A Collaborative Resource for Therapists

Sometimes your clients need specialized trauma processing, but they're not ready to leave the therapeutic relationship they've built with you. I offer adjunctive somatic and EMDR therapy sessions designed to work alongside your existing treatment, not replace it.

What Adjunctive Somatic Therapy Looks Like

  • Collaboration begins with your client's informed consent. They'll sign a release authorizing us to communicate, and the decision to pursue or continue adjunctive work is always theirs

  • I function as a specialist, not a primary therapist. You retain the primary treatment relationship

  • We coordinate on treatment goals, pacing, and any relevant clinical information

  • I communicate regularly with you and defer to your broader clinical picture

  • If the client's needs shift, we discuss it together

Who Adjunctive Somatic Therapy Might be For

Your client may be a good fit for adjunctive work if they:

  • Have a stable primary therapeutic relationship but need focused trauma processing

  • Would benefit from EMDR or somatic work you don't provide

  • Are experiencing somatic symptoms, body-based dysregulation, or trauma held in the body

A Note on Collaboration:

I take the collaborative part seriously. Before beginning (and with the client’s signed consent), I'd want to connect with you directly to understand how we can coordinate care. Ongoing communication, including regularly scheduled check-ins, is an important part of how I work with other providers. This is to ensure the work remains focused and ethical, and that we avoid presenting contradictory information to clients.

Curious to learn more about adjunctive Somatic Therapy?

If you think one of your clients might benefit, I'd welcome a collegial consultation call. There's no pressure, just a conversation about whether this could be a good fit. I’d be happy to think it through with you.