My work is rooted in the belief that healing is both personal and collective. I approach therapy as a collaborative and sacred space where your full self is welcomed—body, mind, spirit, and story. Drawing from somatic, relational, and liberation-based frameworks, I support folks in reconnecting with their inner wisdom, reclaiming agency, and cultivating practices of care that sustain them beyond survival. As a Black, queer, and agender practitioner, I understand how systems of oppression—anti-Blackness, transmisogynoir, ableism, and capitalism—shape our sense of safety and belonging. My approach integrates trauma-informed somatic work, mindfulness, ancestral and spiritual grounding, and narrative reframing to help you build deeper self-trust and embodied resilience. In our work together, I hold space for grief, joy, complexity, and becoming. I see therapy as a space of remembering—of returning to your inherent worth, to the wisdom of your body, and to the truth that you are never beyond repair or connection.
“My work centers the healing and liberation of Black queer, trans, and gender-expansive people, especially those navigating the layered impacts of transmisogynoir, racial trauma, and systemic violence. I integrate trauma-informed, somatic, and spiritually grounded care with a deep commitment to collective healing and cultural affirmation.
Drawing from Black feminist thought, liberation psychology, and embodied practices, I support clients in exploring identity, grief, pleasure, and resilience while tending to the nervous system and spirit. My areas of expertise include racial and intergenerational trauma, identity development, complex PTSD, depression, anxiety, relational challenges, and disconnection from self or community.
I also work with folks seeking healing from internalized oppression, religious or spiritual trauma, burnout, and the chronic stress of navigating systems that were not designed for our thriving. My practice is shaped by a belief that healing is not about perfection but about remembering wholeness, connection, and possibility.”
