

Integrative Mental Health
You don’t need a cancer history to receive care here
While our mission began in survivorship science, we also serve anyone seeking integrative, neuroscience‑informed mental health support.
For most of the past century, mental health care has relied almost entirely on two approaches: medication and psychotherapy. These remain important and effective tools, but they were developed long before we could measure the brain in real time or understand the biological patterns that accompany emotional symptoms.
Today, new technologies allow us to bring neuroscience directly into care. Many conditions—such as panic, anxiety, and chronic stress—are linked to identifiable brain‑based signatures. These patterns are not fixed. They can be gently and safely shifted through neuromodulation and other brain‑based interventions, creating new opportunities for relief that complement traditional treatments.
The brain is extraordinarily complex, and it tends to hold on to the activity it already knows. Relying on only one or two treatment methods can make change slow or incomplete. By approaching healing from multiple directions—psychotherapy, behavioral strategies, and neuroscience‑informed interventions—we increase the likelihood of meaningful, lasting improvement.
This integrated model honors both the biology and the lived experience of each person, offering a more complete path toward wellness.
Mental health without cancer
My Approach
I’ve offered psychotherapy to individuals, couples, and families for more than 20 years, using an attachment-based lens. This means I focus on how our earliest relationships shape the way we connect, cope, and feel safe with others. Together, we work to strengthen emotional security, improve communication, and build healthier patterns—both in relationships and within ourselves.
When appropriate, I may recommend neuromodulation therapies that can be paired with talk therapy—even within the same session. These gentle, brain-based techniques help shift the patterns that contribute to anxiety, stress, or emotional overwhelm, making it easier for the mind and body to respond to therapy.
As a licensed marriage and family therapist, I think systemically. That means I see each person in the context of their relationships, environment, and lived experience—not as a list of symptoms. A systemic approach recognizes that change is most effective when it supports the whole system around a person: their patterns, their connections, and the ways they make meaning. It allows treatment to be more compassionate, more accurate, and more aligned with how people actually live.
Who we support
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Individuals experiencing anxiety, depression, or other mental health concerns
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Couples navigating communication issues or life transitions such as marriage or divorce
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Those seeking a brain-based approach to attachment, stress, and burnout
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People wanting to improve resilience and emotional well‑being