Life is full of challenges, responsibilities, and unexpected twists—and it's completely normal to feel overwhelmed from time to time. But how do you know if what you're experiencing is everyday stress… or something more like anxiety?
Read MoreYou don’t need to have it all figured out. Your first therapy session is simply a starting point—a chance for you and your therapist to get to know each other and begin building a relationship based on trust, safety, and understanding.
Read MoreAs a practice, we place a high value on meaningful and authentic relationships. Over the years, this effort has naturally evolved into finding and creating spaces for genuine community. These efforts extend into all kinds of relationships, including inter-professional networks, local neighborhood collaborations, training and workshop offerings, low-fee/easy-entry therapeutic offerings…
Read MoreIn a city like Los Angeles that can feel fast paced and isolating, finding a safe space to express emotions and share struggles can be challenging. Group therapy offers a powerful avenue for healing, growth, and support.
Read MoreOur culture tends to compartmentalize grief, to privatize and pathologize it, to render it something to be overcome or dismissed. In the West, we regard grief as something to “get over” as though it’s a temporary malady we should quickly recover from. Yet grief is not a single event but an abiding relationship.
Read MoreVergence is a technique that was developed out of a type of therapy called brainspotting. It uses your changing eye movements to help reduce anxiety and panic symptoms.
Read MoreGrounding is a part of mindfulness in which you are directing your thoughts away from distressing thoughts/experiences and guiding it toward the present. This can be particularly helpful when feeling overwhelmed by certain thoughts or emotions. Grounding techniques are designed to help individuals dealing with trauma, panic attacks, or other intense emotional experiences.
Read MoreGrief is defined as “deep sorrow, especially that caused by someone's death.” This definition, although technically true, doesn’t quite reflect the magnitude of grief. It fails to capture the completely overwhelming feelings of loss, emptiness, and despair that accompany grief. We all go through grief at one stage of life or another, and it's a universal experience that we can find connection in.
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