My approach to therapy is grounded in curiosity. I’m interested in how you experience your life and the world around you. Much of therapy is talking about what’s going on for you. This might include things like anxiety, low mood, relationship difficulties or anything else you’re struggling with at the moment.
I see many of the ways we struggle as understandable and reasonable responses to what we have lived through. We adapt to survive in the best way that we can and that we might reach a point where how we’ve adapted no longer works for us. Our environments, relationships and aspects of identity, like gender, sexuality, race, class, neurodivergence and disability, are connected to how safe, visible and valued we feel.
Therapy can be a place to explore how these experiences impact who we are and how we relate to others. Together, we’ll look at how you’ve come to see yourself, your relationships and your place in the world. We carry expectations about who we should be and how relationships are meant to work that come from our earlier experiences. I work in a relational and trauma-informed way, paying attention to patterns of connection, protection and disconnection and how they show up in our relationships with ourselves and others.
I offer therapy for individuals, couples and other relationships. This includes romantic partners as well as people in other important relationships, such as friends or family members. Whether working with one person or with two or more people together, the focus is on understanding experience and relationships in a thoughtful and collaborative way.
I’m mixed heritage (British-Thai) and queer. These aspects of my identity inform my practice and how I understand connection and belonging.
Before training as a psychotherapist, I worked in the tech industry as a qualitative researcher. Much of that work involved trying to understand how people think and make decisions, and what might sit behind those choices. I worked with a dating app company on topics such as dating as a single parent, dating during the COVID-19 pandemic, sexting and consent, and the experiences of minoritised communities on dating apps.
Over time, my curiosity about people and a growing sense that I wanted to work more closely with people's emotional lives led me to psychotherapy. My own experience of being in therapy was an important and transformative part of that journey.
Alongside my private practice, I completed two years of clinical placements at CliniQ, a holistic wellbeing and sexual health clinic for trans, non-binary and gender diverse people, and at Transform, a low-cost counselling service in South London.
I’ve been working with clients since June 2023 and have a Diploma in Integrative Psychotherapeutic Counselling from the Metanoia Institute. I am also an accredited member of the National Counselling and Psychotherapy Society (NCPS).