inside your relationships, it may feel very different.
You may find yourself:
→ replaying conversations and questioning your reactions
→ feeling responsible for other people’s emotions
→ swinging between self-blame and quiet resentment
→ understanding your patterns — but not knowing how to change them in the moment
→ feeling drawn to relationships that eventually drain you
Many people come to therapy believing the issue is a specific relationship.
Often, the deeper challenge is a relational pattern that repeats under stress.
→ over-functioning when others withdraw
→ people-pleasing to keep the peace
→ shutting down when conflict escalates
→ second-guessing yourself after emotional conversations
→ staying too long in dynamics that leave you drained
Many people who arrive here are not lacking insight.
They already understand their patterns.
The difficulty comes in the moment when stress hits.
That’s when the nervous system takes over and old roles return.
In this work, we slow that moment down.
You learn to:
• recognize the pattern as it begins
• stay present instead of reacting automatically
• choose a response that aligns with your values
Over time, something important shifts.
You stop abandoning yourself to keep relationships working.
And you begin building relationships where honesty and connection can exist together.
This isn’t general talk therapy.
This is focused relational work.
We look closely at how you show up in:
• conflict
• intimacy
• boundaries
• emotional responsibility
• attachment
• relational decision-making
Common themes include:
• recovery from narcissistic or high-conflict relationships
• codependent or over-responsibility patterns
• difficulty setting boundaries without guilt
• fear of abandonment or emotional shutdown
• chronic emotional burnout
• repeating family-of-origin dynamics in adult relationships
The goal isn’t to make you “better behaved.”
It’s to help you become steadier, clearer, and more self-trusting in relationships.
We don’t just analyze the past.
We work with what happens in real time when stress enters a relationship.
In therapy, we pay attention to:
Nervous system responses
Shutdown, escalation, people-pleasing, or hyper-vigilance are adaptive responses — not character flaws.
Relational roles
Many people learned early roles in relationships: the fixer, the caretaker, the invisible one, the overachiever.
Together we explore how those roles formed — and whether they still serve you now.
Core beliefs that shape connection
Beliefs such as:
“I’m too much.”
“I’m not enough.”
“If I tell the truth, I’ll be left.”
“If everyone else is okay, I’m okay.”
When these beliefs begin to shift, relational choices begin to shift as well.
Practicing new relational responses
Boundaries.
Requests.
Staying present during conflict.
Saying no without collapse.
These are not things most people learn in the moment when conflict is already escalating.
They are skills that develop with practice, awareness, and support.
Over time, many clients begin to notice meaningful shifts in how they experience relationships.
They may find themselves:
• setting clearer boundaries without the same level of guilt
• feeling less drawn to chaotic or emotionally unavailable partners
• reacting less intensely during conflict
• staying more grounded during difficult conversations
• second-guessing themselves less
• developing a stronger internal sense of “I know what’s right for me.”
The goal of this work isn’t perfection.
The goal is self-trust in relationship.
This work tends to be a strong fit for people who:
• are high-functioning but emotionally tired
• want accountability and depth — not endless venting
• are open to trauma-informed and nervous-system-focused therapy
• are willing to show up consistently and practice change between sessions
• want therapy that integrates psychology, embodiment, and real-life application
This is not passive therapy.
This is structured relational work.
If some part of you senses that something needs to change, that instinct is worth listening to.
Self-trust isn’t something you think your way into.
It’s something you build.
When you’re ready, this work is here.
Schedule Your Consultation to Begin Now.