Online Trauma Therapy
For California
If you’re here, there’s a good chance something you’ve been carrying hasn’t fully settled.
It might not always feel obvious or easy to name. It can show up in how you react, how you relate to others, or how your body holds onto tension even when things seem “fine” on the surface.
​
You might find yourself feeling overwhelmed in moments that don’t fully make sense, shutting down when things get too close, or staying constantly alert without knowing why.
​
Trauma isn’t always about what happened...it’s about what your system had to do to get through it.
​
This can include what’s often referred to as complex trauma or C-PTSD: patterns that develop over time when experiences are overwhelming, inconsistent, or unsupported.
​
Nothing about that is random. And nothing about it means something is wrong with you.
What trauma can look like
Trauma doesn’t always look the way people expect it to. It isn’t always one clear event, it can be built over time through experiences that felt overwhelming, unsafe, or unsupported.
​​
​
​
​
​
​
​
​
​
​​
Sometimes it shows up in your body as: tension, fatigue, difficulty relaxing, or a sense of always being “on.”
​
Other times, it shows up in how you relate: pulling away, over-adapting, or struggling to feel fully safe or understood.
You might notice it as:​​
-
feeling constantly on edge or easily overwhelmed
-
shutting down emotionally or feeling disconnected
-
difficulty trusting others or yourself
-
feeling stuck in long-standing patterns that trace back over time, not just one event
-
strong reactions that feel bigger than the situation
-
difficulty feeling safe in your own body or fully at ease
-
patterns in relationships that are hard to break
-
feeling stuck, numb, or like you’re just going through the motions
Even if it shows up differently for you, it still matters
How I approach trauma therapy
My approach is trauma-informed and centered on helping your system feel safe enough to begin processing what it’s been holding.
​
This work is grounded in nervous system awareness: understanding how your body has adapted and learning how to work with it, not against it.
​
We don’t rush into anything. We build awareness, stability, and trust first so that when we do begin to explore deeper work, it doesn’t feel overwhelming or destabilizing.
This work often includes:
-
understanding how your nervous system has adapted
-
building regulation skills that feel realistic and accessible
-
identifying patterns that developed as protection
-
creating space to process experiences at a pace that feels manageable
-
strengthening your ability to stay present without shutting down or becoming overwhelmed
This isn’t about forcing yourself to “get over” anything. It’s about helping your system reorganize in a way that feels safer, more grounded, and more connected.
​
This is especially important in complex trauma, where patterns are layered and have developed over time.

Getting Started
Starting trauma work can feel uncertain, especially if you’ve learned to manage things on your own or avoid going too deep.
​
You don’t have to figure it all out before starting.
​
I offer virtual therapy across California. We begin with a consultation to talk through what you’re looking for, answer any questions you have, and see if this feels like a good fit.
I work with teens, adults, veterans, first responders, and families through virtual therapy across California.
.png)

