Supervision
With over a decade of experience providing individual, group, and live supervision, I bring both personal and professional depth to the supervisory relationship. Having experienced the profound difference between supervision that empowers and supervision that isolates, I am deeply committed to creating a space where clinicians feel genuinely supported and guided.
My approach is person-centred, drawing from somatic abolitionism and liberation psychology. I view supervision as a collaborative space — one where challenges and successes receive equal attention, skill-building and professional development are actively nurtured, and the emotional wellbeing of the clinician is treated as inseparable from the quality of their work. I recognize that clinicians are whole people who can experience burnout, vicarious trauma, and the cumulative weight of meaningful work, and I hold space for all of that.
I maintain my own peer supervision and consultation practice regularly, because I believe that good supervisors remain accountable to the same reflective process they ask of others.
My supervision experience spans globally, including work with humanitarian organizations and resource-constrained environments, where I have helped develop sustainable supervision systems and structures to support practitioners doing critical work under difficult conditions.
I specialise in working with humanitarian actors and expats working globally, and provide both remote and in-person sessions.
I also provide liscensure supervision in the state of Missouri (USA).