Move Beyond Your Past

Specializing in EMDR therapy, I help individuals process trauma, reduce emotional distress, and create lasting change. Healing starts here.

A smiling man with a beard and mustache wearing a dark blue checked blazer, a light purple dress shirt, and a blue cap, standing outdoors against a brick wall with trees and greenery in the background.

From serving in the U.S. Navy and a previous career in mechanics and engineering, I eventually found my deepest calling as a licensed therapist. Today, I specialize in trauma and EMDR, supporting people in their journey toward healing. This shift has given me a profound sense of purpose and has been the most rewarding chapter of my life.

When someone has gone through trauma or other difficult experiences, the effects can linger in ways that are often confusing and overwhelming. Instead of easing with time, symptoms may grow heavier often showing up in relationships, physical health, work, and even in how we see our future.

Trauma-informed therapy offers a way to understand these struggles and gently shift the patterns that keep you feeling stuck in a rut. In therapy, you can begin to build healthier, more secure relationships. You may notice improvements in your physical well-being as the nervous system settles, easing tension and reducing the toll of stress on the body. At work, you may regain focus, motivation, and a sense of confidence that helps you feel capable again. And over time, as the weight of past experiences lifts, it becomes easier to see your future with hope, direction, and possibility.

Are you experiencing?

  • Constant stress or a sense that life feels chaotic

  • Anxiety, panic, depression or emotions that feel too big to manage

  • Struggles with intimacy, relationships, or connection

  • Low self-esteem, painful self-doubt, or difficulty making decisions

  • Loneliness or feeling cut off from others

  • Turning to unhealthy habits to cope

  • Grief that feels unending or too overwhelming to process

  • Victimization

You may have gone through:

  • Childhood neglect or abuse

  • Divorce, separation, or estrangement

  • The loss of a loved one

  • Chronic health struggles

  • Sexual assault

  • Domestic violence

  • Being displaced from your home or community

  • Community violence, natural disasters, or war