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Robert Brandt, LCSW

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Robert Brandt, LCSW

Staff Therapist

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Biography

Robert Brandt, LCSW, is a licensed clinical social worker with more than 20 years of experience providing behavioral health services across outpatient, community mental health, primary care, addiction treatment, residential, and telehealth settings. He earned his MSW from Fordham University and a BFA in Music and Psychology from SUNY Purchase. Licensed in New York, Florida, Virginia, and Pennsylvania, he is trained in CBT, REBT, ACT, Motivational Interviewing, and Solution-Focused Therapy. He has worked with adults facing anxiety, depression, trauma, substance use concerns, chronic illness, relationship challenges, LGBTQIA+ concerns, and life transitions.

Robert creates a warm, supportive, and nonjudgmental environment where patients feel heard, respected, and understood. He values collaboration and partners with patients to identify meaningful goals and develop an approach tailored to their unique needs. He believes therapy should be practical, individualized, and focused on building skills that support lasting change, balancing empathy with honest feedback when helpful.

Robert begins by gaining a thorough understanding of each patient’s history, strengths, concerns, and goals. Together, they develop a personalized treatment plan aligned with the patient’s values and priorities. Using evidence-based approaches such as CBT, ACT, Motivational Interviewing, and solution-focused interventions, he helps patients build coping skills, strengthen resilience, and overcome barriers to progress while regularly reviewing and adjusting treatment as needs evolve.

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Expertise and specialties

Talk Therapy

Education and training

  • Master of Social Work, Fordham University
  • Bachelor of Fine Arts, SUNY College at Purchase

Location

Licensed in

Florida
New York

Languages spoken

English

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View Taylor Smith, LPC

Taylor Smith, LPC

Taylor Smith, LPC

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My approach is culturally responsive and advocacy-minded, and I don't pretend to be a blank wall. I've worked across schools, higher education, private practice, and rehabilitation settings, which taught me that no two people arrive needing the same thing. Early on, expect me to ask questions and actually listen to the answers, then help you get specific about what you want to change. From there we clarify goals and build practical tools together, drawing on cognitive behavioral, solution-focused, trauma-informed, and mindfulness-based approaches, at a pace that feels supportive rather than rushed. I want you to leave feeling heard and respected, not managed.

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View bio

View Migdalia Moore, LCSW

Migdalia Moore, LCSW

Migdalia Moore, LCSW

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I think healing and growth belong together, so I pay attention to more than symptoms. Identity, purpose, and personal values matter in this work, and for those who want it, faith has a place in our conversations too. I start with a thorough first session to really understand your history, what's weighing on you now, and what you're hoping to move toward. From there, we build a plan that fits your goals, drawing on cognitive behavioral therapy, trauma-informed care, and emotion-focused strategies. I'll also send you off with practical tools to use between our sessions, because a lot of the real work happens in your day-to-day life.

My aim is for you to feel more grounded and more in charge of your own direction, not managed. I value honesty, and I'll be honest with you in return.

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View bio

View Kyle Balasco, LPC

Kyle Balasco, LPC

Kyle Balasco, LPC

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Deborah Columbro, LMHC

Deborah Columbro, LMHC

I'm a licensed counselor who focuses on helping adolescents and adults work through depression, anxiety, trauma, grief, and the patterns that come with co-dependency and addictive behaviors. I'm licensed as a Licensed Mental Health Counselor in Florida and New York, and as a Licensed Professional Counselor in Virginia, so I've had the chance to sit with a wide range of people at very different points in their lives.

What matters most to me is genuineness. I won't pretend to have all the answers or dress things up, and I'd rather be honest with you than tell you what's easy to hear. A lot of the people I see have been carrying something painful for a long time, sometimes the effects of sexual abuse or a loss they've never fully spoken about, and they need to feel understood and respected before any real work can happen. In a session, that usually looks like slowing down, letting you say things at your own pace, and staying open-minded about wherever the conversation goes. From there we work together to make sense of your experiences, build some insight into them, and put practical coping strategies in place.

My hope is that healing, growth, and a little more resilience come out of that process, though I never promise a timeline. If you've been quietly holding onto something and want someone in your corner while you sort through it, reach out and let's talk.

Licensed in

NY

FL

VA

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View Cara Lambert, LCSW

Cara Lambert, LCSW

Cara Lambert, LCSW

My work as a therapist centers on adults and older adults living with depression, anxiety, and the kind of stress that builds up when life gets heavy. Over more than twenty years as a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, much of it in medical social work and hospice care, I've sat with people facing serious health concerns, the loss of someone they love, and the quiet exhaustion of caring for a family member who can no longer care for themselves. Those experiences shape how I listen. Grief, illness, and caregiving aren't problems to be fixed; they're circumstances to be understood.

I'd describe my approach as warm and steady, without judgment about whatever you bring in. Early on, I want to understand the full picture: what's troubling you now, your history, the people and supports around you, and what actually matters to you. I draw on cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness, and solution-focused work, but I adjust to how you think and what you're comfortable with rather than running everyone through the same method. The goals we set are yours, built around your strengths and priorities so the progress we make can hold up over time.

A first visit is mostly about getting to know each other and easing into a rhythm that feels comfortable, so we're not rushing anywhere before you're ready.

Curious whether this feels like the right fit? That's exactly what a first conversation is for.

Licensed in

NY

FL

CA

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View Nora Bice, LMFT

Nora Bice, LMFT

Nora Bice, LMFT

I'm a therapist, and most of what I see is adults trying to stay afloat in a world that never stops pinging at them: ADHD that makes focus feel like a moving target, anxiety that hums under everything, and the particular flavor of burnout that comes from being always reachable and never quite caught up. I started practicing in 2011, and I've worked across private practice, residential, county, and school settings, both as a therapist and a supervisor, which has taught me that no two people arrive at the same fork in the road for the same reasons.

I practice from a feminist, LGBTQIA+, and neurodivergent-affirming lens, and I lean toward collaboration over prescription. Early on, I want to understand your strengths as much as your struggles, past and present, and then figure out with you what a more balanced life would actually look like. In practice, that means we'll pull from mind-body, cognitive-behavioral, and attachment-based approaches depending on what fits you, and we'll build routines and skills that hold up outside the room. When it helps, I'll coordinate with your psychiatrist so the plan stays coherent rather than scattered.

My pace is steady and my questions are direct, but the shape of the work is always yours to steer. If the constant noise of modern life has left you frayed and looking for something more grounded, let's talk about where to start.

Licensed in

CA

FL

MA

OR

PA

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View Bonnie LaBar, LMHC

Bonnie LaBar, LMHC

Bonnie LaBar, LMHC

I'm a therapist who has spent years in outpatient clinics and private practice in Rockland County, working with people across a wide range of ages and concerns, from teenagers to adults. Much of what I see is anxiety, depression, the aftermath of difficult experiences, family strain, low self-esteem, and the ordinary daily stress that quietly wears people down over time.

I tend to be soft-spoken, and I lean into a gentle presence rather than a forceful one. My approach is eclectic, though I most often draw on cognitive behavioral therapy to help ease symptoms and build practical coping skills. What that looks like in practice is a first session spent listening closely and getting a real sense of what's brought you in, so we can shape the work around your specific needs rather than a fixed formula. I'll adjust the pace to you, and I want you to feel genuinely heard and supported in the room, not managed.

My hope is always the same: that the people I work with leave with steadier footing, a bit more well-being, and movement toward the personal goals that matter to them.

Reaching out for help takes something, and if you've read this far, you've already done part of the harder work. When you're ready, I'll be here to start the conversation with you.

Licensed in

NY

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View Rebecca Blunt, LMHC

Rebecca Blunt, LMHC

Rebecca Blunt, LMHC

I'm a therapist who has spent years counseling adults and older adults across outpatient clinics, non-profit community agencies, and school settings. Alongside that clinical work, I've taught undergraduate and graduate courses at three colleges, which has kept me curious about how people learn, change, and make sense of what they're going through.

The way I counsel is a partnership. I take the time to fully understand your situation before we decide anything, because a plan built in a hurry rarely fits the person it's meant for. That means our early conversations lean toward listening: I want to understand your history, what's bringing you in, and what you're hoping will be different. I also pay close attention to your strengths and the resources already in your life, because those tend to be what real progress is built on.

From there, we develop a treatment plan aligned with your goals, so the path forward feels clear and structured rather than open-ended. I care about building a genuine working relationship, and I think that relationship is where most of the meaningful work happens. My pace is deliberate; I'd rather understand you well than rush to conclusions.

There's no rush to begin, either. When the timing feels right for you, I'll be here to start.

Licensed in

NY

PA

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View Alexis Burgess, LCSW

Alexis Burgess, LCSW

Alexis Burgess, LCSW

I've spent years as a therapist treating trauma, anxiety, depression, and the aftermath of domestic abuse, in telehealth, hospital, and community settings. I have a particular commitment to military members, veterans, and their families, who often carry experiences that are hard to put into words with someone who hasn't sat with them before. I see adolescents, adults, and older adults, and I'm comfortable across the range of ages and life stages that walk through my door.

My approach is collaborative and pretty down to earth. I lean on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy along with mindfulness and trauma-informed techniques, less to fill your head with theory and more to give you practical tools you can actually use between sessions. Starting therapy can feel like a lot, so I don't rush it. Early on, my focus is on building a genuine connection and finding a pace that feels manageable to you. In a session, expect me to be direct but warm: we'll look honestly at your thoughts and emotions, and I'll ask questions that help both of us understand what's really going on underneath the stress, the transition, or the long-standing pattern you've been fighting.

What I care about is meaningful change that lasts, not a quick patch. If any of that resonates, reach out and we'll start with a conversation. From there, we'll figure out what real, personalized care looks like for you.

Licensed in

CA

FL

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View Jennifer Cramer, LCSW

Jennifer Cramer, LCSW

Jennifer Cramer, LCSW

I'm a therapist, and most of what I see is adults and older adults working through the kind of thoughts and behaviors that quietly get in the way of the life they want. My background spans outpatient, inpatient, and community-based care, and that range has shaped how I meet people at whatever stage of care they're in. I earned my master's degree at the State University of New York at Buffalo, and I've spent my career supporting people through moments that can feel stuck.

I value communication that's open, honest, and direct, because I think that's what makes it possible to set treatment goals that actually fit the person in front of me rather than a generic version of them. Our first session is where I get a thorough sense of your history, your concerns, and what you're hoping for, and from there we build a plan around your priorities. I'll ask you to notice how your thoughts and behaviors between sessions shape your progress, because a lot of the real work happens in the days we're not talking. I want the room to feel warm and steady enough that you can look at hard things honestly, and I'll be a collaborator in that, not a bystander.

There's no rush on any of this. When the time feels right for you to begin, I'll be here.

Licensed in

NY

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View Ardita Avdiu, LMHC

Ardita Avdiu, LMHC

Ardita Avdiu, LMHC

I'm a therapist, and over the past five years I've worked with adults and young adults across outpatient, intensive outpatient, crisis, and community settings. That range has taught me that most people arrive carrying a mix of things at once: old emotional patterns, strained relationships, and whatever stress is pressing on them right now. Family dynamics come up often, and years of family systems work have shaped how I listen for the ways those relationships shape the rest of a person's life.

I value open, honest, and collaborative communication, and I'd rather we be direct with each other than polite and vague. Early on, I spend real time understanding your history and what's actually going on, the emotional patterns and the current stressors, before we decide together what matters most to focus on. From there I build an individualized plan, drawing on CBT, DBT, and EMDR-informed and trauma-informed approaches, and I adjust it as you change and your needs shift. My aim is practical: better emotional regulation, more self-awareness, and tools that hold up long after our work together.

A session with me tends to be steady and grounded. I ask questions, I check my read of things against yours, and we keep the goals clear and meaningful rather than abstract.

There's no rush to have it all figured out before we start. Whenever you feel ready to begin, I'll be here.

Licensed in

NY

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View Carolina Leon, LMHC

Carolina Leon, LMHC

Carolina Leon, LMHC

Most of my work as a therapist is talk therapy with people across a wide span of life, from adolescents finding their footing to adults navigating the middle years to older adults facing the changes that come with getting older. I hold licenses in both mental health counseling and marriage and family therapy, and I've done that work in homes, in schools, and now virtually, which has taught me that people show up ready to talk in all kinds of settings.

I care about open communication, so I'll always tell you what I'm thinking and ask you to do the same. In our first session, I mostly want to understand your story, what brought you in, and what you're actually hoping to change. From there we set clear, meaningful goals together and build a plan that fits your life rather than one I've decided on in advance. I try to stay culturally humble in that process, which for me means honoring where you come from and the experiences that shaped you, and never assuming I already know what any of that means to you.

My aim is for you to feel genuinely heard and respected the whole way through, not just at the start. I work in English, and I'm comfortable across a range of concerns that bring people to therapy.

Reach out when you're ready to begin the conversation.

Licensed in

FL

SC

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View Heather Aschenbrenner, LMHC

Heather Aschenbrenner, LMHC

Heather Aschenbrenner, LMHC

I'm a licensed mental health counselor who focuses on helping adults, including older adults, work through the barriers that get in the way of both daily life and the longer-term goals they're reaching for. My background spans outpatient, inpatient, and private practice work, including substance use and mental health care in both a Winston-Salem nonprofit and a rural New York clinic, along with inpatient rehabilitation. My training runs through ADHD, maternal and perinatal mental health, and trauma-informed care, and I hold certification in TF-CBT. My interest in the connection between diet and mental health actually started back in my nutritional sciences studies, and it still shapes how I think about the whole person.

I lean toward an existential and humanistic approach, drawing on CBT and DBT depending on what fits the person in front of me. I don't think there's a one-size-fits-all method, so I build strategies around your specific experiences rather than leaning on a single technique. Sessions stay focused and thoughtful, though I'll bring in a little humor when it fits; people tend to say it reflects how I actually am. I check in regularly about whether the tools we're using are working, because I'd rather adjust than assume. My aim is for you to leave with enough insight to understand yourself better than when we started.

The first step is really just a conversation, and we sort out the direction together from there.

Licensed in

NY

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View Stephanie Tubbs, LCSW

Stephanie Tubbs, LCSW

Stephanie Tubbs, LCSW

I trained as a therapist, and I mostly work with adults and older adults who want a space to be themselves without smoothing over the hard parts. Over the years I've worked with veterans, adolescents, older folks, and the LGBTQIA+ community, and what carries across all of them is a simple thing: people want to feel seen, heard, and supported. That's where I start.

My sessions are relaxed. There's room for real conversation, and honestly, there's room for laughter too. I don't think therapy has to be solemn to be serious. I lean on approaches like CBT, DBT, Motivational Interviewing, and Solution-Focused Therapy, and I keep the work trauma-informed and culturally aware, so we're not pretending your context doesn't matter. First, I want to hear your story. Then we figure out together what actually matters to you and what you'd like to be different.

I'll offer support, and I'll also gently push where I think growth is waiting. I bring practical tools you can use in daily life, and I check in on how things are landing so we can adjust as we go. My hope is that you walk out feeling more confident, more resilient, and more able to handle things on your own.

Curious whether the two of us would click? That's exactly what a first visit is for.

Licensed in

MT

CA

FL

MN

MS

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View Robert Brandt, LCSW

Robert Brandt, LCSW

Robert Brandt, LCSW

Robert Brandt, LCSW, is a licensed clinical social worker with more than 20 years of experience providing behavioral health services across outpatient, community mental health, primary care, addiction treatment, residential, and telehealth settings. He earned his MSW from Fordham University and a BFA in Music and Psychology from SUNY Purchase. Licensed in New York, Florida, Virginia, and Pennsylvania, he is trained in CBT, REBT, ACT, Motivational Interviewing, and Solution-Focused Therapy. He has worked with adults facing anxiety, depression, trauma, substance use concerns, chronic illness, relationship challenges, LGBTQIA+ concerns, and life transitions.

Robert creates a warm, supportive, and nonjudgmental environment where patients feel heard, respected, and understood. He values collaboration and partners with patients to identify meaningful goals and develop an approach tailored to their unique needs. He believes therapy should be practical, individualized, and focused on building skills that support lasting change, balancing empathy with honest feedback when helpful.

Robert begins by gaining a thorough understanding of each patient’s history, strengths, concerns, and goals. Together, they develop a personalized treatment plan aligned with the patient’s values and priorities. Using evidence-based approaches such as CBT, ACT, Motivational Interviewing, and solution-focused interventions, he helps patients build coping skills, strengthen resilience, and overcome barriers to progress while regularly reviewing and adjusting treatment as needs evolve.

Licensed in

FL

NY

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View Christine Cantilena Barnes, LPC

Christine Cantilena Barnes, LPC

Christine Cantilena Barnes, LPC

Christine Cantilena Barnes, LPC, is a dedicated mental health counselor with two master’s degrees, including a Master of Science in Clinical Mental Health Counseling from Mercer University. She developed extensive crisis and trauma expertise as a mobile trauma therapist serving all four Emory Hospital emergency rooms and completed advanced clinical training across inpatient and outpatient psychiatric settings. Christine is certified in EMDR and Trauma-Focused Therapy, with extensive training in DBT and CBT. Her clinical background spans child art therapy, high-conflict couples counseling, and collaborative work within psychiatric settings.

Christine believes that personal values are central to meaningful change and healing. She fosters a therapeutic environment built on honesty, transparency, and open communication, helping patients feel heard, respected, and supported without judgment. She works collaboratively with patients to establish clear, measurable goals and regularly evaluates progress to ensure treatment remains focused, effective, and aligned with each individual’s needs.

Christine begins with a comprehensive assessment of each patient’s history, current circumstances, personal values, spiritual well-being, and primary concerns. Using this foundation, she develops an individualized treatment plan that validates each person’s unique experiences while targeting realistic, achievable goals. Her approach combines evidence-based strategies with thoughtful clinical insight to support meaningful and lasting progress.

Licensed in

FL

GA

MD

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View Josefina Cisneros, LMHC

Josefina Cisneros, LMHC

Josefina Cisneros, LMHC

Josefina (Josie) Cisneros, LMHC-QS, LPC, has experience practicing in inpatient, outpatient, community, student counseling, and private practice settings. She earned a Master of Public Health from the University of Texas Health Science Center–Houston and a Master of Mental Health Counseling from Nova Southeastern University. She completed her pre-graduation internship at University Hospital & Medical Center–Behavioral Health in Tamarac, Florida, and her clinical supervision at Henderson Behavioral Health in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

Josie values honesty, individuality, and open communication. She works collaboratively with patients to identify the root causes of mental health concerns while fostering an empathic, safe, and supportive environment where patients feel heard, respected, and comfortable sharing their experiences.

Josie begins by gaining a thorough understanding of each patient’s history, concerns, and goals during the initial session. She then develops a clinical understanding of the presenting concerns, conceptualizes a diagnosis, and creates an individualized treatment plan that aligns with the patient’s needs, diagnosis, and personal goals.

Licensed in

TX

FL

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View Tracie Coleman, LCSW

Tracie Coleman, LCSW

Tracie Coleman, LCSW

Tracie Coleman, LCSW, is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker with more than eight years of experience helping adults navigate anxiety, depression, ADHD, trauma, grief, caregiver stress, chronic illness, and life transitions. Her background includes private practice, outpatient therapy, crisis intervention, and medical oncology settings, supporting individuals and families through emotional and medical challenges. She also provided mobile crisis response in homes, hospitals, and community settings alongside first responders and medical teams. Tracie earned her Bachelor of Social Work from Aurora University and her Master of Social Work from Dominican University, specializing in Military and Veterans.

Tracie creates a warm, supportive, and nonjudgmental environment where clients can openly discuss their experiences. Her approach is compassionate, collaborative, and practical, combining evidence-based therapy with a real-world understanding of stress, caregiving, ADHD, burnout, medical challenges, anxiety, and major life transitions. She helps clients build insight, develop coping skills, improve confidence, and create meaningful change through realistic and manageable steps.

During the first few sessions, Tracie focuses on understanding each client’s concerns, history, strengths, and goals. Together, they develop an individualized treatment plan tailored to the client’s needs and circumstances. Sessions may focus on identifying patterns, strengthening coping skills, improving emotional regulation and executive functioning, processing difficult experiences, and building practical strategies that support daily functioning and overall well-being. She regularly reviews progress and adjusts treatment as clients’ needs evolve.

Licensed in

ID

FL

IL

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View John Dlugosz, LCSW

John Dlugosz, LCSW

John Dlugosz, LCSW

John Dlugosz is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) providing trauma-informed, faith-integrated therapy to children, adolescents, adults, couples, families, and veterans in outpatient and integrated care settings. He uses a holistic, strengths-based approach drawing from CBT, solution-focused therapy, and Christian counseling to support healing of mind, body, and spirit.

John creates a warm, supportive, nonjudgmental space where clients feel heard and respected. He integrates a Christian, biblically informed perspective when desired, along with CBT, positive psychology, and solution-focused strategies. He emphasizes collaboration, emotional safety, and practical skills that build resilience, clarity, and hope.

John begins with a collaborative intake to understand each client’s story, goals, and needs. He develops individualized, evidence-based treatment plans using CBT, trauma-informed care, and strengths-based interventions. Progress is reviewed regularly, and clients are equipped with practical tools for emotional regulation, growth, and lasting change.

Licensed in

ID

FL

NV

OH

TN

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View Mary Lane, LCSW

Mary Lane, LCSW

Mary Lane, LCSW

Mary Lane, LCSW, has experience working in private practice, outpatient, and inpatient settings. She earned her Master of Social Work from the University of Iowa and has more than a decade of experience supporting individuals across a variety of care settings, including substance use treatment and school-based services. Her broad clinical background allows her to provide compassionate, informed care tailored to each client's needs.

Mary understands that beginning counseling can feel vulnerable and values creating an environment where clients feel safe, respected, and supported. She is known for her relatable approach and thoughtfully incorporates humor when appropriate to help build a strong therapeutic relationship grounded in trust, understanding, and collaboration.

Mary starts by giving clients space to share their story at a pace that feels comfortable for them. During the initial sessions, she focuses on understanding each client's experiences, interests, and goals. Together, they develop an individualized treatment plan that reflects the client's unique needs and supports meaningful progress.

Licensed in

IA

FL

GA

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View Lisa Casperson, LCSW

Lisa Casperson, LCSW

Lisa Casperson, LCSW

Lisa Casperson, LCSW, LAC, earned her Master of Social Work from the University of Central Florida and her Bachelor of Science in Human Development and Family Studies from Colorado State University, graduating magna cum laude and receiving Outstanding Student recognition. She completed over 5,000 clinical hours and advanced training to earn her Licensed Addictions Counselor credential in Colorado, along with postgraduate training in Gabor Maté’s Compassionate Inquiry approach. Her experience spans detox, inpatient mental health, corrections, eating disorder treatment, residential care, and private practice.

Lisa uses a compassionate, trauma-informed, bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach that helps clients understand patterns without shame or blame. She integrates neuroscience, attachment theory, mindfulness, CBT, DBT, somatic work, and humanistic therapies to support healing and self-awareness. She believes therapy is an opportunity for meaningful change, authenticity, and deeper connection with oneself and others.

Lisa provides a collaborative, grounded environment where clients feel emotionally safe and supported at their own pace. She develops individualized SMART treatment goals while helping clients recognize their strengths, build emotional regulation skills, and cultivate self-compassion to create lasting change.

Licensed in

ID

AZ

CO

CA

FL

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View Briana Marshall, LMFT

Briana Marshall, LMFT

Briana Marshall, LMFT

Briana Marshall is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (LMFT) with experience in outpatient community mental health, school-based settings (K–12), substance use treatment, and private practice. She holds both a PhD and Master’s degree in Couple/Marriage and Family Therapy and has advanced training in systemic, relational, and culturally responsive approaches. Briana has worked with children, adolescents, adults, couples, and families from diverse backgrounds.

Briana creates a warm, collaborative, and nonjudgmental space where clients feel safe being fully seen and heard. She believes therapy works best as a partnership, where clients and therapist work together to better understand experiences and create meaningful change. Her trauma-informed, culturally responsive approach honors each client’s identity, background, and lived experience, while encouraging authenticity without pressure or expectation.

Briana begins by understanding what clients are experiencing, what feels challenging, and what they hope to change. Together, they create a realistic plan based on each client’s goals and priorities. In ongoing sessions, she helps clients identify patterns, build coping tools, and adjust treatment along the way to ensure continued progress.

Licensed in

CA

FL

NV

WI

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View Cynthia Bracamontes, LMFT

Cynthia Bracamontes, LMFT

Cynthia Bracamontes, LMFT

Cynthia Bracamontes is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (LMFT) with over 15 years of experience supporting adolescents and adults. She has worked in telehealth private practice, outpatient community mental health, and integrated care settings. Cynthia specializes in trauma, anxiety, depression, ADHD, Autism Spectrum parenting, relationships, and co-occurring disorders. She is bilingual in English and Spanish and provides culturally responsive care. She holds a master’s degree in Marriage and Family Therapy from Pacific Oaks College and a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Cal State Fullerton. She is certified in PCIT and SFBT and trained in CBT, DBT, psychodynamic therapy, Motivational Interviewing, and mindfulness-based approaches.

Cynthia creates a space where patients feel heard, supported, and never judged. She meets patients where they are and collaborates with them to set meaningful, realistic goals. Her approach is both supportive and active, helping patients feel better while building practical tools for daily life. She integrates CBT, DBT, mindfulness, Motivational Interviewing, and psychodynamic techniques based on each patient’s needs. Many patients report feeling more hopeful, understood, and empowered in their work with her.

Cynthia begins by understanding each patient’s story, including their challenges, strengths, and goals. Together, they develop a personalized treatment plan aligned with what matters most to the patient. Sessions may include skill-building, emotional processing, mindfulness practices, and insight-oriented work. She uses Motivational Interviewing to support meaningful, self-directed change. Progress is reviewed regularly, with adjustments as needed, and she offers flexible telehealth sessions for accessibility and consistency.

Licensed in

AZ

CA

CO

FL

NV

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View Karen Vigeland, LCSW

Karen Vigeland, LCSW

Karen Vigeland, LCSW

Karen Vigeland is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) with a Master’s degree in Social Work. She has experience working in both inpatient and outpatient settings, supporting individuals with a range of mental health needs across different levels of care.

Karen values open communication and collaboration in the therapeutic relationship. She works closely with clients to build insight, develop coping skills, and reach personal goals. She prioritizes creating a trusting environment where individuals feel safe to openly share their experiences.

Karen begins with a comprehensive assessment to understand each patient’s background, concerns, and goals. She partners with clients to set realistic objectives and develop a strengths-based treatment plan. Ongoing sessions focus on building coping skills, increasing insight, and tracking progress in a supportive, flexible way.

Licensed in

FL

CO

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View Laurie Griswold-Krupski, LMHC

Laurie Griswold-Krupski, LMHC

Laurie Griswold-Krupski, LMHC

Laurie Krupski, LMHC, is a licensed mental health counselor with a PhD in Counselor Education, a Master’s in Rehabilitation Counseling, and an advanced certificate in Mental Health Counseling. Her work is grounded in mindfulness and holistic care, supporting individuals navigating addiction, life transitions, grief, and relationships. She works with individuals and couples to build resilience, deepen connection, and create more meaningful lives.

Laurie Krupski takes a relational, experiential, and client-centered approach, emphasizing connection as a path to healing. She integrates mindfulness, Gestalt, Rogerian therapy, and creative arts into sessions. Her style is warm, collaborative, and engaging, incorporating curiosity, creativity, and reflection. She provides gender-affirming, trauma-informed care that honors each patient’s identity and supports authentic self-expression.

Laurie Krupski begins by building trust and understanding each patient’s story and goals. She collaborates with patients to tailor care to their needs, encouraging openness and curiosity. Her process integrates mindfulness, breathwork, and creative techniques to foster insight and growth. Throughout treatment, she offers guidance, support, and space for patients to discover meaningful, lasting change.

Licensed in

NY

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View Richelle Smallwood, LCSW

Richelle Smallwood, LCSW

Richelle Smallwood, LCSW

Richelle Smallwood is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker with over 14 years of experience providing mental health services across outpatient and school-based settings, along with more than 6 years of telehealth experience. She earned her Master of Social Work from East Carolina University and her Bachelor of Social Work from Elizabeth City State University. Her diverse background supports individuals across various life stages and environments.

Richelle approaches therapy as a collaborative partnership focused on accountability and progress. She often incorporates between-session activities to reinforce growth and goal alignment. She serves as a guide, using evidence-based practices, skill-building exercises, psychoeducation, and practical strategies to support overall well-being.

Richelle emphasizes that clients are in the driver’s seat of therapy. She encourages open communication and invites feedback to ensure the approach remains effective. She supports clients in staying aligned with their goals, coming to sessions with intention, and making meaningful, sustainable progress.

Licensed in

TX

NC

FL

VA

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View Tina Capitly, LCSW

Tina Capitly, LCSW

Tina Capitly, LCSW

Conchitina Capitly, LCSW, is a licensed clinical social worker with 15 years of experience supporting adults through depression, anxiety, life transitions, trauma, and grief. She has worked as a clinician and supervisor in outpatient and inpatient settings, as well as in a psychiatric emergency department at one of New York City's top hospitals. Tina earned her bachelor’s degree from NYU and her master’s degree from SUNY Albany.

Tina values open communication and collaborates with patients to set clear, attainable treatment goals in a nonjudgmental space. Her style is warm, grounding, and supportive, helping patients feel understood and safe while working toward their wellness goals.

Tina begins by thoroughly exploring each patient’s history, concerns, and goals during the initial session. She develops individualized treatment plans that align with the patient’s priorities and supports them with practical strategies and guidance to achieve meaningful progress.

Licensed in

NY

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View Kim Barsella, LICSW

Kim Barsella, LICSW

Kim Barsella, LICSW

Kim Barsella is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW, LICSW, LCSW-C) with a Master’s of Social Work from Howard University School of Social Work. She completed her internship at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital and the DC Rape Crisis Center. Kim brings 25 years of professional experience supporting individuals through a range of life challenges.

Kim believes in treating everyone with respect, sensitivity, and compassion. She has experience helping clients with relationship issues, family conflicts, grief and loss, and parenting concerns. She focuses on creating a supportive space where clients feel heard and understood.

Kim tailors each conversation and treatment plan to meet the unique and specific needs of every client. She works collaboratively with patients to identify goals and develop approaches that align with their personal experiences and priorities.

Licensed in

MN

GA

FL

MD

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View Tasha Sarvis, LMHC

Tasha Sarvis, LMHC

Tasha Sarvis, LMHC

Tasha Sarvis is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor and National Certified Counselor (NCC) who supports adults experiencing anxiety, depression, phobias, communication challenges, and relationship concerns. She earned her master’s degree in Clinical Mental Health Counseling from Walden University. Tasha completed her internship at a substance recovery facility, where she facilitated a Women’s Recovery Group. She later worked in private practice providing in-person and telehealth therapy. She also holds certifications as a Certified Clinical Anxiety Treatment Professional (CCATP) and Certified Specialist in Anger Management.

Tasha creates a supportive, judgment-free space where clients can be themselves. Her style is warm, direct, and down-to-earth, often incorporating humor to help clients feel at ease. She uses an integrative approach tailored to each individual, balancing support with gentle challenge. Clients can expect a collaborative process focused on building insight, strengthening coping skills, and creating meaningful, lasting change at a comfortable pace.

Tasha begins by understanding the whole person, not just symptoms. Early sessions focus on gathering background, exploring concerns, and setting meaningful goals. She uses clear assessments to track progress and guide care. Together, they develop a flexible treatment plan that evolves over time, with optional between-session activities to build skills and encourage continued growth.

Licensed in

CT

FL

NY

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View Shirley Hernandez, LCSW

Shirley Hernandez, LCSW

Shirley Hernandez, LCSW

Shirley Hernandez is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) with a BA in Psychology and a Master of Social Work. She began her career in case management and medical social work, supporting individuals and families through complex life and health challenges. Since transitioning into therapy in 2016, she has worked in outpatient and telehealth settings, including with adults experiencing co-occurring concerns. She is also a RYT 200 certified yoga teacher with training in trauma-informed practice and offers sessions in English and Spanish.

Shirley Hernandez creates a supportive, comfortable space where clients feel genuinely heard. She views therapy as a collaborative process, paced to meet each individual’s needs. Her approach focuses on real-life challenges, not just diagnoses, and considers how stress, health concerns, trauma, and life transitions impact daily functioning. Her style is practical, compassionate, and approachable.

Shirley Hernandez begins by learning each client’s story, strengths, and goals. Early sessions prioritize trust and helping clients feel grounded and understood. She then collaborates on a personalized treatment plan using trauma-informed care, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), and motivational interviewing. She integrates a mind–body perspective and regularly checks in to ensure therapy remains helpful and aligned with client goals.

Licensed in

NY

NJ

CA

MA

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View Robea Meikle-Paige, LMHC

Robea Meikle-Paige, LMHC

Robea Meikle-Paige, LMHC

Robea Meikle-Paige, LMHC, LPC, LPCMH, is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor in Florida, Georgia, and Delaware. She earned a Bachelor’s in Psychology and a Master of Education in Guidance and Counseling with a mental health focus from Florida A&M University. She completed her internship at a community mental health center and is certified in Brief Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Suicide Prevention (BCBT-SP) and trained in CAMS. Her experience includes working with veterans, children, and adults across inpatient, outpatient, and nonprofit settings.

Robea provides compassionate, client-centered, and goal-oriented care for adults and older adults. She supports individuals facing anxiety, depression, trauma, stress, life transitions, and more. She uses an eclectic, evidence-based approach, integrating CBT, DBT, ACT, and MI. Robea values collaboration and tailors treatment to each individual, recognizing therapy is not one-size-fits-all.

Robea begins with building rapport in a safe, structured space to foster trust and engagement. She conducts a thorough assessment to understand each client’s history, needs, and goals. Together, they develop personalized treatment plans with clear goals, while she provides ongoing support, encouragement, and empowerment throughout the therapeutic journey.

Licensed in

FL

GA

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View Ana Ortiz, LPC

Ana Ortiz, LPC

Ana Ortiz, LPC

Ana Gabriela "Gaby" Ortiz is a Licensed Professional Counselor based in Texas with 10 years of experience supporting children, teens (6–17), and young adults (18–25) in educational and residential settings. She earned both her Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and Master’s in Counseling from the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. Gaby is passionate about helping young people navigate challenges and build resilience.

Gaby specializes in anxiety, depression, self-esteem and body image concerns, adjustment disorders, and trauma. She uses an integrative approach, blending CBT, DBT, person-centered therapy, expressive arts, solution-focused therapy, and trauma-informed care. Her style is warm, empathetic, and nonjudgmental, offering a safe space for self-exploration, along with psychoeducation and creative tools like music and art to support healing.

Gaby believes trust is the foundation of meaningful therapy. In the first session, she focuses on understanding each patient’s background, needs, and goals to ensure a good fit. Ongoing sessions are guided by the patient, allowing them to explore concerns at their own pace while she provides validation, insight, and support for informed, values-based decisions.

Licensed in

CA

TX

FL

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View Anju Owens, LMHC

Anju Owens, LMHC

Anju Owens, LMHC

Anju Owens, LMHC, ICADC, is a licensed clinical mental health counselor specializing in addictions. She provides remote care and is licensed in Florida and Utah. Anju brings a warm, compassionate presence to her work and believes that individuals facing addiction, anxiety, depression, or major life transitions benefit from a safe, supportive space where they can openly share and heal.

Patients can expect a collaborative and respectful therapeutic relationship. Anju emphasizes trust, empathy, and nonjudgment, helping clients feel heard and understood. She works alongside each individual to explore challenges, build insight, and foster meaningful change at a pace that feels comfortable and empowering.

Anju begins by understanding each patient’s unique story, goals, and concerns. She tailors treatment to individual needs, integrating evidence-based approaches with a focus on addiction and emotional well-being. Together, she and her patients develop practical strategies to support growth, resilience, and long-term progress.

Licensed in

UT

FL

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View Taylor Smith, LPC

Taylor Smith, LPC

Taylor Smith, LPC

Taylor Smith is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor (LMHC) in New York. She holds a Master of Arts in Mental Health Counseling from Iona University and a Bachelor of Science in Psychology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, with a minor in Women and Gender Studies. Taylor brings a culturally responsive, compassionate, and advocacy-driven approach to care, with experience supporting clients across schools, higher education, private practice, and comprehensive rehabilitation settings. She is certified in suicide prevention and in identifying and reporting child abuse and maltreatment.

Taylor works with adolescents, young adults, adults, couples, and families. She supports individuals navigating anxiety, depression, ADHD, Autism Spectrum Disorder, trauma, bipolar disorder, addiction, and relationship challenges. Her practice emphasizes women’s mental health, LGBTQIA+ affirming care, identity development, and recovery-oriented support. Taylor strives to create a grounded, empathetic space where clients feel heard, respected, and supported in their growth.

Taylor’s therapeutic style is collaborative and individualized. She integrates Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, client-centered and solution-focused approaches, trauma-informed and strength-based techniques, and mindfulness practices. Together with clients, she helps clarify goals, build practical tools, and foster meaningful, lasting change at a pace that feels supportive and empowering.

Licensed in

NY

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View Migdalia Moore, LCSW

Migdalia Moore, LCSW

Migdalia Moore, LCSW

Migdalia Moore is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker who supports clients navigating anxiety, trauma, life transitions, relationship challenges, and emotional regulation. She earned her Master of Social Work from Long Island University and is a Certified Clinical Trauma Professional (CCTP).

Migdalia Moore creates a supportive, nonjudgmental space where clients feel safe to be open and honest. She integrates clinical expertise with a deeper understanding of identity, purpose, and personal values, including faith when desired. Her approach emphasizes both healing and growth, helping clients feel more grounded and empowered.

Migdalia Moore begins with a comprehensive initial session to understand each client’s history, concerns, and goals. She collaborates to establish personalized treatment plans and uses evidence-based approaches such as CBT, trauma-informed care, and emotion-focused strategies. She also provides practical tools for use between sessions.

Licensed in

NJ

NY

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View Deborah Columbro, LMHC

Deborah Columbro, LMHC

Deborah Columbro, LMHC

Deborah Columbro is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor (LMHC) in Florida and New York and a Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC) in Virginia. She works with adolescents and adults experiencing depression, anxiety, trauma, grief, sexual abuse, co-dependency, and addictive disorders. Deborah brings a compassionate, person-centered perspective to her work.

Deborah creates a warm, supportive, and open-minded environment where patients feel safe to share. She emphasizes genuineness, non-judgmental acceptance, and empathy, helping individuals feel understood and respected throughout their therapeutic journey.

Deborah collaborates with patients to explore their experiences, build insight, and develop coping strategies that foster healing, growth, and resilience.

Licensed in

NY

FL

VA

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View Cara Lambert, LCSW

Cara Lambert, LCSW

Cara Lambert, LCSW

Cara Lambert is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker in Florida, California, and New York. She earned both her Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from Florida State University and brings over 20 years of social work experience, including extensive work in medical social work and hospice care. She has a particular interest in supporting adults navigating depression, anxiety, stress, health concerns, grief/loss, and caregiver challenges.

Cara’s approach is warm, supportive, and non-judgmental. She integrates evidence-based strategies, including cognitive-behavioral therapy, mindfulness, and solution-focused therapy, tailoring her approach to each patient’s unique needs and preferences.

She begins by building rapport and creating a comfortable, safe environment. Cara gathers information about presenting concerns, mental health history, psychosocial background, and available supports. Treatment planning is collaborative, ensuring goals align with patients’ strengths and priorities for meaningful, sustainable progress.

Licensed in

NY

FL

CA

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View Nora Bice, LMFT

Nora Bice, LMFT

Nora Bice, LMFT

Nora Bice is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (LMFT) who began providing therapy in 2011. She has worked in private practice, residential, county, and school settings as both a therapist and supervisor. Nora earned her Master’s degree in Clinical Psychology from Pepperdine University and specializes in helping adults navigate ADHD, anxiety, and burnout in today’s fast-paced, digitally overloaded world.

Nora Bice values a collaborative, person-centered approach to care. She practices from a feminist, LGBTQIA+, and neurodivergent-affirming lens, creating a supportive and inclusive environment. She integrates mind-body, cognitive-behavioral, and attachment-based techniques tailored to each client’s needs, helping individuals build insight, establish routines, and develop skills for a more balanced and fulfilling life.

Nora begins by exploring clients’ strengths and challenges, both past and present, while identifying meaningful goals for the future. She collaborates with clients—and when appropriate, psychiatrists—to develop individualized treatment plans that reflect each person’s unique priorities and support lasting growth.

Licensed in

CA

FL

MA

OR

PA

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View Rebecca Blunt, LMHC

Rebecca Blunt, LMHC

Rebecca Blunt, LMHC

Rebecca Blunt, LMHC, is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor with many years of counseling experience. She earned her Master’s degree in Community Counseling Psychology from St. Bonaventure University. Her background includes work in outpatient clinics, non-profit community agencies, and school settings. In addition to her clinical work, Rebecca has taught undergraduate and graduate courses at three colleges.

Rebecca Blunt takes a collaborative, partnership-based approach to counseling, working closely with patients to create a process tailored to their individual needs. She prioritizes taking the time to fully understand and assess each patient’s situation. Rebecca is committed to fostering a safe, supportive, and empathetic environment where a strong therapeutic relationship can develop.

Rebecca begins by gaining a thorough understanding of each patient’s history, concerns, and goals. She also helps patients identify their strengths and existing resources that can support progress. Together, they develop a personalized treatment plan aligned with the patient’s goals, creating a clear and structured path forward.

Licensed in

NY

PA

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View Alexis Burgess, LCSW

Alexis Burgess, LCSW

Alexis Burgess, LCSW

Alexis Burgess, LCSW, is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker and Qualified Supervisor dedicated to helping individuals feel supported, understood, and empowered. She has experience in telehealth, hospital, and community settings, and specializes in trauma, anxiety, depression, and domestic abuse. She also has a strong focus on serving military members, veterans, and their families.

Alexis takes a collaborative, down-to-earth approach to care. She uses Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), along with mindfulness and trauma-informed techniques, to help clients better understand their thoughts and emotions. She creates a welcoming space where clients can be themselves while gaining practical tools for daily life.

Alexis understands starting therapy can feel overwhelming, so she prioritizes building a genuine connection and moving at a comfortable pace. She works alongside clients to address stress, life transitions, and long-standing challenges, focusing on meaningful, lasting change through personalized care.

Licensed in

CA

FL

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View Jennifer Cramer, LCSW

Jennifer Cramer, LCSW

Jennifer Cramer, LCSW

Jennifer Cramer, LCSW, is a licensed clinical social worker with experience practicing in outpatient, inpatient, and community-based settings. She earned her master’s degree from the State University of New York at Buffalo and brings a well-rounded perspective to supporting individuals across different stages of care.

Jennifer values open, honest, and direct communication and believes it is essential for creating individualized treatment goals. She strives to foster a warm, supportive, and safe environment where patients feel comfortable exploring their experiences. Jennifer encourages individuals to identify the thoughts and behaviors that may be preventing them from reaching their goals and works collaboratively with them throughout the process.

Jennifer begins by gaining a thorough understanding of each patient’s history, concerns, and goals during the initial session. From there, she develops an individualized treatment plan that aligns with the patient’s needs and priorities. She also encourages patients to reflect on how their thoughts and behaviors between sessions may influence their progress and overall treatment goals.

Licensed in

NY

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View Carolina Leon, LMHC

Carolina Leon, LMHC

Carolina Leon, LMHC

Carolina Leon is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor (LMHC) and Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (LMFT). She has experience providing care in home, school, and virtual settings, and completed clinical training under supervision at a training clinic at Barry University. Carolina earned a dual Master’s degree in Mental Health and Marriage and Family Therapy from Barry University.

Carolina Leon is committed to open communication and works collaboratively with clients to establish clear, meaningful treatment goals. She creates a welcoming and supportive environment where individuals feel heard, valued, and respected throughout their therapeutic journey.

Carolina begins by developing a comprehensive understanding of each client’s story, concerns, and goals during the initial session. She uses a collaborative approach to create personalized treatment plans that align with client goals while maintaining a culturally humble perspective that honors each person’s background and experiences.

Licensed in

FL

SC

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View Heather Aschenbrenner, LMHC

Heather Aschenbrenner, LMHC

Heather Aschenbrenner, LMHC

Heather Aschenbrenner is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor (LMHC) with experience across outpatient, inpatient, and private practice settings. Her work has included outpatient care at a nonprofit in Winston-Salem, NC and a rural New York clinic focused on substance use and mental health, as well as inpatient substance use rehabilitation. She has also conducted trainings and presentations on mental health topics and ethics. Heather earned her bachelor’s degree in Nutritional Sciences from Boston University, where she developed an interest in the relationship between diet and mental health, and her master’s degree in Clinical Mental Health Counseling from North Carolina A&T State University. She is a Certified Clinical Mental Health Counselor and National Certified Counselor, and has completed specialized training in ADHD, maternal and perinatal mental health, trauma-informed care, and TF-CBT.

Heather often leads with an existential and humanistic approach to therapy, integrating techniques such as CBT and DBT to help patients work through barriers that affect both daily life and long-term goals. She understands that therapy can be a vulnerable process and prioritizes creating a safe, supportive, and welcoming space for patients to explore their experiences. While sessions remain focused and thoughtful, Heather occasionally incorporates humor when appropriate, as patients often find it reflects her authentic and approachable style.

Heather focuses on understanding each patient’s unique experiences and perspectives when they enter therapy. She believes there is no “one-size-fits-all” approach and tailors treatment plans and strategies to the individual rather than relying on a single technique. Her process is collaborative, regularly checking in with patients about the effectiveness of tools and strategies used in treatment. Through this work, Heather aims to empower patients with insight and knowledge so they can become experts in understanding themselves.

Licensed in

NY

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View Stephanie Tubbs, LCSW

Stephanie Tubbs, LCSW

Stephanie Tubbs, LCSW

I trained as a therapist, and I mostly work with adults and older adults who want a space to be themselves without smoothing over the hard parts. Over the years I've worked with veterans, adolescents, older folks, and the LGBTQIA+ community, and what carries across all of them is a simple thing: people want to feel seen, heard, and supported. That's where I start.

My sessions are relaxed. There's room for real conversation, and honestly, there's room for laughter too. I don't think therapy has to be solemn to be serious. I lean on approaches like CBT, DBT, Motivational Interviewing, and Solution-Focused Therapy, and I keep the work trauma-informed and culturally aware, so we're not pretending your context doesn't matter. First, I want to hear your story. Then we figure out together what actually matters to you and what you'd like to be different.

I'll offer support, and I'll also gently push where I think growth is waiting. I bring practical tools you can use in daily life, and I check in on how things are landing so we can adjust as we go. My hope is that you walk out feeling more confident, more resilient, and more able to handle things on your own.

Curious whether the two of us would click? That's exactly what a first visit is for.

Licensed in

MT

CA

FL

MN

MS

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View Nicole Graber, LCSW

Nicole Graber, LCSW

Nicole Graber, LCSW

I'm a therapist, and most of what I see is adults who are trying to work through something difficult and want a partner who takes their particular situation seriously. I've spent 13 years in telehealth practice, along with a background in outpatient care, and one thing hasn't changed in that time: the relationship between us matters more than any single technique I bring to the table. Real progress tends to start there.

I begin with an honest, open conversation, less an intake checklist than a chance to understand what's actually going on for you and what you'd like to be different. From there we build an individualized plan and figure out which skills are worth focusing on first. I lean on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, but I adjust it to fit you rather than fitting you into it. My work is practical and collaborative. I'm interested in helping you develop the tools to make changes that hold up after our sessions end, not just while you're in them.

Pace is something we set together. Some people want to move quickly toward specific skills; others need time to build trust before the harder work feels possible. Either way is fine with me.

If you've been thinking about starting therapy and want someone who'll take the time to understand where you're coming from, bring what's on your mind to a first visit and we'll begin sorting through it together.

Licensed in

FL

PA

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View William Miller, LCSW

William Miller, LCSW

William Miller, LCSW

I'm a therapist specializing in the anxiety, panic, and depression that tend to surface during life transitions: a career change, a shift in a relationship, an illness, a new life stage. Over more than 25 years, I've worked with individuals, families, and groups across community nonprofits, worksite wellness programs, labor unions, and virtual settings, so I've seen how many different circumstances can bring someone to therapy feeling stuck or overwhelmed.

I'm a practical therapist. I draw on mindfulness-based CBT and DBT, and I use SMART goals to keep our work focused and moving forward rather than circling the same ground. I also lean on Positive Psychology, because I'd rather build on the strengths you already have than treat you as a list of problems to fix. Early on, I'll ask you to walk me through your concerns from past to present so we can organize them and decide together what matters most. From there we build a structured plan with achievable goals, and we adjust as we go, always at a pace that feels manageable to you. Many of the people I see notice gradual relief within the first month, with steady improvement after that.

My aim is to address what's weighing on you with clarity, focus, and compassion, not pressure. Curious whether this kind of structured, forward-moving work would suit you?

Licensed in

WA

NY

NJ

OH

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View Jenna LaSpina, LCSW

Jenna LaSpina, LCSW

Jenna LaSpina, LCSW

I'm a licensed clinical social worker with seven years of experience treating depression, anxiety, trauma, ADHD, and perinatal mental health concerns. Over those years I've worked across nonprofit, community mental health, and group practice settings, with children, adolescents, and adults, and I've come to enjoy sitting with people who want to understand themselves more clearly, not just manage their symptoms.

My work is grounded in psychodynamic thinking, meaning I'm curious about the patterns underneath what's showing up day to day. Alongside that, I draw on ACT, DBT, and other evidence-based approaches, matching the tools to the person rather than the other way around. I practice with humility and curiosity, and I try to stay honest about what I'm noticing so we can look at it together. Building rapport matters to me from the very first conversation, because I don't think the work goes anywhere useful without a real connection first. Early on, expect me to ask questions, listen closely, and get a sense of what feels important to you before we start naming goals.

From there, we set those goals collaboratively, keeping the focus on self-understanding and on practical skills you can actually use. I care about self-expression and personal growth, and I want you to leave sessions feeling genuinely heard.

Curious whether the two of us would work well together? That's exactly what a first visit is for.

Licensed in

NY

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View Nancy Marsh, LCSW

Nancy Marsh, LCSW

Nancy Marsh, LCSW

I'm a therapist who has spent more than thirty years treating people through some of the most demanding chapters of a life: chronic and acute illness, the run-up to major surgery, traumatic loss, perinatal stress, and the grief so many carried during COVID. I've sat with Holocaust survivors and with people living through the AIDS crisis, and that history shapes how I listen now, to adults and older adults navigating anxiety, depression, ADHD, relationship strain, workplace pressure, and the big transitions that reshape who we are.

My approach is relational and insight-oriented. I want to understand your actual story, so I begin with a thorough assessment of your history, your concerns, and what you're hoping for, and from there we set clear goals and build a plan that fits you rather than a formula. In session I stay curious and direct, drawing on CBT, DBT, ACT, EFT, motivational interviewing, and psychodynamic work depending on what the moment calls for. That means some days we're practicing a concrete coping tool and other days we're tracing a pattern back to where it started. The aim is both practical relief and lasting self-awareness.

I care about creating room for people from every background to feel genuinely seen. If the harder patterns in your life have started to feel permanent, they usually aren't. Reach out when you're ready to look at them together.

Licensed in

NY

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View Andrea Stang-Mckeough, LMHC

Andrea Stang-Mckeough, LMHC

Andrea Stang-Mckeough, LMHC

My work as a therapist centers on adults navigating anxiety, life transitions, and the kind of academic and professional stress that quietly builds until it starts to affect everything else. I also spend a lot of time with people working through relational challenges, whether that's tension at home, at work, or somewhere in between. Alongside my clinical work, I present and teach on mental health in community and professional settings, which keeps me grounded in how these struggles actually show up in daily life.

I take a goal-oriented approach. I'm less interested in labeling your strengths and weaknesses than in helping you get clarity and make practical change. I value direct, open communication, and I'll build treatment plans with you rather than hand them down. My sessions are structured: we'll begin with a thorough intake to understand your history, stressors, and patterns, then define objectives that are realistic and actually mean something to you. From there, expect a mix of reflection, skill-building, and concrete strategy, drawing on mindfulness and nervous system awareness, cognitive and behavioral tools, and relational processing as it fits. Insight matters to me, but I put real emphasis on action and accountability. Support and a gentle challenge tend to sit side by side in my room.

If you're ready to move from understanding a pattern to changing it, and you want a therapist who'll be straight with you along the way, let's talk.

Licensed in

NY

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View Hayley Schiller, LICSW

Hayley Schiller, LICSW

Hayley Schiller, LICSW

Most of my work as a therapist is talk therapy, and it draws on training I've built up across both crisis response and outpatient settings. I earned my bachelor's and master's in social work at Fordham, and over the years I've become certified in motivational interviewing and Dialectical Behavior Therapy, completed Gottman Level 1 couples training, and studied Cognitive Behavioral Therapy through the Beck Institute. I see adolescents and adults, and I tend to draw on whichever of those approaches actually fits the person in front of me.

I'm a practical, collaborative therapist. Our first session is where I get a thorough understanding of your history, your concerns, and what you actually want to be different, and that becomes the foundation we build on. From there I like to set shared goals with you and shape a plan around your particular needs and strengths, then adjust it as we go. Expect concrete tools and strategies rather than open-ended talking, and expect me to send you off with some 'homework' between visits, because a lot of the real progress happens in the days between appointments, not just in the room.

I'm honest about what's working and what isn't, and I count on you to tell me the same, so we can keep revising the plan together. Bring what's on your mind to a first visit and we'll figure out where to start.

Licensed in

MA

NY

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View Deborah Unger, LCSW

Deborah Unger, LCSW

Deborah Unger, LCSW

I trained as a therapist, and I mostly work with adults who are ready to talk something through but haven't always felt genuinely listened to when they've tried before. My path here started in education and psychology, and that background still shapes how I think about people, with attention to where someone is developmentally and what growth actually looks like for them, not just what a treatment plan says it should be.

My style is warm and interactive. I'm not the kind of therapist who sits in silence and lets you fill the air; I stay engaged, ask questions, and respond honestly. Early on, my focus is on making sure you feel heard and understood, because in my experience meaningful change tends to start there. From that point we set goals that are yours, and I draw on a few approaches depending on what fits: cognitive-behavioral therapy for patterns you want to shift, psychodynamic work when the roots matter, and problem-solving therapy when you need practical strategies for what's in front of you right now. I'll tailor the mix to you rather than the other way around.

Mostly, I want the work to feel collaborative and steady, with room for the courage it takes to change something in your life.

Deciding to talk to someone takes real effort, and getting this far says something. If you're looking for that kind of working relationship, I'd be glad to start it with you.

Licensed in

TX

MA

NY

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View Avril Dennis, LCSW

Avril Dennis, LCSW

Avril Dennis, LCSW

Most of my work as a therapist is with adults and teenagers navigating the kinds of life shifts that don't always announce themselves as crises: a marriage or a divorce, a career change, a move to a new place, or the slow weight of caring for aging parents. I've spent more than 25 years in practice, first in the New York area and the last decade in Florida, and I've wanted to do this work for as long as I can remember. Along the way I've also worked closely with trauma, with LGBTQAI+ clients, with chronic health concerns, anxiety, self-esteem, and sobriety from alcohol.

I start where you are and move at a pace that feels right, not one I've decided in advance. I'm open, understanding, and supportive, and I'll also gently challenge thinking that's keeping you stuck when the moment calls for it. In a first session, I want to understand what brought you in and what your life actually looks like right now, then look at both the present concern and the experiences behind it. My approach is collaborative and humanistic, and I lean on practical tools so you can start building skills and feeling some relief early rather than waiting weeks for it.

Bring in whatever's pressing on you and we'll begin working through it together, one piece at a time.

Licensed in

FL

NY

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View Roberta Gelfand, LCSW

Roberta Gelfand, LCSW

Roberta Gelfand, LCSW

I'm a therapist, and most of what I see spans a wide age range: teens finding their footing, adults sorting through anxiety, depression, trauma, or a life transition that has knocked things off balance, and older adults navigating change later in life. Over more than eight years across private practice, outpatient programs, community mental health centers, and non-profit work in New York and New Jersey, I've spent a lot of time with people who are reexamining their self-esteem, working through relationship strain, or trying to make sense of attention challenges. I also work often with neurodivergent clients and offer affirming care across identities, relationships, and family systems.

How we work together depends on you. I start by really understanding your history, your concerns, your strengths, and what you actually want out of this, then we shape a plan together from there. I draw on approaches like CBT, DBT, ACT, and IFS, but I try to keep therapy practical and paced to you rather than to a method. Early sessions tend to be a lot of me asking questions and listening closely so I understand what brought you here. As we go, I'll revisit our goals with you so the work stays relevant and responsive as things shift.

There's no rush to any of this. When you feel ready to begin, I'll be here.

Licensed in

NJ

NY

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View Elizabeth Vah, LCSW

Elizabeth Vah, LCSW

Elizabeth Vah, LCSW

I'm a therapist who focuses on talk therapy with adults, including older adults, who are working through anxiety, depression, grief, and the kind of life transitions that quietly reshape how a person sees themselves. Some of the people I meet are navigating strained relationships; others are managing severe mental illness and want a steady partner in that work. I've spent time in both inpatient and outpatient settings, and earlier in my training I worked in an emergency room and specialty clinics, which taught me to stay calm and present when things feel far from calm.

The way I work is collaborative. Early on, I want to understand what's actually going on and what you're hoping will be different, so we can sketch out a roadmap for growth together rather than my handing you a plan. My first session tends to be conversational: we talk through what brought you in, a bit of your history, and how sessions and confidentiality work, and then we start naming goals. After that, our time centers on exploring your thoughts and feelings, noticing the patterns underneath them, and practicing skills you can use outside the room. I draw on DBT, CBT, mindfulness, and solution-focused approaches, but I fit the method to the person, not the other way around. We check in on progress along the way.

Deciding to start therapy takes something. If you've gotten this far, you've already begun.

Licensed in

CT

TX

AZ

CA

FL

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View Audrey O'Neal, LPC

Audrey O'Neal, LPC

Audrey O'Neal, LPC

I'm a licensed professional counselor specializing in the concerns that adults carry through the ordinary work of being human: anxiety, depression, stress that won't let go, grief and loss, and the strain that shows up in relationships. A lot of the people I sit with are somewhere in the middle of a transition, trying to figure out what they actually want next and how to get there. Some are working toward a specific goal; others just know something isn't right and want a place to sort it out.

My work draws on a mix of approaches, including cognitive behavioral therapy, solution-focused therapy, psychodynamic work, mindfulness, and hypnotherapy. Which of those we lean on depends on you, not on a formula. Early sessions tend to move between the practical and the underneath, giving you coping strategies you can use now while we start to trace where limiting beliefs and recurring problems actually come from. My style runs warm and direct at once; I'll validate what you're feeling and still gently press on the patterns worth examining.

I'm also a doctoral candidate in clinical psychology, which keeps me curious and current, though the room itself stays focused on you.

Starting is simpler than it sounds. We talk, we get a sense of what's going on, and we decide together what's worth working on first. From there, we build something that fits your life rather than someone else's plan for it.

Licensed in

NY

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View Marcela Medina, LICSW

Marcela Medina, LICSW

Marcela Medina, LICSW

I'm a therapist specializing in talk therapy with adults and older adults who are working through the shifts that come with different stages of life. Over the years I've worked with people navigating homelessness, substance use, and a range of mental health and behavioral concerns, and I've learned that most people arrive knowing something needs to change but not quite sure where to begin. That's the part I like helping with.

I try to be authentic, realistic, and reliable, and I don't dress things up more than they need to be. After we get to know each other, I'll be straightforward with you about what therapy can and can't do, and we'll figure out what you actually want to get out of it. From there I lean on open-ended questions, the kind that help you notice your own triggers, your strengths, and the coping strategies you're already using without naming them. A session with me tends to feel like a real conversation, not an interview, with room for you to think out loud.

My aim is to help you build insight and resilience at a pace that's sustainable, so the progress holds up after you leave the room. I'm interested in what you're capable of, not just what's gone wrong. I speak English and Spanish, and I'm comfortable working in either.

If this sounds like the kind of therapy you've been wanting, I'd be happy to talk.

Licensed in

DC

FL

MD

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View Danielle LaBarre, LMHC

Danielle LaBarre, LMHC

Danielle LaBarre, LMHC

I'm a licensed mental health counselor with about seven years of experience, and most of what I see is adults working through anxiety, depression, stress, grief, and the kind of life transitions that leave you unsure of your footing. I also work with older adults who are facing the shifts that come with later chapters of life. Wherever someone happens to be, my aim is to help them get closer to where they actually want to be.

My approach is person-centered, which for me means the work follows your goals, not a script I've decided in advance. I draw on mindfulness, cognitive-behavioral strategies, and a strength-based lens, but the through line is collaboration. I want our sessions to feel like a real back-and-forth. Early on, expect me to ask a fair amount of questions and mostly listen, because I'd rather understand how you see things before I offer much of anything. I take cultural context seriously, and I try to keep the room open enough that you can bring the parts of your life that matter to you.

Reaching out for therapy can feel intimidating, and I think naming that honestly is part of the point. It's also a genuinely courageous step. There's no rush on my end. Whenever you feel ready to start, I'll be here to begin the work with you.

Licensed in

NY

GA

VA

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View Michelle Corley, LISW

Michelle Corley, LISW

Michelle Corley, LISW

I'm a therapist with over a decade of experience, and much of my focus is on women navigating the perinatal and postpartum period, especially when the transition into parenthood brings postpartum anxiety and depression, infertility, or the grief that follows pregnancy loss. I've completed extensive training through Postpartum Support International, and this work sits close to the center of what I do. I also spend time with adults working through personality patterns that strain their relationships, self-harm, and substance use.

My work has taken me through community mental health, crisis settings, inpatient and outpatient care, and private practice, and each of those places shaped how I sit with people. I'm collaborative and open-minded, and I try to stay attentive to the culture and context you bring into the room. In a first session, I ask questions and listen, and we start to name what's actually happening rather than rushing toward a fix. I draw on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Dialectical Behavioral Therapy, Cognitive Processing Therapy, and mindfulness-based work, but I fit the approach to you, not the other way around. Building healthy, workable coping strategies is often where we begin, and I want the choices along the way to feel like yours.

As someone who understands the weight parents and caregivers carry, I don't take this journey lightly. Bring what's been sitting on your mind to a first visit, and we'll begin working through it together.

Licensed in

LA

OH

PA

TX

FL

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View Kynan Kinley, LPC

Kynan Kinley, LPC

Kynan Kinley, LPC

I'm a therapist, and I treat adults navigating the aftermath of crisis: acute mental health episodes, substance use and recovery, co-occurring struggles, and the kind of complicated life stress that piles up faster than anyone can process it. A lot of my experience comes from high-acuity settings, inpatient psychiatric units and addiction recovery among them, and I've also spent time advocating for medically complex kids and their families. That work taught me a lot about caregiver stress, medical trauma, and the exhaustion of dealing with systems that move faster than your emotions can keep up with.

My style is warm and collaborative, but I'm direct. I'll validate what you're going through, and I'll also gently push when I notice a pattern that isn't serving you anymore. Early on, I want to understand your story, your goals, and what you're already good at before we build anything. Some sessions we stabilize, some we do skill-building, some we work through what past experiences left behind. I care a lot about transparency and about pacing, so I'll check in regularly to make sure the plan still fits your values and your readiness, not just mine.

My training leans on attachment, nervous system regulation, and coping skills that hold up over time. If you're worn down from surviving one hard thing after another and want a steadier way forward, reach out and let's talk about where to start.

Licensed in

MO

NY

FL

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View Darien Orange, LMHC

Darien Orange, LMHC

Darien Orange, LMHC

As a therapist, I work mostly with people who are ready to do the work of therapy, even when it's uncomfortable. Over the years I've counseled in college and boarding school settings and in community mental health, so I've sat across from students figuring out who they are, adolescents working through the noise of growing up, and adults sorting out what they want their lives to look like. I see kids as young as five and adults well into their sixties, and I've come to appreciate how different each of those conversations really is.

My style is down-to-earth. I lean on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, which means we'll pay attention to the connection between your thoughts, your feelings, and what you actually do day to day, then look for practical places to shift things. I'm not here to hand you conclusions; I'd rather build insight and tools alongside you so you leave with something you can use. Early on, expect me to ask a lot of questions and listen closely, less about fixing and more about understanding what's going on for you. Since all of this happens remotely, it helps if you're comfortable connecting by screen and open to trying new perspectives.

I think of therapy as walking alongside someone, not directing from the front. Bring me the challenges you're facing and we'll start making sense of them, one step at a time, together.

Licensed in

NY

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View Adam Hallers, LMHC

Adam Hallers, LMHC

Adam Hallers, LMHC

I'm a therapist, and I treat adults working through the kinds of concerns that show up across a whole life: patterns from the past that still shape the present, current struggles that feel stuck, and the sense that something needs to shift. I've practiced in schools, college counseling centers, community non-profits, and private practice, which means I've sat with a wide range of people and identities, and I've been trained across several approaches, including DBT, CBT, REBT, psychodynamic therapy, narrative therapy, and sex therapy. I draw on whichever of those fits the person in front of me.

I start by getting a thorough sense of your history, what's bringing you in, and what you actually want out of treatment. From there we build the plan together, so the goals reflect your values rather than mine, and we return to them over time to see what's shifting. I try to balance compassion with an appropriate amount of challenge, because I've found that growth usually needs both. My honest belief is that we can't rewrite what already happened, but we can change how we understand it and how we respond to it now.

Expect a first visit that's mostly me asking questions and listening closely to how you tell your own story. If you're ready to look at what's kept you stuck and figure out where you want to go, bring it to a first session and we'll work through it together.

Licensed in

NY

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View Arlette Dominguez, LMHC

Arlette Dominguez, LMHC

Arlette Dominguez, LMHC

I'm a therapist with a particular focus on the everyday concerns that quietly wear people down: anxiety, low mood, shaky self-esteem, strain in relationships, stress, and the disorientation that comes with a big life transition. Over the years I've worked in schools, community programs, and outpatient settings, doing individual, group, and family therapy, and I bring that range with me into every session. I'm bilingual in English and Spanish, and I care a great deal about pulling mental health out of the shadows and chipping away at the stigma that keeps people from asking for help.

I start by getting the full picture, your background, what's bringing you in, what's already working, and where you'd actually like to end up. From there we build a plan that's yours, and I revisit it with you as things shift, because a plan that fits in January may not fit in June. My approach is strengths based and solution focused; I'd rather help you notice and use the resilience you already have than treat you like a list of problems. I lean on open, honest conversation, and I want you to leave a session feeling heard and respected, not managed.

Bring whatever's been sitting on your mind to a first visit, and we'll start untangling it together.

Licensed in

NY

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View Sibi Selvarajah, LCSW

Sibi Selvarajah, LCSW

Sibi Selvarajah, LCSW

I'm a therapist with experience treating substance use disorder, anxiety, depression, trauma, and the relationship struggles that often sit underneath all of it. Much of what I know about this work I learned as a group and individual counselor at an outpatient substance abuse treatment center in Manhattan, where I sat with people at some of the hardest points in their lives and watched them find footing again. I see both adolescents and adults, and I'm comfortable with the messy, tangled ways these problems tend to show up together rather than one at a time.

My approach is integrative, which mostly means I don't force one method onto everyone. I pay close attention to what's actually going on with the person in front of me and build the plan from there. I listen more than I lecture, and I'll be honest with you about what I'm noticing. Early sessions tend to be less about fixing and more about understanding: what's happening now, what you've already tried, and what a better week would actually look like for you. I also take self-care seriously, not as a slogan but as something we work into the plan in a way that fits your real life.

If any of this feels close to what you've been looking for, I'd be happy to talk.

Licensed in

NY

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View Tracey Les Pierre, LCSW

Tracey Les Pierre, LCSW

Tracey Les Pierre, LCSW

I trained as a licensed clinical social worker, and I mostly work with adults navigating the ways stress shows up in the body: the tension, the sleeplessness, the anxiety that doesn't stay in your head. A good part of my practice centers on the seasons of life that reshape us, whether that's the perinatal and postpartum stretch, the shifts of menopause, grief after losing someone you love, or the quieter grief of goals that didn't turn out the way you'd planned. Parenting struggles and big life transitions bring people to me too.

My approach draws on psychodynamic work, CBT, and solutions-focused thinking, but what that really means is I want to understand what's underneath before we decide what to do about it. Rather than handing you a new set of tools and calling it a day, I'd rather start with the coping strategies you already lean on, fine-tune the ones that serve you, and figure out together what's missing from your self-care. Early sessions tend to be less about fixing and more about mapping: where the stress lives, what it's connected to, and what emotional freedom might actually look like for you. I've worked with people from all walks of life and all age groups, and I especially connect with clients in the LGBTQIA+ community.

Bring whatever's been sitting on you into a first visit, and we'll begin sorting through it, mind, body, and spirit, at a pace that feels workable.

Licensed in

CT

NY

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View Akili Carter, LMHC

Akili Carter, LMHC

Akili Carter, LMHC

My work as a therapist centers on helping people come home to their authentic selves. I see counseling as something you live through, not just talk about, so I lean on creativity as much as conversation. I often bring in multimedia resources, with a real emphasis on writing, and I've written a few books of my own, including one called Be an Anomaly about the autism spectrum. I've been through most of the same life struggles the rest of us have, and I don't pretend to sit above any of it.

I work with adults and adolescents who want to figure out who they actually are, not who they've been told to be. Sessions with me tend to feel warm and full of energy; I want you to feel welcomed and genuinely connected, not evaluated. I draw on approaches like REBT, CBT, ACT, Positive Psychology, and the Gottman Method, but the real tools I use are the ones already hidden inside you. My job is to help you find them, and to use creative and behavioral techniques to get you where you want to go. Think of it as a trip we take together, with you deciding the destination and me helping you find the best routes there.

Starting therapy takes nerve, and choosing to look for someone at all says something about where you're headed. When you're ready to begin, I'll be here to take that first step with you.

Licensed in

NY

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View Racquel Ellis, LMHC

Racquel Ellis, LMHC

Racquel Ellis, LMHC

I'm a licensed mental health counselor, and I've spent more than a decade helping individuals and families work through mood disorders, trauma, difficult life transitions, and the kind of chronic challenges that wear on a person's overall well-being over time. Much of the care I offer centers on the BIPOC community and on women who want a counselor who understands the context they're living in, not just the symptoms they're describing.

My approach is inclusive by design. I want the people I work with to feel like their full experience is welcome in the room, including the parts that don't always get named in therapy. In an early session, I spend a good deal of time simply understanding your story: what brought you here, what you've already tried, and what you actually want your life to look like. From there we shape a direction together, and I'll be honest with you about what I'm noticing along the way. I tend to move at a pace that respects where you are rather than rushing toward a fix.

Some of what people bring is long-standing, and some of it is fresh. Either way, I'm interested in the whole picture of your wellness, not a single diagnosis on a chart.

Reach out when you're ready to start this work together.

Licensed in

NY

OH

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View Robin Lawson, LCSW

Robin Lawson, LCSW

Robin Lawson, LCSW

Most of my work as a therapist is with adults navigating anxiety, depression, and the particular weight of grief and loss. Over the past 14 years, I've practiced in both inpatient and outpatient settings, and I've spent a good deal of that time alongside people facing chronic or serious medical illness, the kind of situation where the diagnosis is only part of what you're actually living with. Those are often the folks I connect with most: someone trying to hold themselves together through something they didn't choose and can't simply solve.

My approach leans on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Solution-Focused Therapy, with Acceptance and Commitment Therapy woven in when it fits. In practice, that means our early sessions are less about fixing and more about getting clear: I want to understand how you see yourself, where your strengths already are, and where there's genuine room to grow. I tend to be steady and practical rather than flashy, and I'll be straight with you about what I'm noticing. The insight we're after is yours, not mine, so I try to make space for you to arrive at it.

What I find rewarding is the connection itself, sitting with someone as they start to recognize what they're capable of. If any of this resonates, the beginning is simple: we talk, we get a sense of what you're up against, and we sort out the direction together from there.

Licensed in

FL

WI

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View Scott Tuckman, LMHC

Scott Tuckman, LMHC

Scott Tuckman, LMHC

I'm a therapist, and I treat mood disorders, depression, the full range of anxiety, relationship and self-esteem struggles, adjustment concerns, and emotional dysregulation. I've worked in a lot of different worlds over the years, including correctional, educational, inner-city community-based, and corporate settings, and I've spent time among many cultures and ways of life. That range shaped how I think about the person in front of me, and about the ever-present connections between body, mind, and emotional state.

My orientation is psychodynamic, but I don't treat that as a rulebook. Depending on what you need, I'll bring in attachment theory, mindfulness, and pieces of CBT and DBT, and I keep it all coordinated with any medication that's part of your plan. I tend to be direct while staying compassionate, because I think a comfortable, co-owned relationship is where the real work happens. I consider it an honor to join someone on their journey, and my aim is to help you understand more fully how you can move yourself forward, then build the readiness to actually take that step.

When we've met your goals and it's time to part ways, I want your tool belt fortified with techniques you can use on whatever obstacles come next. Bring what's been weighing on you to a first visit, and we'll start sorting through it together.

Licensed in

NY

RI

TN

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View Dianna Sanderson, LMFT

Dianna Sanderson, LMFT

Dianna Sanderson, LMFT

Most of my work as a therapist is with adults, including older adults, who are dealing with the daily hassles, life transitions, or chronic and acute health conditions that have started to feel overwhelming. I'm dually licensed as a marriage and family therapist and a genetic counselor, and I've come to care a lot about treating everyone with respect, sensitivity, and compassion, including the service members and veterans who find their way to me.

My style is warm and interactive, and I draw on an eclectic mix of cognitive-behavioral therapy, motivational interviewing, and schema therapy techniques, tailored to what you actually need rather than a fixed formula. Humor and deep insight aren't off limits here; they often sit side by side in the same session. I'm interested in functional therapy, the kind that helps you move forward, and where it's relevant I can gently fold in psychospiritual questions no matter your religious background. I work alongside the rest of your healthcare team and answer your questions directly. I won't live your life or make your decisions for you, but I can offer the anticipatory guidance that shifts your internal dialogue or opens a door where a family has drifted apart.

It takes real courage to reach for a more fulfilling life, and my job is to support and empower that. We'll start with whatever challenge is in front of you and brainstorm the best place to begin. From there, we build the rest together.

Licensed in

FL

MA

WA

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View Kayla Garcia, LMHC

Kayla Garcia, LMHC

Kayla Garcia, LMHC

I'm a therapist who focuses on anxiety, depression, and the relationship struggles that tend to tangle up everything else. A lot of the adults I see are trying to make sense of what they're feeling and where it's coming from, and I want them to leave a session feeling genuinely heard rather than processed. I see clients from young adulthood through their later years, and I work in both English and Spanish, which matters when someone wants to talk about hard things in the language they think and dream in.

Much of my early training was in inpatient psychiatric units during my internship at Aventura Hospital and Medical Center, where I learned crisis management and acute care. That experience taught me to stay steady when things feel overwhelming, and it shaped how I listen now. In a first session, I'm mostly asking questions and getting a real sense of your life, not rushing toward conclusions. I keep things client-centered, which for me means the pace and the priorities are yours to set, and I check in rather than assume.

Outside of work, my time goes to my family and my two dogs, usually hiking or somewhere near the beach. Those quiet moments of connection keep me grounded, and I think that steadiness carries into the room.

Whatever you've been sitting with, bring it to a first visit and we'll start untangling it together.

Licensed in

FL

NC

OH

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View Alexis Lanzillo, LPC

Alexis Lanzillo, LPC

Alexis Lanzillo, LPC

I'm a therapist and board-certified dance/movement therapist who focuses on the connection between mind and body, and I've spent more than fifteen years working with adolescents and adults across a wide range of backgrounds and mental health needs. My work is humanistic and trauma-informed, which means I'm less interested in a checklist of symptoms than in the person sitting across from me and the story their experiences tell.

My training as a dance/movement therapist shapes how I practice. I encourage people to use their voice both verbally and non-verbally, because self-expression takes many forms, and I've found it helps people build and keep a positive sense of self. I draw on dance/movement therapy principles alongside evidence-based approaches like CBT, DBT, and mindfulness techniques, adapting to what a particular person actually responds to. In sessions I tend to notice what's happening in the body, not only in the words, and I'll gently name what I see.

I believe in the power of relationship, to yourself and to others. With people who are motivated to look honestly at their own patterns, I'll help you challenge beliefs that no longer serve you, practice healthy risk-taking, and set boundaries that hold up with yourself and the people around you. I set my pace by where you are.

Curious whether this way of working fits what you're looking for? That's exactly what a first visit is for.

Licensed in

FL

PA

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View Taylor Cortez, LPC

Taylor Cortez, LPC

Taylor Cortez, LPC

I'm a licensed professional counselor specializing in talk therapy for adults, adolescents, and older adults who are working through depression, anxiety, ADHD, bipolar disorder, and body dysmorphia. My background spans a range of settings, from inpatient care at Willowbrooke at Tanner, where I served as a primary therapist and assessor, to a university counseling center and virtual practice in Atlanta. That mix taught me that no two people arrive with the same story, and that the therapy has to fit the person rather than the other way around.

I take an interdisciplinary approach, drawing on CBT, DBT, Motivational Interviewing, and trauma-informed work depending on what's actually in front of me. Rather than fitting you into one method, I customize what we do to your needs and your preferences. Early sessions are largely about exploring and processing the emotions and experiences that are hardest to name, at a pace that doesn't push you faster than you want to go. I try to stay warm and steady while we do it, so the difficult parts feel less like something to get through alone.

A lot of my work is about healing from what came before so you can actually be present in your life now. If you're ready to look at what's been weighing on you, come as you are to a first visit and we'll start untangling it together.

Licensed in

GA

FL

NY

PA

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View Alexia Ford, LCSW

Alexia Ford, LCSW

Alexia Ford, LCSW

I trained as a licensed clinical social worker, and I mostly work with adults through the geriatric years, along with couples looking to understand each other a little better. Over more than twenty years, I've sat with people managing a wide range of concerns, including co-occurring struggles, grief and bereavement, and the existential questions that tend to surface at life's turning points.

I'm a wife, mother, daughter, and sister, and I've walked through my own share of life's challenges, so there's a good chance some part of your story will land with me. I pay close attention, not just to what people say but to the things they show without words. My approach is individualized, strengths-based, and affirming. I'm intentional about building rapport and meeting people without criticism, though when I notice behaviors keeping someone stuck, I'll name that gently and respectfully.

I draw on approaches like CBT, ACT, IPT, and solution-focused work, and I fold in mindfulness, breathing exercises, and spirituality where they fit. I'm also a self-described movie and series buff, and I'll often bring in a scene, a theme, or a character to give us a shared way to talk about behaviors and their consequences. It tends to make hard conversations feel a little more human.

My hope is that you can be your true, authentic self here, without needing to perform. If that sounds like the kind of support you're after, I'd be happy to talk.

Licensed in

FL

GA

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View Jessica Vassallo, LCSW

Jessica Vassallo, LCSW

Jessica Vassallo, LCSW

My work as a therapist centers on anxiety, depression, and PTSD, and over 20 years I've sat with a wide range of people: World Trade Center responders, college students living far from home, people managing severe and persistent mental illness, patients navigating a cancer diagnosis, and people whose struggles were shaped by poverty and everything that comes with it. What I've learned across all of that is that no one arrives as a diagnosis. You arrive as a person embedded in things bigger than yourself, your family, your job, your community, the larger society, and all of it leaves a mark.

My approach is eclectic, grounded in cognitive behavioral therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy, mindfulness, and supportive psychotherapy, but I don't reach for a technique before I understand the person in front of me. Early sessions are about getting oriented to what actually matters to you, so the plan we build reflects your goals and not a template. I want you to feel understood enough to explore the roots of what brought you in, rather than just managing the surface of it.

I won't pretend to have answers before I've heard your story, and I'll be honest with you as we go. If you've been carrying anxiety, low mood, or the aftermath of something you can't quite put down, and you're ready to look at it with someone who won't flinch, reach out and let's start there.

Licensed in

NY

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View Matthew Green, LMHC

Matthew Green, LMHC

Matthew Green, LMHC

I'm a therapist, and most of what I see is adults, adolescents, and older clients who come to talk therapy looking for a way through whatever they're facing right now. I've spent over seven years in outpatient work, both in person and virtual, since earning my master's degree from St. Bonaventure University and starting out at a community counseling center in Olean, New York.

Before we go anywhere deeper, I want us to actually trust each other. I think open, honest communication is where the real work starts, so early on I focus on setting clear goals together rather than handing you a plan I made on my own. Our first session is mostly me getting a full picture of your history and what you're hoping to change, so I understand the whole scope of what you've been living with, not just the presenting problem. From there I build a plan that fits you specifically.

Early on, I tend to prioritize coping strategies, practical things that help you get through the day. As we go, and as your footing steadies, we shift toward the deeper issues underneath and the goals you came in with. I move at whatever pace makes that sustainable for you, grounded in mutual respect and a genuine sense of connection.

If you've been wanting a place to sort through what's weighing on you with someone who'll take the time to really hear it, reach out and let's talk.

Licensed in

NY

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View Ariella Rodriguez, LCSW

Ariella Rodriguez, LCSW

Ariella Rodriguez, LCSW

I'm a therapist who has spent years treating stress, anxiety, family conflict, and the tangled interpersonal knots that come with them. I earned my Master's in Social Work from New York University and have practiced since 2013 across settings that shaped how I work, including a community mental health clinic, an outpatient hospital program, and a nonprofit devoted to parent-child psychotherapy. That last one taught me a lot about parenting struggles and the relationships that hold families together or pull them apart. I see adults across the lifespan, from younger adults sorting out early adulthood to older adults navigating later chapters.

Here's how I think about the work: you're the expert of your own story. My job is to notice your strengths and build on them, not to hand you a one-size-fits-all plan. Early on, I'm listening for what actually matters to you, then we shape goals and strategies around your specific situation rather than a template. I take a hands-on, encouraging approach, and I'll be direct with you when it helps. Being genuinely seen, heard, and understood is the foundation everything else grows from.

My hope is that you leave our sessions feeling motivated and clearer about the change you want, moving toward a life that feels more whole and fulfilling. Reach out when you're ready to start that work together.

Licensed in

UT

NY

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View Thomas Reis, LICSW

Thomas Reis, LICSW

Thomas Reis, LICSW

I trained as a clinical social worker, and I mostly work with adults who are trying to find their footing through big life transitions, an existential crisis, or the kind of stress that quietly wears a person down. Over thirteen years as a psychotherapist, in outpatient settings and through telehealth, I've spent a lot of time alongside people navigating anxiety, mood concerns, ADHD, and addictions of different kinds, whether chemical, behavioral, or process. Often the work comes back to something practical: rebuilding self-esteem, setting healthy boundaries, learning to communicate assertively and actually listen.

My approach is client centered, which means I follow your goals at your pace rather than pushing my own timeline onto you. I draw on Motivational Interviewing, CBT, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and Solution Focused Brief Therapy, but I choose the tool that fits the person in front of me, not the other way around. In a first session, expect a real conversation: I'll ask what brought you here and what you want to be different, and I'll listen without rushing to fix. I try to keep things open and honest, so thoughts and feelings can be shared without worrying about judgment.

I'll be straight with you: I genuinely like this work, and I like working with people who want to be here. Deciding to start is often the hardest part, and if you've gotten this far, you've already done something that matters. When you're ready, reach out and let's talk.

Licensed in

MA

FL

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View Katrina Myers, LPC

Katrina Myers, LPC

Katrina Myers, LPC

I've spent years as a therapist treating adults and adolescents through the kinds of struggles that don't always fit neatly into a category: bipolar disorder, anxiety, depression, ADHD, postpartum, social anxiety, and the fallout from past trauma, divorce, and family conflict. Before I became an LPC, I spent two decades in elementary education, much of it as a behavioral interventionist working with children who had special needs, ADHD, and emotional disturbances. That work taught me how to sit with people who feel stuck and help them, along with the adults around them, find a way to turn things around.

My communication style is gentle but open. I'll tell you what I'm noticing, and I want you to feel free to do the same. I don't lean on one method; depending on what you need, we might draw from cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness, positive psychology, psychodynamic work, or humanistic approaches. Early sessions are mostly about getting a clear picture of what's weighing on you and what you're hoping to feel more of. I care a great deal about helping people find real happiness and some joy in their lives again, and I set the pace so it feels manageable rather than rushed.

Whether you're an adult sorting through a hard chapter or a teenager trying to make sense of it all, I'd be glad to talk about what's going on and where you'd like to go from here.

Licensed in

FL

TX

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View Stephorna Barnes-Patterson, LCSW

Stephorna Barnes-Patterson, LCSW

Stephorna Barnes-Patterson, LCSW

Most of my work as a therapist spans a wide age range, from kids as young as five to teenagers, adults, and older adults well into their later years. I've spent more than fifteen years in community and outpatient settings, which taught me that no two people walk in with the same story, so I don't treat them as if they do. Some of the folks I see are figuring out a hard season for the first time; others have been managing something for years and want a fresh set of eyes.

I draw on a range of approaches rather than forcing everyone into one method, because what helps a nine-year-old is rarely what helps someone in their seventies. The first time we meet, I'm mostly getting to know you: your history, what's bringing you in, what you're hoping for, and the strengths you already have that we can build on. From there we shape a plan together, one aimed at both some relief now and steadier ground over the long run. I try to keep things straightforward and grounded in your culture and life, so you actually feel understood rather than processed.

My training in social work at Adelphi University shaped how I look at people in the context of everything around them, not in isolation. Reach out when you're ready to start, and we'll figure out the first steps together.

Licensed in

CT

NJ

FL

NY

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View Tara Pavone, LMHC

Tara Pavone, LMHC

Tara Pavone, LMHC

I'm a therapist specializing in talk therapy for people navigating anxiety, depression, and the relationship strains that so often sit underneath both. I see adolescents, adults, and older adults, and I tend to approach counseling as something we build together: I bring psychoeducation and practical coping skills for whatever you're up against, and you bring the insights, because no one knows your experience better than you do. I start from the belief that all people have intrinsic value, and I hold positive regard for the person in front of me, whatever they walk in with.

How I work: I think thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are all connected, and that even the reactions that feel confusing have valid reasons underneath them. A lot of what we do is connecting the dots, from both the past and the present, so you can understand yourself and your surroundings more clearly. My style is eclectic, drawing on cognitive behavioral therapy, dialectical behavior therapy, and psychodynamic work depending on what fits you. I also make room for you to name and sit with feelings you've been holding back, because sometimes the relief is in finally letting them out. Cultural humility matters to me; I stay in a posture of ongoing learning around racial and social equity.

I'm also a big believer in self-care, in finding whatever it is that fills your cup. There's no rush to any of this. Reach out whenever the timing feels right for you.

Licensed in

NY

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Specialties
Talk Therapy
States
Florida
New York
Languages
English
Takes insurance
Virtual visits