For Mental Health Professionals

Your client is doing the deep clinical work with you. I support the practical work happening around it.

Women leaving coercive or emotionally abusive relationships often carry a lot outside the therapy room: legal logistics, safety planning, documentation, communication with an attorney, decisions that feel urgent and overwhelming. That weight doesn't always stay contained to a session, and it can take time away from the clinical work that matters most.

That's where I come in.

What I Do

I work alongside your client on the practical and strategic side of leaving or divorcing a high-conflict or emotionally abusive partner: building a factual timeline, organizing documentation, communicating clearly with her attorney, and creating both long-term and emergency safety plans. During the most intense periods, filing, being served to court dates, I'm available to her directly, so she has consistent support outside of your sessions.

Where I Stay in My Lane

I am not a therapist. I do not diagnose, treat, or provide clinical care, and I never work in place of one. Every client I work with is required to have outside professional support throughout our time together, so referring to a therapist is something I actively encourage, not something I compete with.

Why This Helps Your Work

Clients who have this kind of support tend to arrive at session less consumed by logistics and crisis management, freeing up more of your time together for the clinical work only you can do. I also recognize when a client may need therapeutic support she doesn't yet have, and I make it a priority to help her find it.

If you have a client who could benefit from this kind of support, or you'd like to talk about a referral relationship, I'd love to connect.