Clinical Supervision for Associate Therapists

You already have the theories. What you need is a supervisor who will actually be in it with you — someone who brings their full self to the process so you can do the same.
My supervision is feminist, relational, and unapologetically grounded in the belief that who you are as a person is your most powerful clinical tool. My goal is to help you create the most impactful therapeutic relationships you can imagine.

WA State Approved Supervision

I am approved in Washington State to provide clinical supervision hours toward licensure for Licensed Social Work Associate Independent Clinical (LSWAICs), Associate Mental Health Counselors (AMHCs), and Associate Marriage and Family Therapists (AMFTs).

I am open to being a primary or adjunct supervisor.

Prior to returning to private practice, I managed a queer-centered group practice and supervised many heart-centered, values driven clinicians with their own unique styles. I am not interested in teaching you how to be me; I am interested in growing you into the best version of yourself.

Supervision is offered virtually throughout Washington State.

Specializations

My supervision is tailored for clinicians who wish to deepen their skills in:

  • Developmental Trauma Healing: Learn to support adult clients in healing early relational wounds through trauma-informed, attachment-centered care.

  • Relationship and Attachment Healing: Deepen your ability to help clients build healthier, more connected relationships across their lives.

  • Neuro-affirming therapy: Build skills to work with Autistic, ADHD, and otherwise neurodivergent adults, as well as people of all neurotypes caregiving neurodivergent children.

  • LGBTQIA-affirming therapy: Strengthen your practice with queer and trans adults and with parents of LGBTQIA+ individuals of all ages.

  • Feminist Therapy: Engage with therapy as a site of liberation and resistance. We will explore how systems of power shape clinical work and how to practice in ways that honor client wisdom, challenge internalized oppression, and center relational justice.

  • Functional Analytic Psychotherapy (FAP): Receive experiential FAP-based supervision*—whether you’re new to the model or seeking to deepen your practice. Emphasis on identifying CRBs, building a strong therapeutic relationship, and using in-session behavior as a path to change.

    *Please note this supervision is for associates working toward licensure only and would not count for supervision toward FAP certification. I am currently working toward certification as a FAP Consultant and Trainer.

Benefits of Supervision

  • Liberatory Clinical Growth: Develop your clinical voice in a space that honors complexity, curiosity, and the politics of care.

  • Relational Supervision: Experience supervision that mirrors the depth, presence, and attunement you aim to offer your clients.

  • Depth with Accountability: Receive feedback that supports both clinical depth and ethical clarity—especially in the gray areas.

  • Practice-Based Learning: Grow your skills in the room through practicing within the supervisory relationship, as well as process-focused reflection.

  • Sustainable Clinical Work: Explore how to stay connected to this work without burning out, or abandoning yourself. Practice staying connected to this work, while acknowledging the inevitability of harm—and learning to repair, realign, and keep showing up.

How I’m Different

My approach to supervision is rooted in vulnerability—yours and mine.

I empower you to ethically leverage your authentic self as a powerful tool for connection and change within your therapeutic relationships.

Your genuine thoughts, feelings, reactions, and behaviors, as well as your unique intersectional identities, are vital to the deep healing work you and your clients long for each therapy hour.

But you don’t have to do it alone. I’ll meet you there.

Supervision is our practice ground. Whether we are tending to logistical questions, or exploring complex cases, we’ll do it in a way that invites us both to show up to the relationship between us.

Through supervision, associates:

  • expand their awareness of themselves and their clients

  • build their courage to take the relational risks that amplify therapeutic progress

  • practice giving and receiving (this one can be tough for therapists!) the therapeutic love necessary for healing

If you’re looking for an intersectional feminist, radical, contextual, relational approach to supervision—you’ve found it.

Get in touch to learn more about
clinical supervision for associates.

Supervision inquiries go through a brief interest form (opens in Google Forms) so I can learn a little about you before we connect. You can check my current availability here.