Clinical Supervision and Consultation

Supporting people through emotional pain, uncertainty, and life experiences can be meaningful and deeply connecting work, while also carrying emotional weight at times.

At times, the work may feel emotionally heavy, uncertain, activating, or difficult to carry alone.

Clinical supervision and consultation offer a reflective and collaborative space to slow down, explore what may be happening within the work and within yourself, and feel supported in the complexity of therapeutic practice.

Reflection, Support, and Sustainability

Supporting people can be deeply meaningful, but it can also ask a great deal of us.

At times, certain client dynamics, therapeutic relationships, or emotional responses may feel difficult to hold alone. There may be moments of uncertainty, self-doubt, feeling stuck, or noticing that something within the work feels activating or emotionally charged.

Clinical supervision and consultation offer a reflective and collaborative space to slow down, explore what may be happening within the work and within yourself, and feel supported in the complexity of therapeutic practice.

I have experience offering clinical supervision and consultation to both student counsellors and Registered Clinical Counsellors within private practice and organizational settings.

My supervision approach has been shaped not only through formal training, but also through the ongoing relational and reflective nature of the work itself.

Understanding the Supervision Process

A Space
for Reflection and Support

Supporting others can be deeply meaningful work, but it can also feel emotionally demanding at times.

Supervision offers space to slow down and reflect on how the work may be affecting you, both professionally and personally.

There is room here for uncertainty, questions, self-doubt, and the parts of the work that may feel difficult to carry alone.

Developing Your Own Approach

Supervision is not about becoming the “right” kind of therapist.

It is a space to become more connected to your own way of being as a therapist, while deepening your confidence, clarity, and clinical understanding.

Together, we can explore what feels aligned, authentic, and sustainable within your practice.

A Collaborative Process

My approach to supervision and consultation is reflective, supportive, and collaborative.

Rather than focusing only on interventions or problem-solving, supervision can also offer space to explore the therapeutic relationship, emotional process, ethical considerations, and the complexity that naturally exists within clinical work together.

How Supervision and Consultation May Support You

Supervision and consultation can offer space to pause, reflect, and feel supported within the complexity of therapeutic work.

At times, certain client relationships, emotional responses, or experiences within the work may feel activating, uncertain, or difficult to fully understand alone.

Together, we may explore themes such as relational dynamics, emotional process, uncertainty, self-doubt, boundaries, ethical considerations, or the impact the work may be having on you personally and professionally.

My approach is not centred on finding the “right” intervention or having immediate answers. Instead, supervision offers space for reflection, curiosity, collaboration, and developing a deeper understanding of yourself within the work.

Supervision can support both newer and more experienced therapists in cultivating greater steadiness, clarity, and sustainability within their practice.

What Supervision May Offer

Space for
Clinical Reflection

Supervision offers space to reflect on the therapeutic relationships you are holding and the complexity that can emerge within the work.

This may include moments of feeling stuck, uncertain, emotionally activated, protective, frustrated, disconnected, or deeply moved within the therapeutic process.

Together, we can slow down and explore these experiences with curiosity, care, and reflection.

Support Through Complexity and Uncertainty

At times, clinical work can feel uncertain, emotionally demanding, or isolating.

At times, supervision may involve exploring uncertainty, ethical considerations, relational dynamics, boundaries, or questions that do not have simple answers.

You do not need to arrive with clarity or certainty before bringing something into supervision.

Sustainability and Self-Trust

Over time, supervision can support greater steadiness, confidence, and trust in yourself as a therapist.

This includes making space for your own needs, emotional capacity, and humanity within the work, while developing ways of practicing that feel sustainable and aligned over time.

When you’re ready,
I’m here to support you.