Frequently Asked Questions
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My fee is $150 for a 50-minute individual session and $175 for couples sessions, payable by cash, check, or Zelle. I have a 48-hour cancellation policy — sessions canceled with less than 48 hours' notice will be charged in full.
I reserve a portion of my practice for sliding scale clients. If cost is a concern, please don't let that stop you from reaching out — I'm happy to talk through what might be workable. If I'm not able to accommodate a rate that feels sustainable for you, I'll do my best to offer referrals to colleagues.
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My style is warm, curious, and unhurried. I'm genuinely interested in your particular inner life — not in fitting your experience into a diagnostic category or moving you quickly toward predetermined goals. Sessions feel, most of the time, like a sustained, attentive conversation — one in which we're both listening for something, following threads as they emerge, staying with what's difficult long enough for it to become more knowable. I bring humor and directness alongside the depth.
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Reach out via the contact form or by phone to schedule a free 15-minute consultation. That's the first step — no paperwork, no pressure, just a conversation.
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A free 15-minute consultation is a brief, informal conversation — a chance for you to ask questions, share a little about what's bringing you in, and get a sense of whether we might be a good fit. There's no commitment involved. I'll share a bit about how I work and we can feel out whether to move forward.
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Yes — I see clients in person in South Pasadena and virtually throughout California. Virtual sessions are conducted via a secure, HIPAA-compliant video platform.
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Psychoanalytic therapy is a depth-oriented approach that attends to the unconscious dimensions of experience — the patterns, defenses, and relational configurations that operate beneath conscious awareness and continue to shape how we feel and relate. Unlike approaches focused on symptom reduction or skill-building, psychoanalytic work is less directive: it creates space for what's unformulated to gradually find language and for change to emerge through the therapeutic relationship itself, rather than through techniques applied to it. This kind of work tends to be open-ended and longer-term, and it is particularly well-suited to people who are drawn to depth and genuine self-understanding rather than quick resolution.
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Yes. I approach couples work from a relational and psychoanalytic framework, attending to the unconscious dynamics and patterns that shape the space between partners — the ways each person's history shows up in the relationship, the cycles of connection and rupture, and what might allow for greater honesty, understanding, and intimacy. I work with couples of all configurations and orientations.
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Do you work with children and teenagers?
Yes — I work with adolescents ages 12 and up. With younger teens especially, I take particular care in how I build the therapeutic relationship, holding the specific developmental and identity questions that adolescence brings. I am experienced working with LGBTQIA+ and neurodivergent youth, and I am attentive to how family systems, school environments, and cultural contexts shape the inner lives of young people.
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I am currently out of network for all insurance plans. I can provide a superbill — a detailed receipt — that you may be able to submit for reimbursement through your out-of-network benefits. Many plans offer partial reimbursement; I'd encourage you to call your insurance provider to ask about your specific coverage before we begin. My current fees are $150 per individual session and $175 per couples session.
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This varies considerably depending on what brings you in and what you're hoping to find. Some people come for a focused period — a few months around a specific transition or difficulty. Others find that what begins as one kind of question opens into a longer exploration. Psychoanalytic work, by its nature, tends to be open-ended: there is no fixed endpoint, and the work deepens over time. We'll talk about this in our initial conversations, and we can revisit it as things unfold.
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Most clients meet with me once a week, particularly at the beginning. For those who are drawn to deeper or more intensive work, meeting twice a week can be meaningful — it allows more continuity and a different quality of engagement. I'm happy to discuss what might make sense for you.