Clinical Supervision

Support Your Growth—Inside and Out

Supervision is more than a requirement—it’s a relationship. Finding the right supervisor isn’t just about hours or paperwork. It’s about having a space where you can reflect, grow, and develop your clinical voice with guidance that honors both your skill and your humanity.

A Relational, Curious, and Integrated Style

I’m an approved supervisor with the Oregon Board of Licensed Professional Counselors and Therapists, offering supervision for associate therapists working toward LPC or LMFT licensure.

My supervision style mirrors my therapy work: warm, present, and grounded in curiosity. I integrate the same modalities I use with clients — IFS, AEDP, Relational Therapy, and emotion-focused, grief & trauma-informed frameworks — to support you in developing both your skills and your confidence.

Whether you already use these approaches or are simply curious, I offer support, education, and space to explore them at your own pace.

What supervision with me includes:

We'll cover the essentials—while staying connected to what matters.

  • Case consultation and clinical discussion

  • Ethical decision-making and professional development

  • Review of documentation and client records

  • Optional video/audio review (if available)

  • Space for emotional processing, identity exploration, and learning to sit with the unknown

I strive to create a balance of structure and spaciousness—where you're both supported and stretched in the ways that help you grow.

This is a space where you don’t have to know everything.


You’re not expected to show up with perfection—just with honesty, reflection, and a willingness to learn. My role is to support you in becoming more of the therapist you are meant to be, not a replica of someone else.

That said, creating a meaningful and supportive supervision space also includes shared responsibility. Below are a few expectations I hold to help us stay grounded, organized, and focused in our work together.

Supervisee Expectations:

  • Be honest about the cases, questions, and internal dynamics you’re struggling with—this is where meaningful supervision begins.

  • Stay on top of your licensure requirements and know when your renewal date is approaching.

  • Use your full professional title—Professional Counselor Associate or Marriage and Family Therapist Associate—on all written materials (email signature, website, directories, marketing, etc.), as required by the Board.

  • Include my name and credentials on all professional materials where your title appears.

  • Keep notes from our supervision sessions and maintain a record of what we’ve discussed throughout your associate years.

  • Come to supervision with intention—bring cases, questions, or reflections to help guide our time and support your growth.

  • Submit payment for supervision on the day of each appointment.

Reach out

If this resonates, I’d love to connect.
Feel free to reach out with questions or to schedule a consult. I’m happy to discuss what you’re looking for and explore fit.