This post comes from Emerson, one of our Seattle-based providers. Emerson offers both in-person therapy in Georgetown Seattle and telehealth sessions to support clients in finding presence, connection, and healing.
There’s something different about sitting together in a room. For many of us, therapy has lived through screens in recent years—accessible, flexible, and meaningful in its own way. And still, there can be a quiet longing for something more embodied: a shared space, where your whole self can arrive, not just what fits inside a frame.
I’m grateful to share that I am now offering in-person therapy in Seattle’s Georgetown neighborhood on Tuesdays. This space is designed to help you pause, breathe, and reconnect with yourself.
Why In-Person Therapy?
Therapy is, at its core, relational. Healing unfolds not only through words but also through presence—through breath, pauses, subtle shifts in energy, and the calming ways our nervous systems respond to being with another human being.
Working in the same physical space can bring unique benefits, including:
A deeper sense of grounding and genuine connection
Greater access to your body’s cues and responses
A contained and supportive environment for processing emotions
A rhythm and focus that set therapy apart from everyday life
For some, being in-person with a Seattle therapist offers a deeper sense of safety or belonging. For others, it simply feels good to leave home, arrive somewhere intentional, and be met where they are.
The Therapy Space
Georgetown has its own distinctive character—creative, industrial, a little off the beaten path. That sense of place encourages a slower, more intentional pace.
The therapy office itself is quiet, private, and designed to feel grounding, calm, and welcoming. It’s a space where you can exhale a bit, where nothing is required of you except to show up as you are.

My Approach to Therapy
My work is evidence-based, relational, psychodynamic, and somatically informed. I’m interested in how your stories, body, and nervous system hold both your past and your possibilities for healing.
Together, we might:
Explore patterns that feel hard to shift
Slow down and listen to what your body has to say
Make room for grief, anxiety, or uncertainty
Build a more compassionate relationship with yourself
Move toward connection—within yourself and your relationships
This integrative approach supports clients seeking therapy for anxiety, trauma recovery, self-understanding, or relationship challenges.
Now Accepting New Clients
I currently have availability for new clients, both in-person on Tuesdays in Seattle’s Georgetown neighborhood and via telehealth for those across Washington State.
If you’ve been thinking about starting therapy—or wondering if it might be time to return—this could be a gentle space to begin. You don’t have to have everything figured out before reaching out.
Reach Out
If you’d like to schedule a session or learn more, I’d be glad to connect. You can reach me through email or schedule a free consultation online.
This new space in Georgetown is here for you—a place to land, reconnect, and begin again.
